Viktor Belenko

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File:Former Soviet Pilot Viktor Belenko’s Military Identity Document.jpg
Viktor Belenko's military ID

Viktor Ivanovich Belenko (Template:Langx; February 15, 1947 – September 24, 2023) was a Soviet-born American aerospace engineer and pilot who defected in 1976 to the West while flying his MiG-25 "Foxbat" jet interceptor and landed in Hakodate, Japan. George H. W. Bush, the Director of Central Intelligence at the time, called the opportunity to examine the plane up close an "intelligence bonanza" for the West.<ref>INTELLIGENCE: Bonanza or Bust? Time Magazine, Monday, 1 November 1976</ref> Belenko later became a U.S. aerospace engineer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Early life and defection

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File:Former Soviet Pilot Viktor Belenko’s Knee Pad Notebook with Flight Data - Flickr - The Central Intelligence Agency.jpg
Belenko's knee pad notebook with flight data

Belenko was born in Nalchik, Russian SFSR, in a Russian family (his passport states his ethnicity as Russian). Lieutenant Belenko was a pilot with the 513th Fighter Regiment, 11th Air Army, Soviet Air Defence Forces based in Chuguyevka, Primorsky Krai. On 6 September 1976, he successfully defected to the West by flying his MiG-25 jet fighter to Hakodate Airport in Hokkaido, Japan.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He was married to Lyudmila Petrovna and they had a son, Dmitry (born in January 1973), but at the time of his defection, he was going through a marital crisis, when his wife, hailing from a wealthy family and not liking being a military wife, had told him she was intending to file for divorce and move with their son to her parents' home in Magadan.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

This was the first time that Western military intelligence were able to get a close look at the aircraft and its specifications, and many secrets and surprises were revealed. His defection caused significant damage to the Soviet Air Force.<ref>Template:In lang Предатель – Беленко Виктор Иванович. tkachenko.in.ua</ref> Belenko was granted asylum by U.S. President Gerald Ford, and a trust fund was set up for him, which granted him a very comfortable living in later years. The US government debriefed him for five months after his defection and employed him as a consultant for several years thereafter. Belenko had brought with him the pilot's manual for the MiG-25 since he expected to assist US pilots in evaluating and testing the aircraft.Template:Citation needed

Belenko was not the only pilot to have defected from the Soviet Union in this way or even the first to defect from a Soviet-bloc country. He might have been aware of the US government's policy of awarding large cash prizes to defecting pilots of communist countries.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In March<ref>Mr. Mig: And the Real Story of the First Migs in America, Paul T. Entrekin Retrieved 27 August 2017</ref>Template:Page needed and May 1953,<ref>Skaarup, Harold Page 78, Canadian MiG Flights Retrieved 27 August 2017</ref> two Polish Air Force pilots Lieutenant Franciszek Jarecki and Lieutenant Zdzisław Jaźwiński flew MiG-15s to Denmark. Later in 1953, North Korean pilot No Kum Sok flew his MiG-15 to a US air base in South Korea;<ref name="Mig to freedom">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Page needed the MiG is in the permanent collection of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force, displayed in its original owner markings.<ref>Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15bis National Museum of the U.S. Air Force Retrieved 25 August 2017</ref> Later, Soviet Captain Aleksandr Zuyev flew his MiG-29 to Trabzon, Turkey, on 20 May 1989.<ref name="may21">MiG returned to Soviet Union, United Press International, 21 May 1989.</ref> That MiG-29 was promptly returned to the Soviets.<ref>MiG returned to Soviet Union, United Press International, May 21, 1989.</ref>

Aftermath

The MiG-25's arrival in Japan was a windfall for Western military planners. The Japanese government had originally allowed the United States to examine the plane and to conduct ground tests of the radar and engines only; however, it subsequently allowed the US to dismantle the plane to examine it extensively.<ref>New York Times, 22 September 1976, column 4.</ref> The plane was moved by a US Air Force C-5 Galaxy cargo aircraft from Hakodate to Hyakuri Air Base on 25 September, and by then, experts had determined that the plane was an interceptor, not a fighter-bomber, which was a welcome reassurance for Japanese defense planners.<ref>UNCLAS State Message 239736, U.S. State Department, 27 September 1976.</ref>

On 2 October 1976, the Japanese government announced that it would ship the aircraft back to the USSR in crates from the port of Hitachi and billed the Soviets US$40,000 for crating services and airfield damage at Hakodate.<ref name="barron">MiG Pilot: the Final Escape of Lt. Belenko, John Barron, 1980, Template:ISBN.</ref>Template:Page needed The Soviets responded with a request to return the plane via their own Antonov An-22 aircraft after a rigorous inspection of the crates. The Japanese government refused, and the Soviets finally submitted to the Japanese terms on 22 October 1976.<ref>JAPAN-SOVIET RELATIONS: NEGOTIATIONS FOR RETURN OF MIG-25, TOKYO 15888 221325Z (Confidential), U.S. State Department, 22 October 1976.</ref> The aircraft was moved from Hyakuri to the port of Hitachi on 11 November 1976 on a convoy of trailers. It left in 30 crates aboard the Soviet cargo ship Taigonos on 15 November 1976 and arrived about three days later in Vladivostok.<ref name="fi1976">Flight International, 27 November 1976, p. 1546.</ref> A team of Soviet technicians had been allowed to view subassemblies at Hitachi, and upon finding 20 missing parts,<ref>SHARING MIG 25 INFORMATION WITH THIRD COUNTRIES, TOKYO 220903Z NOV 76 (Secret), U.S. State Department, 22 November 1976.</ref> one being film of the flight to Hakodate,<ref name="fi1976" /> the Soviets attempted to charge Japan US $10 million. Neither the Japanese nor the Soviet bill is known to have been paid.<ref name="barron" />Template:Page needed

A senior diplomat described the Soviet position as "sulky about the whole affair."<ref>JAPAN-SOVIET RELATIONS: NEGOTIATIONS FOR RETURN OF MIG-25, TOKYO 16354 021113Z (Confidential), U.S. State Department, 2 November 1976.</ref> The CIA concluded at the time that "both countries seem anxious to put the problem behind them" and speculated that the Soviets were reluctant to cancel a series of upcoming diplomatic visits because "some useful business is likely to be transacted, and because the USSR, with its political standing in Tokyo so low, can ill-afford setbacks in Soviet–Japanese economic cooperation."<ref>NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE DAILY CABLE, Monday 8 November 1976 Template:Webarchive (Top Secret), Central Intelligence Agency, 1976.</ref>

Life in the United States

Belenko started a new life in the United States. In 1980, the US Congress enacted S. 2961, authorizing citizenship for him, which was signed into law by President Jimmy Carter on 14 October 1980, as Private Law 96-62.<ref>96th Cong. S.2961 Template:Webarchive, A bill for the relief of Viktor Ivanovich Belenko, Bill Summary and Status.</ref><ref>An act for the relief of Viktor Ivanovich Belenko, 94 Stat. 3599. GPO's Federal Digital System.</ref> Eager to avoid attention, and reprisal from the Soviet Union, he took the surname Schmidt and moved around often, mostly living in small towns across the Midwest.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He worked as a consultant to aerospace companies and government agencies, and married a music teacher from North Dakota, Coral Garaas. They had two sons before divorcing.

The Soviet Union repeatedly spread false stories about Belenko being killed in a car accident, returning to Russia, being arrested and executed, or otherwise brought to justice.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Russian journalists claimed that Belenko allegedly also had a son from his first marriage, never divorced his first wife, and never provided child support to her after his defection,<ref>Aleksandr Kots (26 September 2006) Он сел на истребитель и сбежал из СССР. Komsomolskaya Pravda</ref> but Belenko denied this.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The journalists also claimed that his Soviet wife appealed for his return after his defection.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Belenko co-wrote a 1980 autobiography, MiG Pilot: The Final Escape of Lieutenant Belenko with Reader's Digest writer John Barron,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which confirmed that he had a wife and son in the USSR, although Belenko had previously told his son that this was Soviet propaganda.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Belenko almost never appeared in interviews during his life in the United States. He feared for his life until the day he died. However, in a brief and informal bar interview in 2000, he said that he was happy in the United States, remarking, "[Americans] have tolerance regarding other people's opinion. In certain cultures, if you do not accept the mainstream, you would be booted out or might disappear. Here we have people—you know, who hug trees, and people who want to cut them down—and they live side by side!" In this interview he also claimed that he visited Moscow but did not provide any evidence of his trip.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Viktor Belenko died in a nursing home in the small town of Red Bud, Illinois on September 24, 2023, at the age of 76.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He is survived by two sons and four grandchildren, as well as a son from his previous marriage. However, journalists learned about his death only at the end of November. One of his sons told the newspaper that his father had died after a short illness.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There was no memorial service.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

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References

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Further reading

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