Relaunching Nasa’s moon missions

In Depth: Donald Trump’s new directive aims to put humans back on the Moon for the first time since 1972

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Astronaut Dave Scott salutes the US flag during an Apollo 15 moonwalk

Donald Trump has launched a bid to return US astronauts to the Moon, followed by missions to Mars and beyond.

The US president signed a new national space policy directive earlier this month that paves the way for a Nasa-led programme of manned exploration, with support from private sector partners. But no human has set foot on the Moon in 45 years, and the Apollo space programme appeared to be winding down - leading to questions about exactly how Trump plans to leave America’s footprint on the Moon, and when.

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