The International Space Station (ISS) was transformed into an emergency shelter on Friday. Following a dramatic escalation of a long-festering structural defect, NASA Mission Control in Houston issued an emergency directive ordering five of the seven astronauts aboard the orbiting outpost to immediately evacuate into a “safe haven” posture.
For nearly two frantic hours, SpaceX Crew-12 Commander Jessica Meir, Pilot Jack Hathaway, ESA Astronaut Sophie Adenot, NASA’s Chris Williams, and Cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev were forced to lock themselves inside the docked Crew Dragon Freedom capsule.
The team wore full spacesuits and prepared for an emergency undocking and return to Earth. The reason? A rapidly deteriorating air leak in the Russian-built Zvezda service module that went from a minor engineering nuisance to a life-threatening crisis.
The “Saw Scandal” at 17,500 MPH
The emergency began during routine repressurization of the PrK transfer tunnel, an aging corridor at the rear of the Russian module used by arriving cargo spacecraft. While the area has experienced minor micro-fissures since 2019, data streaming to Earth indicated that the structural degradation had suddenly doubled. The leak spiked from an acceptable one pound of air loss per day to an alarming two pounds per day, indicating that the microscopic cracks were physically widening.

The crisis peaked due to an astonishing operational clash between international flight controllers. According to senior aerospace sources, Roscosmos cosmonauts Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikaev proposed a highly controversial, aggressive repair plan: using an industrial mechanical saw inside the pressurized environment to cut back structural paneling and locate the underlying fissure.
NASA officials vehemently objected to the high-friction, debris-generating technique in microgravity, fearing it could compromise the structural integrity of the entire station segment. Out of pure self-preservation and a complete lack of faith in the Russian workaround, NASA ordered the non-Russian crew to immediately isolate themselves inside the SpaceX capsule until Roscosmos backed down.
Roscosmos’ Carelessness
The phrase “out of an abundance of caution” is diplomatic code for a terrifying reality: the Russian space agency’s systematic neglect and decaying infrastructure are actively holding international astronauts hostage in low-Earth orbit.
The Zvezda module was launched over a quarter of a century ago in July 2000. It is an ancient, vibrating piece of metal undergoing high-cycle thermal fatigue, expanding and contracting every 90 minutes as the station transitions between blistering orbital sunlight and freezing darkness. For seven years, Russia has treated these structural cracks with the aerospace equivalent of duct tape, applying layers of experimental sealant (“Germetal-1”) and calling it a day.
The suggestion by Russian specialists to take a saw to an actively leaking, pressurized bulkhead while the space station traveled at five miles per second is pure, unadulterated desperation. It shows a complete breakdown of disciplined engineering protocols within Roscosmos.
The U.S. and European space agencies have poured billions into keeping this joint project alive, but our astronauts shouldn’t have to spend their missions sitting in emergency escape pods because Russia refuses to acknowledge that their half of the laboratory is structurally failing. If Roscosmos cannot safely manage their hardware without triggering evacuation alerts, the Russian segment needs to be permanently sealed off before a catastrophic decompression event kills a crew.
A Fragile Truce in a Leaky Outpost
The immediate panic subsided only after Roscosmos agreed to abort their reckless mechanical intervention. Once the repair efforts were officially paused to “assess more data,” NASA rescinded the shelter order, allowing the astronauts to exit the Crew Dragon capsule and return to their scheduled microgravity research.
The structural problem, however, remains completely unsolved. While cosmonauts successfully slapped a temporary layer of sealant over the first identified fissure, a second leak located on the tricky conical portion of the transfer chamber remains open to the vacuum of space. As the station approaches its planned retirement around 2030, this latest scare proves that the greatest threat to international cooperation in space isn’t geopolitical tension on the ground; it’s the slow, inevitable snapping of metal fatigue in orbit.





