I never claimed it was specifically Lajes (though it may be). And the miss distance is baloney and you know it but won't admit it. Your claims become less and less supportable by evidence so you abandon the attempt to support them and instead resort to repetition.
Touchdown miss distance is almost always in excess of 1300 feet, you failed to account for that.
I showed that the rollout distances are possible
I didn't say it never happens, I said it usually doesn't happen.
well short of the numbers you are using. The fact they sometimes use a longer rollout means nothing.
Actually it means there would have been a disaster at wideawake in those cases. In one case I posted, the rollout was longer than 10,000 feet, touchdown miss distance not included. A TAL-style abort should also cause the shuttle to come in hotter than it otherwise would have.
accomplished this without a drag chute.
The drag chute is irrelevant, I was waiting for to fall into that trap. Drag chutes were employed in 1992, only a few years before ISS assembly started. They were not employed during the early missions and later missions to the ISS were launched in a direction that would not allow access to wideawake.
The point here is that in general the shuttle does not have the touchdown distance+rollout distance necessary to make a safe landing on a 10,000 foot runway. That's not to say it could never happen safely, that's to say it wouldn't happen safely every time.