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Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the moon 48 years ago — here’s the speech Nixon would have read if they’d died

NASA knew the mission was very risky, so the White House prepared remarks in case the astronauts died

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Apollo 11 astronauts quarantined in their "Hornet 3" trailer meet then-President Richard Nixon. Photo: NASA
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By Dave Mosher

Forty-eight years ago this month, people around the world were glued to their TVs and radios as the first astronauts landed on the moon.

Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins — the crew of NASA’s Apollo 11 mission — blasted into space atop a giant Saturn V rocket on July 16, 1969. About a week later, on July 24, they safely splashed down in the North Pacific Ocean.

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Although the plucky astronaut crew made the feat look easy, NASA knew better: This was easily the most perilous voyage in history.

So, shortly before the mission, Apollo 8 astronaut and White House liaison Frank Borman called President Nixon’s speechwriter, William Safire.

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“You’ll want to consider an alternative posture for the President in the event of mishaps,” Borman told Safire, according to an NBC “Meet The Press” interview with Safire on July 18, 1999.

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