Russia Shares Bizarre Video That Shows International Space Station Breaking Apart After Its Cosmonauts Leave

A bizarre video posted by Russian state-controlled news agency RIA Novosti shows the International Space Station (ISS) breaking apart in an artist rendering after Russian cosmonauts bid adieu. With this video, we are not sure if Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Russia’s Roscomos space corporation, is trying to threaten the US or hinting at something unusual, but it nevertheless looks scary. A space news blog NASA Watch shared the video on Twitter. The clip, which is about a minute long, is accompanied by some kind of classical singing. In the caption, NASA Watch mentioned that Rogozin “is clearly threatening the ISS program”.

The caption reads, “Russian govt-controlled RIA Novosti posted a video on Telegram made by @Roscosmos where cosmonauts say goodbye to Mark Vande Hei on ISS, depart, and then the Russian segment detaches from the rest of ISS.”

Watch the video here:

Rogozin is no stranger to such tweets. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a couple of weeks ago he had stated that imposing restrictions on Russia’s space programme may have terrible consequences for the country’s opponents. Rogozin even went as far as to appear to issue a direct threat to the United States.

In a tweet in Russian, he had threatened the US, saying that if they didn’t cooperate with Russia, who will save the ISS from plummeting into the United States.

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk soon responded to Rogozin’s tweet. Musk just tweeted his own company’s logo.

Before that, in 2020, Rogozin bemoaned in a column in the Russian edition of Forbes that Americans do not take Russia’s space programme as seriously as their own.

Rogozin’s comments came after Musk had jokingly said in June 2020, “The trampoline is working”, after SpaceX had successfully launched two NASA astronauts into orbit from American soil. Musk was referencing a statement made by Rogozin in 2014 when he had said that without help from Russia the US would have to transport its astronauts to the ISS using a trampoline.


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