Top speed 10,000 KPS = about 1/10th the speed of light. So the nearest system is about 5 light years x 10 = 50 years away (and it's a one way trip). For the expense and effort, what would the return be? Any human crew would be marooned there, likely to die in a very unpleasant manner (lack of biological necessities). And we'd never even know if they made it!! Wow. Talk about a pointless project.
So why not just send them to the bottom of the ocean and leave them there to die? They couldn't even send back information because we have no transmitters that can cross interstellar space.
Maybe we need to go back to the drawing board and hope for a breakthrough in FTL transportation before we start aspiring to become space mariners. In fact, if things keep going forward as rapidly as they have been with technology, any mission traveling to another system at 1/10th C would likely be overtaken by some vessel using FTL drive the way the road runner would overtake the coyote.
And space being as big as it is, an FTL vessel trying to locate and intercept (uh, rescue) any slower vessel would likely be unable to find it in the vast emptiness of the universe. Even a few fractions of a degree of deviance from a straight course (say if they had some sort of navigation system failure or minuscule mis-calibration) would, after years of drifting, put them outside nominal trajectory so far away from any search team's vicinity that they might as well be in another universe.
