The Stolen MiG-25 "Foxbat" and Viktor Belenko's Defection of 1976

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2024
  • On the 6th of September 1976, a fighter-pilot of the Soviet Union did the unthinkable. During a training mission near the Siberian airbase Chuguyevka, near Vladivostok, USSR pilot Viktor Belenko, flying his Mikoyan-Gurevich MIG-25, nicknamed “Foxbat”, suddenly dove below radar detection elevation, turned off his radio and sped towards Japan as fast as he could.
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    In Japan, the aircraft popped up on radar screens after not too long. But due to its speed, before any action could be taken against this potentially hostile intruder, Belenko had already reached the airfield of Hakodate. Rapidly approaching the airport his MiG-25 only had 30 seconds of fuel remaining, and as such Belenko again dove full-speed towards the airfield. During his descent, he narrowly escaped a collision with a Japanese passenger plane, reached the landing strip at a speed that was way too high, knocked over two large antennas on the airfield and with squeaking brakes finally managed to come to a standstill after 250 metres. Viktor Belenko had officially defected to the West.
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    The information about the aircraft the U.S. published was that it was a ‘thing from the past’ designed with ‘crude technology’. And that wasn’t too wrong, although a bit exaggerated. The US had indeed overestimated the capabilities of the MiG-25 by a longshot, with US Defence Secretary Schlesinger once stating that the “MiG -25 is the only aircraft scaring all the world.” This conviction stemmed from the Soviets flying MiG-25s over Israel without being intercepted during the Yom Kippur war.
    Upon inspection, it became clear the aircraft indeed was easy to repair and could suffer intense heat and damage due to its steel airframe. Its radar had two wavebands, which meant it could not be jammed, something the US was eager to copy. Nevertheless, its radar technology was considered outdated.
    Belenko himself revealed a significant amount of information as well. For example, he explained that the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird, a long-range high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft caused enormous frustration within the USSR airforce. It was assumed the MiG-25 was the only soviet aircraft that could intercept the blackbird. The Blackbird would fly at an incredible speed and high altitude on reconnaissance missions, and although the Soviet airforce apparently tried to shoot one Blackbird down by using multiple MiG-25s, the plane simply was too fast for both the MiG-25s and its missiles.
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    www.nytimes.com/1976/09/29/ar...
    theaviationgeekclub.com/the-d...
    www.kijkmagazine.nl/artikel/v...
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Komentáře • 329

  • @mbathroom1
    @mbathroom1 Před 3 lety +301

    Defected to the west but actually went east

    • @willnailer2118
      @willnailer2118 Před 3 lety +6

      😂😂😂

    • @luketorres1408
      @luketorres1408 Před 3 lety +5

      🎶 LIKE A G-6

    • @sunyue5076
      @sunyue5076 Před 3 lety +10

      Japan was part of the "western" allies. When you talk about "the west" you not only refer to it geographically but its values. And japan certainly is also a democracy

    • @mbathroom1
      @mbathroom1 Před 3 lety

      @@sunyue5076 japan isn't western, the west is white countries

    • @koc988
      @koc988 Před 3 lety +15

      @@mbathroom1 someone forgot about South America

  • @user-xx5mt6nb6z
    @user-xx5mt6nb6z Před 3 lety +194

    "By the way, I did not steal the airplane. I had clearances. I just changed my flight plans slightly in the air." V. Belenko.

    • @cranberryeater7459
      @cranberryeater7459 Před 2 lety +6

      *Traitor* who betrayed his own countrymen. Gave up technology that the USSR developed to the enemy to benefit himself. How many lives it could have saved.

    • @woozy7405
      @woozy7405 Před 2 lety +32

      @@cranberryeater7459 Who said he defected? He performed a special midair relocation.

    • @woozy7405
      @woozy7405 Před 2 lety +17

      ​@@cranberryeater7459 Maybe consider the way his country treated him, the lies they told their people, and what conditions were in it. Instead you blame him. You're angry he revealed your miserable truth and wanted a better life.

    • @woozy7405
      @woozy7405 Před 2 lety +13

      ​@@cranberryeater7459 Plenty of lives were saved with the US finally realizing the "technology" the USSR developed was a piece of junk. It did more good and saved more lives being sold to poorer countries which were the only ones low enough to desire that plane.

    • @h8GW
      @h8GW Před rokem +5

      @Woozy I'm not a betting man, but I'd put good money on that _someone_ here is also salty about Ukraine.

  • @The_Custos
    @The_Custos Před 3 lety +88

    "I'm defecting, and coming in to land." *in Russian*
    Hakodate flight control: NANI!?

  • @tomcarroll6116
    @tomcarroll6116 Před 3 lety +86

    In 1989, while guiding for a salmon fishing lodge outside of King Salmon, Alaska a couple of F-15 pilots from the nearby base came out to fish with us. They had Viktor 'in their care" and I spent several days with him. One of the most interesting people I had the pleasure of fishing with!

    • @joby-wankenobinolan3428
      @joby-wankenobinolan3428 Před 3 lety +1

      What was he like?

    • @tomcarroll6116
      @tomcarroll6116 Před 3 lety +33

      @@joby-wankenobinolan3428 Somewhat reticent and soft spoken, but willing to talk about life in the U.S.S.R. vs America. Told me about how when first taken out to a supermarket that he didn't believe it was real - that average American citizens had access to so much - he dismissed it as some sort of sham. He related that Russian propaganda painted America as a miserable place with a failing economy and a dejected, dispirited populace. He said that he found Americans to be the happiest and friendliest people he had ever encountered and attributed it to the fact that we were truly free.

    • @R3NOV8
      @R3NOV8 Před 2 lety +13

      @@tomcarroll6116 that is 100% true. I've immigrated in the 90s and the supermarkets were a shock to me. As well as everyone smiling.

    • @hogopogo7616
      @hogopogo7616 Před 2 lety

      @@tomcarroll6116 The same propaganda is going on in today's Russia.The song remains the same.

    • @CreatingAlong
      @CreatingAlong Před rokem +1

      @@R3NOV8 🙂

  • @thevoxofreason8468
    @thevoxofreason8468 Před 3 lety +45

    I read the book "Mig Pilot" in the late 80's when I was around 13 yo. I was fascinated by fighter planes, pilots and the Cold War...and this story had it all.

    • @robertorequenes2459
      @robertorequenes2459 Před 3 lety +3

      I found that book in a MWR library in Iraq after I saw destroyed Iraqi Mig 25 on the Air Field

    • @hogopogo7616
      @hogopogo7616 Před 2 lety

      There's a new Cold War coming, stay tuned.

    • @christianorr1059
      @christianorr1059 Před 2 lety

      @@robertorequenes2459 Ironically, I read the book in 2011, whilst I was working as a contractor at the Al Asad Airbase Flightline Badging Office, a short distance from the "graveyard" where the dead IqAF Foxbat was located!

    • @christianorr1059
      @christianorr1059 Před 2 lety +1

      Great book! However, the host of the video is incorrect when he states that it was an autobiography authored by Belenko himself; it was actually written by John Barron.

  • @crazybrit-nasafan
    @crazybrit-nasafan Před 3 lety +72

    Awesome vid. If you are interested the Japanese company Hasegawa released a model kit of the MIG25 shortly after this defection. The markings for Belenko's aircraft are included in it.

    • @crazybrit-nasafan
      @crazybrit-nasafan Před 3 lety +11

      Forgot to mention, rumour has it that Hasegawa were allowed access to the aircraft to take measurements. The kit is still produced and available. I have one to build.

    • @HoH
      @HoH  Před 3 lety +12

      Very cool, thanks for pointing it out! When I was a kid I used to play with Airfix soldiers and haven't really thought about them for many years. Brings back memories!

    • @crazybrit-nasafan
      @crazybrit-nasafan Před 3 lety +2

      @@HoH Airfix were a big part of my childhood too. And still a big thing for me as I work in the model Industry, and I created the 'Unofficial Airfix Modellers forum' I used to work on real aircraft too and am restoring the Ercoupe cockpit section in my avatar and a Cessna 140 fuselage too.

    • @memonk11
      @memonk11 Před 3 lety +4

      I ran to the hobby store as soon as that came out. Well... actually, my older brother drove.

    • @h8GW
      @h8GW Před rokem +1

      Stealth burn via a no-so-stealthy aircraft.

  • @WorldsTallestLeprechaun
    @WorldsTallestLeprechaun Před rokem +15

    Years ago, I got a summer job cleaning villas/cabins at a very fancy resort in the north woods, and one day I found a book about Belenko, which was both an autobiography and a regular biography. (from Victor’s POV and stuff that wasn’t from his POV) and the things he revealed about life in Russia were pretty eye-opening for how shit everything was. The constant, intelligence-insulting lies that the people were basically forced to accept, the corruption and general incompetence, were crazy.
    One example stands out; he lived in a town where tanks were made, and had to help out when he was younger. (-ish. Like, a teenager I think) and the Foreman for the tank factory told all the employees “We make TRACTORS, do you hear me!? It doesn’t matter who asks you what we do, if it’s a family member or a friend, or even someone who claims to be from the party (government), you tell them we make TRACTORS, got it?”
    Belenko knew this was fucking stupid, because they had to park the “tractors” outside in plain view underneath tarps, which would be OBVIOUSLY tank-shaped what with the gun-barrel sticking out. And that’s only when they had enough tarps to cover them, otherwise they’d just park the finished tanks out in the open where everyone could see them. And yet they’d STILL have to lie and say “We only make tractors.”

    • @Silver_Prussian
      @Silver_Prussian Před 8 měsíci

      Cause everything he says should be taken at face value.You know one of my favourite thing about defectors in general is their ability to awe the public with their over exaggerated ,,truths" which go from reality straight the realm of kys fantasy land.
      Now if you were to stop for a second and read about his personal life some things raise an eyebrows.
      Like why didnt he ever visit his child, why didnt he atleast divorce his wife before starting another relationship with another woman with whom he had two kids which he would latter divorce as well. Man this guy is so great its just that all the women around him s*ck, right ?
      Defectors are people who habe in interest but their own well being rarely do they have any morals guiding their actions. They are politically self made public stars whos main objective is to tell folks how nice the place they live in is and how everything outside of that place is just awful.

    • @igortchernowitzer927
      @igortchernowitzer927 Před 6 měsíci

      Life in modern russia is still the same shit russians live on

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      @@Silver_Prussian -- After knowing Viktor Belenko (personally) for a number of years starting in 1980 in Long Beach, CA I got to know him and believe what he said. *I met Russian fighter pilot Viktor Belenko in 1980 in Long Beach, CA - met him through my Dad. Dad and Vik (and we) became good friends for years. Dad got Belenko on as a consultant in the aeronautics/aerospace industry here in Southern California in the late 1970s or so. He would visit Dad for a few days at a time at Dad's home in Texas on a few occasions during the 1980/90s and 2000s. --- I deleted a couple of paragraphs so-as-to-not to bore you...
      Our friend Viktor Belenko passed away last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. Viktor Belenko was granted American citizenship in 1980 - during the Carter administration. Vik was a good man, led an interesting life, a great friend and passed away as a loyal American citizen. ~ Al Thompson III.

  • @jaybartgis5148
    @jaybartgis5148 Před 3 lety +20

    Could you imagine what they'd fucking do to him if Japan returned him to the USSR

    • @ChloeTheMarxistFxg
      @ChloeTheMarxistFxg Před 3 lety +1

      "Trialed" him and shot him in the back of the head.

    • @mudkingz6432
      @mudkingz6432 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ChloeTheMarxistFxg they would have skipped the trial and moved directly to the execution!

    • @alwaysdisputin9930
      @alwaysdisputin9930 Před 2 lety

      They would've made an example out of him.

  • @reubenmarchant2229
    @reubenmarchant2229 Před 3 lety +16

    I read his co-written book "MIG Pilot", fascinating.

  • @_Abjuranax_
    @_Abjuranax_ Před 3 lety +65

    The Military first laughed at the Mig-25, "It has exposed Rivets!" But the Engineers pointed out that where they were didn't affect Drag. "It has Tubes." Hmmm... take at least 2 precise hits to knock it out, and its EMP proof as well. " Its Radar is antiquated and way too large." What do you say, kill a rabbit at 3 miles? And it will push right through most of our Counter-measures. This thing was designed to fly through a Nuclear Battlefield and intercept our Bombers, at the lowest possible price, and it would have done its job with simplistic precision.

    • @thefederalist9982
      @thefederalist9982 Před 3 lety +7

      Could kill a rabbit out to 300 yards. It was developed in response to the B-70 bomber.

    • @timdillon4876
      @timdillon4876 Před 2 lety +4

      Thing is the bad maneuverability meant it could not engage other interceptors very well and eventually if the west made an interceptor just fast enough or with weapons that could target it effectively then it would be in trouble. Still with its incredible speed it still would be a pain in the ass and could be used to targeted bombers or even important ground targets

    • @Silver_Prussian
      @Silver_Prussian Před 8 měsíci +2

      It was a great aircraft, set the basics for what any interceptors needs and what they dont need.
      People dont het the fact that its not a multirole or a fighter but an interceptor and was designed as such.
      Its like laughing at a fire truck for being a fire truck and not a sports car.

    • @Silver_Prussian
      @Silver_Prussian Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@timdillon4876because at speeds of mach 2.8 at altitude of 80.000ft or higher you would be able to turn in no time and dogfight ? It had one of the best radars ever and there was no other interceptor that can catch it.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@Silver_Prussian -- The MiG 31 Foxhound was basically and improved version f the legendary Foxbat. The 31 has wider wings to make is more stable at lower speeds. The speed of BOTH were set at mach-2.83, even though the Israelis allegedly clocked a MiG-25 Foxbat at mach-3.2. But at those speeds the engines had to be replaced often.

  • @migmit
    @migmit Před rokem +8

    Actually, Belenko's trial in Japan was a formality. He did break certain laws and, therefore, had to stand trial. But it was prearranged with the judge that Belenko would be found guilty (as he was), but not given any punishment.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      Vik was granted American citizenship in 1980, when I met thim in Long Beach, CA. We became friends for years.

  • @paulfrancis8836
    @paulfrancis8836 Před 3 lety +25

    Victor probably still has a reward on his head to this day. The US Air Force could have used him.

    • @TKA322
      @TKA322 Před rokem

      The AF did, as Victor toured and spoke with our pilots.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      Vik passed away last November 2023 in Ohio at 76.

  • @jerryolais7780
    @jerryolais7780 Před 3 lety +22

    Met Mr Bellenko around 1989- 90 in Cali.
    Heard the defection story.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      * I met Russian fighter pilot Viktor Belenko in 1980 in Long Beach, CA - met him through my Dad. Dad and Vik (and we) became good friends for years. Dad got Belenko on as a consultant in the aeronautics/aerospace industry here in Southern California in the late 1970s or so. He would visit Dad for a few days at a time at Dad's home in Texas on a few occasions during the 1980/90s and 2000s.
      We talked about his mother country, the good people, life- in general, politics and drank good whiskey. Belenko had a great sense of humor. He remarried and later got divorced in the US. They had had 2 sons.
      I lost contact with Belenko for about 20-25 years. I searched periodically... with no success. However, I found out just a couple months ago during an obituary search (my last resort) that Belenko changed his last name to Schmidt for a time, and then changed it back to Belenko a few years ago. Mystery solved!
      Unfortunately, during my search via obituaries I ran across the newspaper article confirming the passing of our friend Viktor Belenko last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. Viktor Belenko was granted American citizenship in 1980 - during the Carter administration. Vik was a good man, led an interesting life, a great friend and passed away as a loyal American citizen. ~ Al Thompson III.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      PS. Belenko stated the MiG-25 Foxbat was fast, but had poor maneuverability and the engines had to be replace after 150 hours.

  • @ChiefKene
    @ChiefKene Před 2 lety +5

    I came across this because of about Mr.Belenko story and his first time seeing the grocery store. I stayed because I was absolutely fascinated by everything in this video. Excellent video , great quality. Definitely earned an active sub

  • @DardanellesBy108
    @DardanellesBy108 Před 3 lety +95

    I was about ten when this happened. Before the defection I remember hearing about the Mig-25. I had other friends who were also into military aircraft. Everything in our young minds was exaggerated myth. The US was going to be brought to it’s knees by this incredible aircraft! What could we possibly do about it? Unfortunately lots of the aviation books I read in my school library were about 1950’s and 1960’s US aircraft and I really thought we were screwed! Haha!
    Ahhh youth.

    • @robertsansone1680
      @robertsansone1680 Před 3 lety +11

      I'm a little older than you & I remember hearing the same type of worries about
      the T-62 tank. Then came The Yom Kippur War. You know the rest of that story.

    • @hogopogo7616
      @hogopogo7616 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DardanellesBy108 Especially when it's russian made.

    • @pottyputter05
      @pottyputter05 Před 2 lety +5

      @@robertsansone1680 funny how history is repeating itself right now eh? You must have a similar perspective to my father watching the Russian confederation from '91 to today and the rumors of them being able to challenge the USA on the battlefield. Conventional military comparisons are kinda laughable now but it's just awful the way we've found out, Ukraine has suffered horribly but given us a gift in both destroying the myth of the Russian "near peer" and by extention the Chinese but also being an example of a people united that we haven't seen in a long time.

    • @robertsansone1680
      @robertsansone1680 Před 2 lety +4

      @@pottyputter05 When I was a teenager in the Seventies, I would read about the weapons of the Cold War. NATO vs. The Warsaw Pact. "They have so many tanks, we have so many". Aircraft, ships etc. The big wildcard in the deck was, will the E. European "Allies" of the Soviets fight like tigers or shoot their Russian Masters in the back & join us? Judging from the way things turned out, I would guess the latter of the scenarios. Believe me, the Soviets factored in this possibility a lot more than we did.

    • @lampegutt123
      @lampegutt123 Před rokem

      Om noen in the 90s. To me it’s fascinating how both the peoples of the SU and the west were certain the other side was bent on the destruction of the other side. The arms race was founded and justified with scaring their populations with their enemy being evil and would destroy their entire nation if they had the chance. But in 1947 Stalin actually suggested to the UN Security Council, to destroy and never produce any nuclear weapons. But the US refused and so the Soviets developed their own, and the threat of total destruction of the world was and still is a very real possibility. Extremely sad, and I as a citizen of a NATO country focus more on what role the US/NATO has in endangering world peace.
      I mean Bush Sr and the American delegation to the conference on German unification promised many times that if the SU pulled out of Eastern Europe and they did. By doing this they knew the whole Warsaw Pact would become fully independent nations. All the Gorbachev asked for in return, was that NATO (an alliance founded to fight the Soviets and do whatever it could to isolate the Soviets) would not expand eastward and that this new Unified Germany would remain militarily neutral. This was of course ignored after the unification and withdrawal of Soviet forces in Europe. And thanks to this we now have a paranoid Russia that feels NATO is slowly trying to choke Russia off. And it’s not a bad observation! Yet when Putin after warning NATO 10+ times not to expand in to Ukraine and Georgia, they still went ahead, he was left with no other choice but to invade them both. Had just Ukraine (not even the whole Warsaw pact) remained neutral, we wouldn’t be an inch from ww3 like we are now in 2023. To add insult to injury, we’re supplying Ukraine and making Russia bleed for every kilometre of Ukraine they occupy. But it has nothing to do with our governments “just being so obsessed with democracy and freedom”. 😂
      Americas biggest weapons customer and the largest military ally they have in the Middle East (Saudis) still execute people WITH A SEORD for like, adulterous or smoking marijuana. Or being a journalist critical of the royal family..
      The US doesn’t give a shit about democracy or human rights. It’s only justification to commit horrible atrocities and to do business with the worst war criminals and whatever else they want to. So stop talking about Putin until we fix our own leaders!

  • @talijamir5395
    @talijamir5395 Před 3 lety +18

    Just imagine if it was during Stalin regime..

  • @LooxJJ
    @LooxJJ Před 2 lety +6

    there are 2 sides of this story: After the loss of Foxbat's data to the US via this incident, the Soviet engineers now started to upgrade all Mig-25 to higher standard (Mig-31), however, they did NOT have any avionic or radar system that would improve system overall. Comes Iranian revolution of 1979, and F-14's data came to USSR on a silver plate. Yes, Mig-31's Zaslon BRLS/RP series radar was originally based on F-14's very own AWG-9 - also full data of AIM-54 Phoenix. However, another twist of story is that CIA managed attain all data of Mig-31 as well. By late 80's, USSR knew that US knew of Mig-31 by paying off one of defense contractors (along with other info related to NAS systems). Spy game is always intriguing.

  • @Gunrunner4532
    @Gunrunner4532 Před 3 lety +50

    It’s my understanding that we (The U.S.) put out a reward to any pilot who could deliver a Mig-25 to us, and the pilot would be protected diplomatically as well. This pilot reacted to that offer, I believe

    • @whiteonggoy7009
      @whiteonggoy7009 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes that's true...mark Felton on CZcams explains payments

    • @Ronaldo882.
      @Ronaldo882. Před 2 lety +1

      Absolutely true.

    • @migmit
      @migmit Před rokem

      Yes, because obviously a military pilot in the USSR would be aware of such a reward offered by the country that is officially recognized as the biggest enemy of his own one. Perhaps it would even pop up as an ad in his Google search.

    • @wafu6058
      @wafu6058 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@migmitif you need a google ad to tell you any foreign aversary will pay, protect and go to any lengths for foreign bleeding edge technology my dude you are beyond dumb...
      He didnt need to know the offer was on the table to know he would be given all these anyways because it not only sends a message for future defectors, because the better you treat your prisoners of war, the better you will come out but also because you are benefitting incalculable amounts that whatever they paid him, would still not be anywhere near worth what they got from that plane and from him regarding soviet tactics

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      I knew Vik for years and know nothing about any payment(s). Belenko always said he was tired of how the Soviet top gun pilots are treated. A times they even had to pay for their own food - whereas here in America our top guns are treated like rock stars. He couldn't believe how much and variety of food we had at the grocery stores and much more.

  • @-C.S.R
    @-C.S.R Před 4 měsíci +1

    I read his book when I was in high school. It's such a crazy story! Not just the defection or leading up to it but when he was brought to America and he got to see how we lived it blew his mind! He thought it was all a lie at first, but the Americans were playing tricks on him but one day when he was sitting in a park just watching people he realized there was no way they could orchestrate all this and he couldn't believe it.
    I've been saying for years this should be a movie or turned into a miniseries!

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      You are right. Vik told me the same stuff.

  • @HistoriaenCeluloide
    @HistoriaenCeluloide Před 3 lety +11

    I guess the enemy appreciates betrayal but despises the betrayer. Great story gentleman. Thank you for sharing it.

  • @seph9980
    @seph9980 Před 3 lety +12

    This could’ve dramatized thrillingly in a movie. C’mon, Japan, this is still very relevant. Make a movie out of it.

    • @Full_Otto_Bismarck
      @Full_Otto_Bismarck Před 2 lety +3

      I think this incident did at least inspire the 1982 Clint Eastwood film, Firefox.

    • @07_danishwistara29
      @07_danishwistara29 Před 2 lety +4

      you know how the Japanese make those animes, could make an interesting anime

  • @davidsmithson9236
    @davidsmithson9236 Před 3 lety +4

    Now I need to read that book. Many thanks sir.

  • @NinjaTaco__
    @NinjaTaco__ Před 3 lety +9

    The MiG-25 is such a beatiful piece of engineering!

  • @matchesburn
    @matchesburn Před 8 měsíci +3

    Sadly, Viktor Belenko died on September 24, 2023.

    • @veronika7736
      @veronika7736 Před 7 měsíci +3

      It's unfortunate this traitor lived such a long life.

    • @matchesburn
      @matchesburn Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@veronika7736
      Cope and seethe.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      I was told Vik passed away last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. I knew Vik personally since 1980 and only found out of his passing during a newspaper search - We had lost contact for 20-25 years =- looked for him foor years.. I'll have to recheck the date. want to be accurate. Thanks for posting.

  • @genecollins7375
    @genecollins7375 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I was assigned to the Marine Corps' VMA-513 in Iwakuni, Japan when this happened, and recall everyone going on high alert upon Belenko's defection. The aircraft was almost immediately concealed into one of Hakotake's hangars by Japanese authorities, then subsequently deconstructed by Americans authorities, all while the Soviets continously screamed for its immediate return. The narrator's correct, this behemoth was filled with antiquated technology, with vacuum hoses throughout. Bottom line: the US was so convinced by Soviet propaganda it wound up already exceeding their technology by more than a quarter of a century. One other discovery was that although the Foxbat could exceed just over mach 3, the engine was essentially worthless after doing so. Its worth reading Belenko's "Mig Pilot," of which I purchased upon its initial release.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      I knew Vik Belenko for years, after meeting him in 1980 in CA. You are right on ever word. Vik passed away last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. He was a very interesting man and a good friend and became a loyal American in 1980.

    • @genecollins7375
      @genecollins7375 Před 3 měsíci

      Yeah, his was both a compelling and sad story. The Russian people are no different than any others around the world. They deserve to personally pursue their dreams, an opportunity to earn a decent living, and raise their children to accomplish anything they desire. Today, as under communisn, their government is the greatest impediment to their happiness.

  • @luxembourgishempire2826
    @luxembourgishempire2826 Před 3 lety +19

    Wow... Another interesting video house of history! Keep it up!

    • @HoH
      @HoH  Před 3 lety

      More to come!

  • @GSXK4
    @GSXK4 Před 2 lety +3

    I bet his commanding officer evacuated his bowels when he learned Bolenko defected.

  • @verbm3353
    @verbm3353 Před 2 lety +3

    Dad went to grab some milk from Japan

  • @mbathroom1
    @mbathroom1 Před 3 lety +6

    Wow this is so amazing. One wrong moment anywhere and so many people would have died

  • @catlinferris5970
    @catlinferris5970 Před 3 lety +19

    What a story, imagine his other son and wife...

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      I feel bad for them. But that was Vik's decision. We became friends in 1980.

  • @user-zm3qz2vq4u
    @user-zm3qz2vq4u Před 3 lety +13

    I think that a more interesting story would be about the Iraqi mig pilot who defected to Israel in 1967

    • @HoH
      @HoH  Před 3 lety +4

      I hadn't heard about this before. Incredibly interesting, thank you for the great suggestion!

    • @user-zm3qz2vq4u
      @user-zm3qz2vq4u Před 3 lety +8

      @@HoH okay, I did a bit of research, first of all, he defected in 15/8/66, his name was Munir Radfa and he stole a mig 21, his motives were that he felt discriminated in the Iraqi air force for being Christian and that he opposed the air raids on Kurdish villages he had to perform. Some sources say that without the Israeli research done on the plane Israel might not have gained air superiority in the six day war . Maybe you could make a video about it?

    • @kalebloshbough1899
      @kalebloshbough1899 Před rokem

      @@user-zm3qz2vq4u Israel has America backing and God sooner muslim realize this the better we will all

  • @natebartels1444
    @natebartels1444 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Supposedly also an Iranian F-14 pilot defected to the USSR after the Iranian Revolution with an F-14, also an Iranian Pilot defected with an F-14 to Iraq, during the Iran-Iraq War.

  • @JClore1950
    @JClore1950 Před 2 lety +33

    He left his wife and son behind?! Wow! What a hero!

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 2 lety +4

      Viktor Belenko's wife was the daughter of a low-ranking communist official. She was a woman with big claims, initiated scandals with her husband, reproaching him with a low officer rank, lack of money, and difficult living conditions. In the summer of 1976, she filed for divorce. For a Soviet officer, this could be the end of his career.
      The son of Viktor Belenko, Dmitry, was always proud of his father and immediately after the collapse of the USSR, he was reunited with him.

    • @robertsansone1680
      @robertsansone1680 Před rokem +7

      More than one defector thought that they could "bargain" their families out of the Soviet Union by promising to withhold secrets from the Americans. (Shevchenko the UN defector, the KGB agent (whos name I have forgotten) who defected out of Japan) None were successful as far as I know. I understand. Deserting ones family isn't exactly admirable.

    • @zemlidrakona2915
      @zemlidrakona2915 Před rokem +5

      Yeah that's what I was thinking. Defection is one thing, but leaving your wife and kid and then remarriage without even getting a divorce is probably even illegal.

    • @dmmchugh3714
      @dmmchugh3714 Před rokem +2

      @@robertsansone1680 the KGB agent defecting from assignment in Japan was Stanislav Levchenko. John Barron wrote about this defection in one of his books, but I wish I could hear more detail about how the actual departure from Japan was handled. They boarded a commercial flight to leave the country and apparently there were some difficulties.

    • @robertsansone1680
      @robertsansone1680 Před rokem

      @@dmmchugh3714 Excellent. Thank You. I would like to read that book. I only read an article in the Readers Digest magazine about him. I need to go back to the Library. I used to hang out there. Thanks again.

  • @salsheikh4508
    @salsheikh4508 Před 3 lety +2

    Great Episode

    • @HoH
      @HoH  Před 3 lety

      Thanks!

  • @Robertonnz
    @Robertonnz Před 2 lety +1

    I hope you are happy and living well.

  • @matchesburn
    @matchesburn Před 8 měsíci +1

    1:38 - "The United States was on the case in no time."
    ...I can imagine that U.S. officials were at Hakodate Airport before the engine exhaust on the MiG-25 was even cool to the touch.

  • @stevefreeland9255
    @stevefreeland9255 Před 3 lety +3

    Well done!

  • @MrWtonckens
    @MrWtonckens Před 2 lety +3

    I bet the Americans feared this aircraft and were eager to inspect the technological features at the same time. Legend has it that MiG's owned and flown by other countries than the Soviet Union were not as advanced as the MiG's flown by Soviet pilots.

  • @matvei15
    @matvei15 Před 3 lety +21

    Viktor was a good friend of my father's, also a defector. If anyone has information on Viktor's whereabouts, I'd love to reconnect the two.

    • @thefederalist9982
      @thefederalist9982 Před 3 lety +9

      He lives in the northwestern part of the United States. That's all you are going to get.

    • @lovablesnowman
      @lovablesnowman Před 3 lety +29

      Nice try Vlad

    • @kalebloshbough1899
      @kalebloshbough1899 Před rokem

      Best keep your commi ass off American soil if you value life

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      @@thefederalist9982 -- Vik passed away last November 2023 in OHIO. You can now dance all you want but Vik Belenko was a good friend and a good man.

    • @thefederalist6786
      @thefederalist6786 Před 3 měsíci

      @@lovablesnowman Who is Vlad?

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks I remember this 👍🇳🇿

  • @dmmchugh3714
    @dmmchugh3714 Před rokem +2

    And the USA carefully inspected the plane and returned it in many boxes to the Soviet Union. Needless to say, diplomatic relations were rather tense over this incident.

  • @fantabuloussnuffaluffagus

    When the Soviets demanded the aircraft back, the Americans should of told them they could have it back as soon as the Soviets returned the 4 B29s they kept in 1945.

  • @tkmaniac5812
    @tkmaniac5812 Před 3 lety +3

    Este episodio tiene que haber inspirado la novela Firefox de Craig Thomas y la posterior adaptación al cine en Firefox de 1984.

  • @seanx476
    @seanx476 Před 2 měsíci

    My father was the HICOMOP on record during that incident

  • @magtulisbonvincent5978
    @magtulisbonvincent5978 Před 3 lety +1

    Why I am happy to hear this?

    • @cy-one
      @cy-one Před rokem +1

      Because we usually empathize with people who seek, and achieve, freedom in one way or another.

  • @IcyMan143
    @IcyMan143 Před 2 měsíci

    Japan: please don’t kill the messenger..

  • @JC-pu1ej
    @JC-pu1ej Před 2 lety

    Please do a story of Major Jesse Walton Wooldridge of the 38th Infantry regiment, 3rd Division (1880-1963).

  • @WickedStyles
    @WickedStyles Před 5 měsíci

    I know this video is 3 years old but I'm just now seeing it.... Is no one going to acknowledge the fact that the newspaper shown at like 3:35 spelled Tokyo right once and wrong twice? lolol

  • @kwilson5745
    @kwilson5745 Před 2 lety

    Good job

  • @corporeidad
    @corporeidad Před 3 lety +9

    ¡Muy bueno! Puse "Victor Belenko" para saber qué había Sido de su vida (solo una noticia lejana para mí, de cuando era chico), y dí con este video.

  • @-KingGanon
    @-KingGanon Před 2 měsíci

    This got harder to find

  • @IcemachineDk
    @IcemachineDk Před 3 lety +12

    Great story, any defectors from west flew to the east?

    • @DK-cr7hn
      @DK-cr7hn Před 3 lety +2

      That son of a bitch John McCain )) LOL

    • @joby-wankenobinolan3428
      @joby-wankenobinolan3428 Před 3 lety +1

      @@DK-cr7hn lmao 😂

    • @alwaysdisputin9930
      @alwaysdisputin9930 Před 2 lety

      "In 1987 a West German teenager Mathias Rust shocked the world, by flying through Soviet air defences to land a Cessna aeroplane in Red Square."

    • @IcemachineDk
      @IcemachineDk Před 2 lety +1

      @@alwaysdisputin9930 oh yes, but he didn't defect as I recall it. He was merly teasing the Russian military..;)

  • @fredd3.14
    @fredd3.14 Před 2 lety

    those intro elgar strings were a good start.. but thanks for reading the wikipedia page i guess

  • @John-oe5nb
    @John-oe5nb Před měsícem

    When I started reading "Mig PIlot" the story of Viktor Belenko and his defection I could not put it down. It goes into Russian life at that time and the reasons why he defected. I don't know if it is still in print, if it is I highly recommend it. I just checked, it is available.

  • @no_hyperbole_xone
    @no_hyperbole_xone Před 2 lety

    I have some great pics of Mig 25s from Tripoli.

  • @RTD3
    @RTD3 Před 3 lety +6

    That's still going on today in the US. Countless numbers of comrades from the Peoples Republic of California and New York are defecting to the Capitalist (and free) states in the southern US.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      I understand why ---> I live in coastal SoCal (Californication). The socialist-Democrats have ruined CA ans NY ... and every large city in America.

  • @BK-uf6qr
    @BK-uf6qr Před 2 lety

    Well told story.

  • @Aeyekay0
    @Aeyekay0 Před 3 lety +2

    Is this the same video that you uploaded a couple of weeks ago, just with a real picture of the pilot instead the Daniel Craig lol

  • @vitameat
    @vitameat Před 3 lety

    How about Alexander Zuyev flying a MiG-29 to Turkey...also wrote a great book about it.

  • @Tamburello_1994
    @Tamburello_1994 Před 3 lety +2

    @8:02
    I have a hardcover copy of the book "MiG-Pilot" and no where on it does it say "autobiography by..." as its attributed to one John Barron and him only, no names anywhere else -- It doesn't even say him and Belenko collaborated for that matter. I would love to know how / why Barron got access. The circumstances behind "MiG-Pilot" and how that came into being is just as shady as the defection itself. Someone should pull on that thread...

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      Belenko DID collaborate on his so-called auto-biography. I know --- Vik and I were friends since 1980. --- I watched Belenko sign MY copy of "MiG Pilot".

  • @alanstrong3295
    @alanstrong3295 Před 3 lety

    Job well done. Brezhy was not amused.

  • @toplak
    @toplak Před 3 lety +45

    All those who believe Marxism and Communism is “awesome” should watch this😂

    • @mauriceouellette7514
      @mauriceouellette7514 Před 3 lety +2

      Bonjour a vous du Canada Your right Toplak here at Montréal the communist are
      realy stong the majority of the red come from university political science dept.
      the young read the book das kapital karl marx after this kind of young had the
      brain burn by this book today in 2021 a lot Montrealer student had the burn burn

    • @dominikstuchlik5856
      @dominikstuchlik5856 Před 3 lety +3

      that is a bit manipulative statement, I do not say I am ok with commies, but on the other hand we can talk about many whistleblower cases like Kwiatkowski, Snowden, Assange, etc. Btw 3/4 of known whistleblowers and their defects in this list are from United States ;) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_whistleblowers

    • @charliechan8063
      @charliechan8063 Před 2 lety

      Dont ask what your government can do for yuu ask wat yuu can do for yuur country

    • @YankeeVatnik1917
      @YankeeVatnik1917 Před 2 lety

      They always pretend that if it was done right millions of people wont die like all the other times its been done and dont bring up sweden its not communism

    • @alwaysdisputin9930
      @alwaysdisputin9930 Před 2 lety

      ​@@YankeeVatnik1917 Those previous examples aren't representative of all types of communism. In USSR, the tyranny began with the populace not wanting high taxes & their land taken. They voted against the communists & so elections were banned & criticism silenced. Thus communism's a compassionate system that gives everyone free doctors & lawyers & education but doesn't work when it's imposed on a self-centred populace who don't like high taxes & their land taken. If everyone was compassionate it'd work

  • @Newdivide
    @Newdivide Před 3 lety

    Belenko defection was mention in the anime film patlabor 2

  • @michsky46
    @michsky46 Před 2 lety

    John Barron? the book I mean. i red it when I was young

  • @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge
    @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge Před 7 měsíci +5

    Viktor sadly died 2 months ago but his death was announced this month

    • @veronika7736
      @veronika7736 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Sadly? It's rather unfortunate that he lived such a long life.

    • @RlTrades44
      @RlTrades44 Před 4 měsíci

      @@veronika7736mad commie hahahaga

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      You are right. Vik passed away last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. -- * I met Russian fighter pilot Viktor Belenko in 1980 in Long Beach, CA through my Dad. Dad and Vik (and we) became good friends for years. Dad got Belenko on as a consultant in the aeronautics/aerospace industry here in Southern California in the late 1970s or so. He would visit Dad for a few days at a time at Dad's home in Texas on a few occasions during the 1980/90s and 2000s. We talked about his mother country, the good people, life- in general, politics and drank good whiskey. Belenko had a great sense of humor.
      I lost contact with Belenko for about 20-25 years. I searched periodically... with no success. However, I found out just a couple months ago during a search of newspapers (my last resort) that Belenko changed his last name to Schmidt for a time, and then changed it back to Belenko a few years ago. Mystery solved!
      Unfortunately, during my search via obituaries I ran across the newspaper article confirming the passing of our friend Viktor Belenko last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. Viktor Belenko was granted American citizenship in 1980 - during the Carter administration. He ‘remarried’ and later got divorced in the US. They had had 2 sons. Vik was a good man, led an interesting life, a great friend and passed away as a loyal American citizen. ~ Al Thompson III. (Facebook - @AlThompsonIII).

    • @sarbrevin5131
      @sarbrevin5131 Před měsícem

      @@veronika7736 living a long life is unfortunate?

  • @motionplays3637
    @motionplays3637 Před 3 lety

    could have been a plot to push the jets out of secrecy

  • @618hunting
    @618hunting Před 2 lety

    The guy actually lives in the area I’m from!

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      Vik passed away last November 20233 in OHIO. a age 76.

  • @madzen112
    @madzen112 Před 6 měsíci

    Defections: A History

  • @amm5905
    @amm5905 Před 2 lety +4

    Carrying illegal fire arm,
    What happened in court
    Judge: was it a sidearm
    No sir
    Was it a machine-gun
    No your honor
    Was it a bazooka
    No sir
    So what the hell it was
    Mig25 fighter jet😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎

  • @abbeyjane1306
    @abbeyjane1306 Před 3 lety +1

    Viktor said he knew he had been lied to about the Americans when he toured a U.S Aircraft Carrier.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      I met Viktor Belenko in 1980 in Long Beach, CA through my Dad. Dad and Vik (and we) became good friends for years. Dad got Belenko on as a consultant in the aeronautics/aerospace industry here in Southern California in the late 1970s or so. Vik was amazed at how the Soviets said untrue things about America. He couldn''t believe the variety of food in the grocery markets... a small but important thing to him.

  • @WildBill-kf2pc
    @WildBill-kf2pc Před 3 lety +2

    What a great story. 🇺🇸

  • @joseluissalguero6478
    @joseluissalguero6478 Před rokem +1

    Fue un notición en su época y un desprestigionpara rusia de cuidado

  • @Chrizz06041980
    @Chrizz06041980 Před 3 lety +1

    He shouldn't have been detected in case of his wife and son who he left with this behind. Only if their relationship was very bad and the son very young.

    • @cyberblah
      @cyberblah Před 3 lety +10

      I read his autobiography years ago. If I recall correctly his wife had left him because the Soviet air bases he was stationed at were ridiculously shitty places to live. He rarely saw her, and the only reason they weren't divorced was that the Soviet government made it very difficult.

    • @Gunrunner4532
      @Gunrunner4532 Před 3 lety +2

      @@cyberblah interesting! Thank you

    • @cy-one
      @cy-one Před rokem

      Of course, that could be post-hoc rationalization. We won't know either way.

  • @TheOneAndOnlyDon
    @TheOneAndOnlyDon Před 2 lety

    Interesting story, strangely I had never Heard about it until now. But Ido remember seeing a film when I was a kid, starred by Clint Eastwood about a pilot fleeing the Soviet Union on an advanced fighter jet, can't help thinking that movie was loosely inspired by Belennko's defection story.

    • @henry_tsai
      @henry_tsai Před rokem

      It's Firefox, US sent a pilot to steal the fictional prototype of Mig25's successor. The movie is based on a novel of same name. I learnt about this defection through that novel. btw the novel has a sequel, the plot is a little bit hilarious though.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      @@henry_tsai You are right.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      I knew Vik Belenko personally (since 1980). Firefox was based on Belenko's defection.

  • @cookiecrumb1018
    @cookiecrumb1018 Před 3 lety

    The suckiest part was the US never got the stole mig new Zealand had returned it after he landed so they wouldn't receive any problems the use enginers where pissed off

    • @bigsmokeinlittlechina174
      @bigsmokeinlittlechina174 Před rokem +1

      Different event? The mig landed in Japan. Where us technician got to inspect the het.

  • @Newdivide
    @Newdivide Před 5 měsíci +1

    Belenko has since died on Sept 2023

  • @kaliss7192
    @kaliss7192 Před 2 lety +2

    Now in 2021 we have Americans defecting to Russia lol. Show's how much we've fallen as a country.

  • @willnailer2118
    @willnailer2118 Před 3 lety +1

    Please I want to know more about the stallions that were stolen by the Germans from the Russians then stolen by the british from the Germans and then stolen back fro the british by the Russians.
    What a story that would be !!!

    • @HoH
      @HoH  Před 3 lety +2

      I'll have a look, thanks for the suggestion!

    • @willnailer2118
      @willnailer2118 Před 3 lety +1

      @@HoH thanks mate

  • @rouslanunknown
    @rouslanunknown Před 2 lety +7

    в любом случае Виктор сделал все правильно, смог улететь из совка, так еще и истребитель захватил. не считаю его предателем (в русской википедии почему то его называют именно так)

  • @DekkerDavis
    @DekkerDavis Před 3 lety

    Foxfire movie

  • @chrisberlin1552
    @chrisberlin1552 Před 5 měsíci

    I had respect for Belenko until i learned he abandoned his wife and son in the USSR.

  • @ad70.93
    @ad70.93 Před 2 lety

    MiG25 is a F15 EAGLE NOW DAY.

  • @RaZiNL
    @RaZiNL Před rokem +2

    Ihh pesawat kok hasil curian itu mau jadi pro atau noob ya?

  • @Humanaut.
    @Humanaut. Před rokem

    It's interesting that landing in japan counts as "defecting to the *west*"

    • @EagleTwo758
      @EagleTwo758 Před 6 měsíci

      I went to that base 6 yrs later with my USAF fighter unit it's on the Ruskie border

  • @Advcrazy
    @Advcrazy Před 9 měsíci +1

    Rounor has it that was the most reliable Russian fighter jet ever built…after America reassembled it 😆

    • @winternow2242
      @winternow2242 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Actually, the US had acquired a number of Russian migs by then, and found them quite reliable when used for evaluation in HAVE DRILL and DONUT.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      Belenko told me they ere fast, but bad maneuverability and unreliable engines (after only 150 hours they had to be replaced).

  • @tanksouth
    @tanksouth Před rokem

    We have vays of getting our money.

  • @berko9608
    @berko9608 Před 2 lety +4

    Nobody has the right to accuse someone of betrayal when your borders to exit are closed and you are legally obliged to work for the state? Let us accuse the slave who escaped with an oar of betraying his own galley. When a person is reduced to the status of state property, he does not even run away, he finds a way to evacuation himself. Evacuattion from a juridical disaster zone.
    Никто не имеет права обвинять кого-либо в предательстве, когда у вас закрыты границы для выезда и вы по закону обязаны работать на государство? Обвиним раба, сбежавшего с веслом, в предательстве собственной галеры. Когда человека низводят до статуса государственной собственности, он даже не убегает, он сам находит способ эвакуации. Эвакуация из зоны правового бедствия.

  • @randomrazr
    @randomrazr Před 2 lety

    wonder what the russian wife and son thinks now

  • @CJM-rg5rt
    @CJM-rg5rt Před 2 lety

    You had to end on his wife and kid withering away in Russia while he became rich and successful. Until the last sentence he was a hypothetical ubermensch.

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 2 lety +2

      @
      C.J.M. 1997
      Mrs. Belenko was the daughter of a low-ranking communist official. She was a woman of high ambition. She constantly initiated conflicts with her husband because of his low military rank, due to lack of money, due to poor living conditions in the Far East. In the summer of 1976 Mrs. Belenko filed for divorce. For a Soviet officer who dreamed of entering a military academy, the divorce meant the end of his career.
      Victor Belenko made the right decision. We admired his deed and continue to admire him.
      Immediately after the collapse of the USSR, Viktor's "Soviet" son was reunited with his father.
      Russians write comments on another CZcams channels: "I would also run away from such a wife."

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      @@berko9608 -- * I met Viktor Belenko in 1980 in Long Beach, CA through my Dad. Dad and Vik (and we) became good friends for years. Dad got Belenko on as a consultant in the aeronautics/aerospace industry here in Southern California in the late 1970s or so. He visited Dad for a few days at a time at Dad's home in Texas during the 1980/90s and 2000s. We talked about his mother country, the good people, life- in general, politics and drank good whiskey. Belenko had a great sense of humor. At the time (1980-81, etc.) he didn't want to talk about his family in Russia.
      I lost contact with Belenko for about 20-25 years. I searched periodically... with no success. However, I found out just a couple months ago during a search of newspapers (my last resort) that Belenko changed his last name to Schmidt for a time, and then changed it back to Belenko a few years ago. Mystery solved!
      Unfortunately, during my search via obituaries I ran across the newspaper article confirming the passing of our friend Viktor Belenko last November 2023 in Ohio at age 76. Viktor Belenko was granted American citizenship in 1980 - during the Carter administration. He ‘remarried’ and later got divorced in the US. They had had 2 sons. -- In spite of what Russian patriots think or say about Viktor Belenko -- Vik was a good man, led an interesting life, a great friend and passed away as a loyal American citizen. ~ Al Thompson III. (Facebook - @AlThompsonIII).

  • @BunkrMan
    @BunkrMan Před rokem +1

    'The Americans put new tires on the wheels and repaired the brakes of that plane, so that they could check the flight capabilities, and some of their experts found with astonishment that the rivets (threads) on the plane's paneling barely hold the paneling. Most of the pilots, at the Wright Patterson base, refused to sit at the controls of the plane, but after talking with the Russian pilot (with the help of a translator, because he did not know a single word of English), some of the pilots agreed to make a test flight.'
    But in spite of the severe defects found, the plane took off and reached a speed of Mach 3 and showed excellent maneuverability, which, given the poor quality of construction, was astonishing, that is, better than any American-made plane.
    Russian engineers have astonished their Western colleagues with their ingenuity and practicality. They developed a special technology for welding prochromic steel. Everything on it stands firmly. In the wings it has a technical miracle - a branched network of tubes that suck a turbulent layer of air from the wings through the porous plating. Tanks at high altitudes lose fuel through the walls due to the pressure difference, because they are porous in a vacuum. The MiG 25 has waxed canvas lined tanks. Simple and ingenious.
    They have 80 kg of silver in their engine to exchange heat. The American XB 70 Valkyrie was abandoned because they did not solve the engine cooling problem. When he landed in Japan, he was intercepted by two F4s, and he turned on the afterburner and disappeared into the blue sky 1000km/h faster than them!

    • @Silver_Prussian
      @Silver_Prussian Před 8 měsíci +1

      Dont belives all of the utter crap of the ,,experts" yes the aircraft had rivets but on places that didnt effect its aerodynamics and they were holding pretty well if they didnt it would disintegrate before reaching the speed of sound.
      The quality of the construction has nothing wrong with it. It was made from a nickel-steel aloy so you can basically repair it with whatever you can find, thats called reliability.
      Equipment will brake and be broken by the enemy if you cant not repair quickly and cheap then its f*cking useless as it will never be able to keep up with the war effort.
      At the time the aircraft was developed it was hard to work on titanium and was quite expensive another reason why the alloy was used. And thats why the sr71 which was made out of titanium coming from the soviet union ironically, just as fast as it took off so did it land as fast, permanently, while the mig25 still flies to this day.
      The mig25 is a fantastic interceptor working miracles for its intended role.

    • @BunkrMan
      @BunkrMan Před 8 měsíci

      @@Silver_Prussian I absolutely agree with you. This first part I stated is nothing but nonsense and US spin. The ingenuity of Russian engineers has always been something they've always been known for, and shamefully mocking it is, if nothing else, a lack of good taste.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci

      Disagree. The MiG-25 Foxbat was fast, but not built for dogfights and engines needed replacement after afterburner was used 70-90 miles and had to be replace after only 150 hours. Belenko told me this himself in 1980.
      The XB-70 Valkyrie was abandoned because they found our Belenko's MiG-25 was low-tech (but fast). Instead, the U.S. turned their focus on STEALTH technology.

  • @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883

    the russian son is probably a KIA in a ditch somewhere in Ukraine. They are drafting men into their 60's because the young men left russia instead of fighting.

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 9 měsíci

      Message from the American pilot: "Happy to report as of 2020, Viktor Belenko is still alive in the U.S living a happy life with 2 new children as well as reuniting with his first after the collapse of the USSR."

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@berko9608 -- Vik died in Ohio or Illinois in November 2023.

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 3 měsíci

      @@AlThompsonIII
      Thanks, I know. Viktor Belenko died in September 2023.
      Only in November 2023 NYT published an obituary
      In Slavic languages, the word “mig” means a moment, an instant.
      In 1973, a Soviet science fiction film was released that contained a very expressive philosophical song:
      “There is only one MiG between the past and the future.
      This MiG is called a Life”.
      After Belenko's escape, this song took on a new meaning.
      Try to find this song at CZcams by context: “В честь подвига советского лётчика Виктора Беленко”.

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 3 měsíci

      "Russian son" Dmitry Belenko (born in January 1973) was reunited with his father shortly after the collapse of the USSR. Dmitry manages a bank branch.

  • @787maggie
    @787maggie Před rokem +2

    He betrayed his fellow pilots.Don't care what his excuses were.
    He knew he was worthless without the plane which was not his property so he is also a thief.
    He should never been allowed back.
    Traitor.

  • @user-bv9ff3ie6n
    @user-bv9ff3ie6n Před rokem

    Is the pilot still alive, or was he already killed by the Soviet agent after committing the act of treason?

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Message from the American pilot: "Happy to report as of 2020, Viktor Belenko is still alive in the U.S living a happy life with 2 new children as well as reuniting with his first after the collapse of the USSR."

    • @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge
      @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge Před 7 měsíci +1

      Unfortunately 2 months ago Viktor died at a nursing home in Rosebud Illinois, the news was announced by his son only this month

    • @berko9608
      @berko9608 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge Thanks. I know.
      Rest in Peace, Colonel Belenko, non-formal Hero for my generation.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge -- I met Viktor Belenko in 1980 in Long Beach, CA through my Dad. Dad and Vik (and we) became good friends for years. Dad got Belenko on as a consultant in the aeronautics/aerospace industry here in Southern California in the late 1970s or so. I was saddened to learn of Vik's passing last November 2023. at age 76.

    • @AlThompsonIII
      @AlThompsonIII Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@berko9608 Amen. Vik was a good man and a great American (since 1980).

  • @tilsr2556
    @tilsr2556 Před 2 lety +1

    he betrayted hiscountry. that is sad

  • @fadiadam7887
    @fadiadam7887 Před 2 lety

    👍🇷🇺👍

  • @StarwarsFannick
    @StarwarsFannick Před rokem +1

    I would say the uk becoming a superpower.

  • @aap9167
    @aap9167 Před rokem +2

    Betrayed his country and left his family. Hero indeed 😂

  • @TheKaMeLRo
    @TheKaMeLRo Před 2 lety +1

    So it's kind of asshole to leave his wife and son.

  • @hansgruber650
    @hansgruber650 Před 3 lety

    He should have made provisions for his wife and son to visit outside the country first to Japan or somewhere to claim Asylum but to abandon them, less than honorable.

    • @petebondurant58
      @petebondurant58 Před 3 lety +1

      His wife and he were not happily married at the time. Her father was an industrial manager and party member, and she would have been well taken care of without him around.

  • @bachelbel
    @bachelbel Před rokem +2

    Refugees now: Walk their way through Mexico.
    Refugees then: Fly a fighter jet into Japan airport.