US President Donald Trump speaks during a televised address on the conflict in the Middle East from the Cross Hall of the White House in Washington, DC on April 1, 2026. President Donald Trump made his case for attacking Iran in his first nationwide address more than a month into the war, insisting the United States was close to victory as his approval rating sinks. In an evening speech from the White House, Trump broke little new ground on how the war would end and vowed two to three weeks further of “extremely hard” strikes against Iran. (Photo by Alex Brandon / POOL / AFP)
US President Donald Trump on Monday called and congratulated the Artemis astronauts circling the Moon for making “history,” telling them they’ve “made all America really proud, incredibly proud.”
“You really are modern-day pioneers — all of you,” Trump said, before launching into a friendly interview of sorts with the three Americans and one Canadian who are on a historic 10-day mission around Earth’s natural satellite.
“You’ve got a lot of courage doing what you’re doing,” Trump said, lavishing praise on NASA’s first lunar flyby in more than 50 years.
“America will be second to none in space and everything we’re doing, and we will continue to lead the whole thing into the stars, this incredible journey into the stars,” Trump said, crediting himself with choosing to save the space program.
Trump then conducted a brief question-and-answer session, asking what the dark side of the moon was like and how it felt to go incommunicado with Earth during that part of the space flight.
“I said a little prayer, but then I had to keep rolling,” Artemis pilot Victor Glover responded. “I was actually recording scientific observations of the far side of the Moon.”
The 79-year-old Republican added that he’d spoken to Canada’s leader and hockey legend Wayne Gretzky about the “neighbor” country’s addition to the space mission.
Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen thanked Trump for American “space leadership” and called the effort a “mutually beneficial goal.”
“A nation that leads like (the US) and creates and sets big goals for humanity that brings other countries along with it, is truly incredible,” Hansen said, adding: “Canadians are so proud to be a part of this program.”
Trump ended the call by inviting the astronauts to the White House.
“Congratulations to everybody. I’ll see you at the Oval Office,” he said.
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