What’s Happening in Space Policy February 15-21, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy February 15-21, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of February 15-21, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in recess except for pro forma sessions.

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Crew-12 Lifts Off on Eight-Month ISS Mission

Crew-12 Lifts Off on Eight-Month ISS Mission

Crew-12 headed to the International Space Station this morning aboard their SpaceX Crew Dragon Freedom. When they arrive tomorrow, the ISS will be restored to its normal crew complement of seven. The unexpected early return of Crew-11 in January meant that only one NASA astronaut is aboard the ISS right now with two Russian colleagues. Freedom is delivering two NASA astronauts, one Russian, and one from the European Space Agency who will spend eight months conducting scientific research and maintaining the earth-orbiting laboratory that has been permanently occupied by international crews for more than 25 years.

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ULA’s Vulcan Gets USSF Payloads to Orbit Despite Another SRB Anomaly

ULA’s Vulcan Gets USSF Payloads to Orbit Despite Another SRB Anomaly

United Launch Alliance’s (ULA’s) new Vulcan rocket delivered U.S. Space Force satellites to geosynchronous orbit today despite a “significant performance anomaly” on one of the Solid Rocket Boosters. This was only the fourth launch of Vulcan and the second time an SRB malfunctioned. In both cases Vulcan’s core stage compensated for the underperformance and put the payloads where they needed to go. ULA and its partners are investigating what happened.

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Musk Embraces the Moon

Musk Embraces the Moon

Just 12 months after convincing President Trump to use his inaugural address to extol the vision of sending people to Mars, Elon Musk is changing course. Mars is still the long-term goal, but Musk now acknowledges that is years away. His near-term ambition is a “self-growing city” on the Moon, a planetary object he earlier eschewed as a distraction, that would be home to a manufacturing base for AI satellites and a mass driver to send them into deep space.  [Updated, February 11, 2026.]

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What’s Happening in Space Policy February 8-14, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy February 8-14, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of February 8-14, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in session this week.

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Isaacman Wants to Restore NASA’s Core Competencies

Isaacman Wants to Restore NASA’s Core Competencies

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman issued a directive today to restore the agency’s “core competencies” in order to fulfill President Trump’s December 2025 Executive Order on Ensuring American Space Superiority. The directive identifies actions to be taken within either 30 days or 60 days by Center Directors and other top NASA leadership to begin expanding a strong core of civil servants strengthened by contractors and complemented by international and commercial partners.

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House Committee Approves New NASA Authorization Bill

House Committee Approves New NASA Authorization Bill

The House Science, Space, and Technology Committee unanimously approved a new NASA authorization bill today after adopting a number of amendments. Overall the bill reemphasizes congressional commitment to U.S. leadership in space, especially the Moon-to-Mars human exploration program. More than three dozen amendments were considered. Almost all were adopted by voice vote although an amendment to assess challenges with moving space shuttle Discovery to Houston was withdrawn and another to improve NASA’s ability to detect drones entering its airspace was defeated.

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Final FY2026 Defense, FAA Bills Signed into Law

Final FY2026 Defense, FAA Bills Signed into Law

The FY2026 Defense and Transportation-HUD appropriations bills were signed into law today, ending a brief partial government shutdown that began Friday night. The Defense bill funds the U.S. Space Force, and THUD funds the FAA and its Office of Commercial Space Transportation. Coupled with three others in the same package, 11 of the 12 FY2026 appropriations bills are now enacted. Only the Homeland Security bill, controversial because it funds ICE, remains in limbo under a two-week Continuing Resolution.

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NASA Will Wait Until March for Artemis II

NASA Will Wait Until March for Artemis II

Following a Wet Dress Rehearsal (WDR) that ended early this morning, NASA decided to pass on this month’s opportunities to send astronauts around the Moon on the Artemis II mission. At a news conference this afternoon, NASA said they need to review data before deciding when they will be ready, but the earliest is March. The four Artemis II astronauts — three from NASA and one from the Canadian Space Agency — ended their pre-launch quarantine for now. Whenever they do launch, they will become the first humans to fly to the Moon since the Apollo era.

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Artemis II Waiting for WDR Test Results

Artemis II Waiting for WDR Test Results

As of 11:00 pm ET, NASA is still conducting the Artemis II Wet Dress Rehearsal test of the Space Launch System rocket that will send four astronauts around the Moon. The launch could be as early as Sunday, but the actual date depends on NASA’s assessment of the test results. The astronauts are in quarantine in Texas and ready to fly to Kennedy Space Center tomorrow if the answer is “go.” [UPDATE: The decision was to wait until March.]

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