American, two cosmonauts in successful Russian launch

American, two cosmonauts in successful Russian launch
An American and two cosmonauts have successfully docked at the International Space Station. -EPA

Russia has launched ‌two cosmonauts and an American astronaut to the International ‌Space Station from Kazakhstan, resuming crewed ‌flights from a recently repaired astronaut launchpad with a rare joint attendance by the heads of NASA and Russia's space agency.

US astronaut Anil Menon and ‌cosmonauts Pyotr ‌Dubrov ⁠and Anna Kikina lifted off from ​the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan aboard Russia's Soyuz MS-29 spacecraft at 10.47am local time on Tuesday bound for the ISS, where they will spend about eight months ⁠as the station's ‌75th ​rotation crew.

The crew and their Soyuz spacecraft were ​placed into ‌orbit some 10 minutes later, beginning a roughly ​three-hour orbital trek to the football field-sized space laboratory ahead of docking at a few hours later.

The ​mission was ​watched by Roscosmos director Dmitry ‌Bakanov and NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, the first NASA chief to visit Russia's launch site since 2018. Tensions over the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war had ​largely prevented Bill Nelson, President Joe Biden's NASA ​chief, from ⁠such talks.