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The following post is for those of my readers who are interested in the history of intelligence in this country, particularly during the cold war.
For those of you participating in my occassional "good citizenship class on the Intelligence Community" and how it works, here are some things I think worthy of note:
1. Projects like this are approved by the President. 2. Congressional approval does not seem to be required back in the "good old days", beyond budget approval. That is different now, but the details of that will not be apparent in this case, it was before such things. 3. People die. 4. Top scientists of the country devote their time, sometimes without compensation to help make it happen. 5. Some projects are reasonably priced and get done on or ahead of schedule. 6. The different agencies really are different and compete for money and really do want to do things differently. 7. Projects like this are inherently interdepartmental and ultimately require the agencies to work together. 8. (most importantly) The project helped to deescalate tensions during the cold war on at least three occasions (the bomber gap, the missile gap, the china/taiwan issue).
The following post is for those of my readers who are interested in the history of intelligence in this country, particularly during the cold war.
For those of you participating in my occassional "good citizenship class on the Intelligence Community" and how it works, here are some things I think worthy of note:
1. Projects like this are approved by the President. 2. Congressional approval does not seem to be required back in the "good old days", beyond budget approval. That is different now, but the details of that will not be apparent in this case, it was before such things. 3. People die. 4. Top scientists of the country devote their time, sometimes without compensation to help make it happen. 5. Some projects are reasonably priced and get done on or ahead of schedule. 6. The different agencies really are different and compete for money and really do want to do things differently. 7. Projects like this are inherently interdepartmental and ultimately require the agencies to work together. 8. (most importantly) The project helped to deescalate tensions during the cold war on at least three occasions (the bomber gap, the missile gap, the china/taiwan issue).
When the CIA releases a report about a
project or projects you can be quite sure that whatever project they
are talking about is considered ancient history. In this case we
have the release of a report written in 1991 about the origins,
operations and results of the CIA ventures in overhead photography
via the U2 and A-12 / SR-71 reconnaisance airplanes.
The report itself can be found here:
For those of you who are not aware of
how difficult the U2 is to fly (particularly to land) please take a
look at the following 4 minute Youtube video. It is, among other
things, very funny.
Here are some items that I found
interesting and were (for the most part) new to me.
-- Later uses of the U2 included work
for NASA and other agencies to map terrain in the continental US for
a variety of land management purposes. This I think was before the
LANDSAT satellites.
-- I knew the U2 was not pressurized and had a suit for the pilot that was basically a space suit to keep him pressurized. What I had not realized is that this is one of the first times that this had been done, the U2 was happening in the mid 1950s and that was before the manned space program, so far as I know.
-- I knew the U2 was not pressurized and had a suit for the pilot that was basically a space suit to keep him pressurized. What I had not realized is that this is one of the first times that this had been done, the U2 was happening in the mid 1950s and that was before the manned space program, so far as I know.
-- Initial testing of the U2 resulted
in a greatly increased number of UFO sightings and lead to Project
Bluebook, the famous US Air Force study of unidentified flying objects. At the time the U2 was flying higher than common belief
thought we could fly, and was catching sunlight during sunset and
appeared to be glowing dot of fire at very high altitude to lower transcontinental
airplanes.
-- The U2 is really cheap. Less than
$1M a pop in its initial configuration (not including extras like a
camera, a crew, etc).
-- The U2 was normally flown out of
overseas locations because of limited range. It was not refuelled
in the air, apparently. This made its very small operational
footprint a big advantage over later airplanes (e.g. it used standard
aviation fuel, did not need that many people to maintain it, etc).
-- The U2 was really dangerous to fly.
Particularly in the later days when we were collaborating with the
Nationalist Chinese to photograph mainland China they were losing
planes and pilots right and left.
-- The CIA did not want to run these
airplanes or their operations, they wanted to focus on their core
expertise which was more in the areas of human intelligence. But
Eisenhower wanted a civilian agency to run this so that the
overflights would be less provocative. In other words, when a plane
was shot down over the Soviet Union, they wanted a civilian to climb
out not a Colonel in the US Air Force.
-- The Air Force wanted nothing to do
with an airplane that could not be used as a military jet. The U2,
fundamentally a powered glider, did not have the ability to take the
kind of G forces that a military jet has to be able to withstand, so
the Air Force rejected it.
-- The SR-71 project started soon after
the U2 project because everyone knew that the U2 would not be immune
to air defenses very shortly.
-- For a variety of reasons the A-12 /
SR-71 was not used ultimately for strategic reconnaisance. It did
have a limited role in tactical reconnaisance but was retired after
only a few years.
-- The competition / issues between the
CIA and the Air Force versions of the A-12 / SR-71 plane was much
more complicated and weird than I had realized.
Regarding photography, we learn, among
other things:
-- Kodak invented a new thin film for
the U2. I presume this has to do with both the incredible weight
limitations and also the need to fit a certain amount of film into a
limited space.
-- Lots of cameras and lenses were
designed for the U2. Several of them would not fit in the limited
space available and had to be redesigned.
-- Apparently some of these cameras are
still flying in U2s to this day.
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