India lost communication with its spacecraft attempting to land on the moon early Saturday, appearing to miss its shot for now at becoming the fourth nation to do so.

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi and dozens of scientists looked on from a space center in Bangalore ― and at least hundreds of thousands watched live from around the world ― the nation’s space program lost communication with a lander descending toward the lunar south pole.

“For the last few hours, the entire nation was awake,” Modi said in a televised speech to the nation at the center later. “We were awake in solidarity: in solidarity with our scientists who had embarked on one of the most ambitious missions of our space program. We came very close, but we will need to cover more ground in the times to come,” he added, apparently giving up the unmanned mission as lost.

A consoling Modi encouraged India to look forward to “many more opportunities to be proud and rejoice ... the best is yet to come.” He praised the “professionals who have given your best always and will give us several more opportunities to smile.”

The descent of a lander in the Chandrayaan-2 space mission had been “as planned and normal” until an altitude of about 1.3 miles, after which communication from the spacecraft to the ground stations was lost, according to the India Space Research Organization’s mission control center. “Data is being analyzed,” the group added.

“India is proud of our scientists! They’ve given their best and have always made India proud,” Modi tweeted from the space center, where he had gone to watch “history unfold,” as he put it earlier.

“These are moments to be courageous, and courageous we will be!” he added.