- Lyon see off Nice in Ligue 1, Lille slip up
- Guardiola hits 'sacked in the morning' taunt for six
- In-form Chelsea 'not ready' for title challenge: Maresca
- Olympic champions Hassan and Tebogo named 'Athletes of the Year'
- Liverpool pile on misery for Man City, Man Utd boss Amorim earns first Premier League win
- Liverpool inflict more pain on Man City to extend Premier League lead
- Verstappen wins, teams title race goes on after Norris penalty
- Mbappe strikes as Real Madrid beat Getafe
- Serbia denies link to Kosovo canal blast amid heightened tensions
- Plastic pollution talks fail to reach landmark deal
- Lille slip up to late Montpellier equaliser
- Senegal marks 80th anniversary of troop killings after France acknowleges colonial 'massacre'
- McTominay keeps Napoli top in Serie A with Torino winner
- Man Utd boss Amorim earns first Premier League win, Chelsea climb to third place
- Romanians vote as far right hopes for breakthrough
- US ski star Shiffrin has puncture wound, 'severe muscle trauma' after crash
- White House says 'not there yet' on Gaza ceasefire and hostage deal
- VW's German workers to strike from Monday
- Zelensky says Ukraine needs arms, NATO invite before Russia talks
- World chess champ Ding, teen challenger even after six games
- Indigenous groups call for health protections in plastic deal
- Divided plastic pollution negotiators call for more time
- Georgia PM rules out re-run of contested vote
- Serbia denies behind Kosovo blast, says attack aimed at Belgrade
- Syria's second city slips from government control: monitor
- Harry Kane sidelined with hamstring tear
- Centre-right parties set to hold power in Ireland
- Social Democrats set to overtake ruling party in Iceland snap election
- Afghanistan must participate in future climate talks: Taliban
- India's Jay Shah starts term as world cricket boss
- Bangladesh court quashes convictions for grenade attack on ex-PM
- With Angola trip, Biden fulfills his promise to visit sub-Saharan Africa
- Romanians return to the polls with far right hoping to gain ground
- New EU chiefs visit Kyiv on first day of mandate
- 'Lethal Weapon' Johnston and Shin Ji-yai win Australian Open titles
- Poland border fence divides officials and rights groups
- Near Chechnya, tracing the life of a Georgian-Ukrainian soldier
- For Georgia's opposition, protest is the cure for melancholy
- Kayaker 'stable' after leg amputated in Australian river rescue
- Durant and Booker lead NBA Suns over Warriors
- Stokes fit for second New Zealand Test despite injury scare
- 'Red carpet treatment': Taiwan's Lai feted during US stop on Pacific trip
- Glittering dreams: India's big push for solar power
- Trump announces loyalist Kash Patel as choice to lead FBI
- The farm fires helping to fuel India's deadly air
- Philippine Eagle hatchling dies in conservation setback
- Red Bulls reach MLS Cup final with win over Orlando
- Debutant Bethell leads England to eight-wicket win over New Zealand
- Turmoil overshadows Romania vote as far right hopes to gain ground
- Nations warn of 'obstruction' at plastic talks
In space, Russians and Americans remain 'dear friends': astronaut
After nearly a week back on Earth, NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei said Tuesday the relationship between US astronauts and Russian cosmonauts remained positive while on board the International Space Station, despite their countries' animosity over Moscow's February invasion of neighboring Ukraine.
Vande Hei landed in Kazakhstan last Wednesday in a Russian capsule, along with cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Pyotr Dubrov.
"About my relationship with my Russian crewmates, they were, are and will continue to be very dear friends of mine," the American Vande Hei said during a press conference in Texas Tuesday.
"We supported each other throughout everything," he said. "And I never had any concerns about my ability to continue working with them."
Vande Hei said the Russian invasion of Ukraine was discussed on board the ISS, but "it was largely how they felt about things and those are things that I would prefer that they get to share directly."
Moscow and Washington jointly manage the ISS, and NASA has said cooperation between the two countries' space programs has so far remained unaffected by their governments' friction.
But Russian space authority head Dmitry Rogozin has been ramping up incendiary rhetoric on Twitter for weeks.
"If you block cooperation with us, who will save the ISS from uncontrolled deorbiting and falling on US or European territory?" Rogozin wrote in a February tweet -- noting that the station does not fly over much of Russia.
Vande Hei said he has stayed away from social media, but heard about some of the tweets from his wife.
"I just had too much confidence in our cooperation to date, to take that those tweets as anything but something that was meant for a different audience than myself," he said.
The 55-year-old now holds the record for the American who has spent the most consecutive days in space, at 355 days.
He said his legs were a bit "wobbly" for his first eight hours back on solid ground, but he is adjusting quickly to life back on Earth.
"I'm a little disappointed with how normal it feels. I kind of want it to seem more strange being back," he said.
"I'm still uncomfortable, but humans are very adaptable."
The goal for the extended mission was to observe the effects of prolonged exposure to a space environment on humans in preparation for future missions -- like going to Mars, for example.
"My body is part of the experiment," Vande Hei remarked, adding that he hopes his record time in space is soon broken.
The record for the longest space journey for any human belongs to Russian cosmonaut Valery Polyakov, who spent 437 days on board the Mir station in 1994 and 1995.
A.P.Maia--PC