Jeff Bezos’s space company Blue Origin has successfully launched its rocket into orbit on its first test flight.
New Glenn – described by Blue Origin as a “giant, reusable rocket” and designed for a minimum of 25 flights – was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, early on Thursday morning.
Coming after a planned launch on Monday was delayed over a build-up of iceon the spacecraft, all seven of the rocket’s main engines successfully fired at lift-off at 2.03am (7.03am in the UK).
Image: New Glenn entered orbit around 10 minutes after launch, marking a successful mission. Pic: AP
Watching from Mission Control nearby, Bezos and company employees broke out in cheers and applause as the rocket went orbital – the main objective of Blue Origin’s launch – around 10 minutes after launch.
Ariane Cornell, vice president of in-space systems for the company, said in a live stream that the launch was a “momentous step” and a “historic launch”.
“We hit our key, critical, number-one objective, we got to orbit safely,” she said. “And y’all, we did it on our first go.”
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The second stage of the rocket is now gliding through orbit, carrying the Blue Ring Pathfinder payload, and its upper stage will later attempt to re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere and burn up over a remote part of the ocean.
Elon Musk, head of rival company SpaceX, congratulated Blue Origin and Bezos “on reaching orbit on the first attempt”.
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Blue Origin also aimed to have New Glenn’s rocket booster return to a landing platform in the ocean so it could be recycled, but it failed to hit its mark.
The company said ahead of the launch that “landing the booster on our first try offshore in the Atlantic is ambitious,” and Bezos told Reuters it would be the “icing on the cake” for the mission.
New Glenn is expected to make six to eight space flights this year if all goes well, Blue Origin added. The next launch is set for the spring.
Mr Bezos founded the space company in 2000. Since 2021, it has been launching smaller private flights to the edge of space.
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has been linked to a second group chat about sensitive military operations, which he reportedly shared with his wife, brother and personal lawyer.
The messages sent via the Signal messaging app are again understood to have contained details of an attack on Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis in March.
The second chat group, initially reported by The New York Times, included about a dozen people. It revealed details of the schedule of the airstrikes, according to the Reuters news agency.
Two sources with knowledge of the matter told Sky News’ US partner network NBC News there were 13 people in the second chat group, and Mr Hegseth divulged the information despite an aide warning him about using an unsecure communications system.
Mr Hegseth’s wife, Jennifer, a former Fox News producer, has attended sensitive meetings with foreign military counterparts, while his brother was hired at the Pentagon as a Department of Homeland Security liaison and senior adviser.
Responding to the latest chat group, White House deputy press secretary Anna Kelly said: “No matter how many times the legacy media tries to resurrect the same non-story, they can’t change the fact that no classified information was shared.
“Recently-fired ‘leakers’ are continuing to misrepresent the truth to soothe their shattered egos and undermine the President’s agenda, but the administration will continue to hold them accountable.”
The “leakers” referred to in the White House statement are four senior officials who were ousted from the Pentagon last week as part of an internal leak investigation.
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4:11
Leaked war plans: ‘Fairly serious’
‘Hegseth put lives at risk’
The New York Times reported that the second chat – named “Defence | Team Huddle” – was created on Mr Hegseth’s private phone.
It detailed the same warplane launch times as the first chat.
Several former and current officials have said sharing those operational details before a strike would have certainly been classified, and their release could have put pilots in danger.
The row over the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was deported to El Salvador from the US in error in March, continues to rock Washington DC.
US correspondent Martha Kelner speaks to Ron Vitiello, Donald Trump’s former acting director of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, about the case and if the president’s border policies are working as he planned.
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NB. This interview was recorded before Kilmar Abrego Garcia was moved from the CECOT prison – where terror suspects are held in severe conditions – to another detention centre in El Salvador.
DHL Express is suspending some shipments to the US as Donald Trump’s new tariff regime takes effect.
From 21 April, shipments worth more than $800 (£603) to US consumers from “any origin” will be temporarily suspended.
New rules that came into effect at the start of April made such shipments subject to increased customs checks.
“This change has caused a surge in formal customs clearances, which we are handling around the clock,” said the parcel delivery service.
Shipments going from business to business worth more than $800 aren’t affected by the suspension, but DHL warned they may also face delays.
Shipments under $800 to either businesses or consumers are not impacted, but one British cycle manufacturer suggested its US customers may need to split orders over $800 into “smaller shipments” to avoid the red tape.
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1:07
Trump: Tariffs are making US ‘rich’
Trump targeting ‘deceptive’ practices
From May, shipments from China and Hong Kong that are worth less than $800 “will be subject to all applicable duties”, according to the White House.
“President Trump is targeting deceptive shipping practices by Chinese-based shippers, many of whom hide illicit substances, including synthetic opioids, in low-value packages,” it said in a statement.
Until now, deliveries worth less than $800 didn’t incur any duties, which allowed low-cost companies Chinese like Shein and Temu to make inroads in the US.
Both have warned their prices will now rise because of the rule changes, starting on 25 April.