Avon Books are available at special quantity discounts for
bulk purchases for sales promotions, premiums, fund
raising or educational use. Special books, or book excerpts,
can also be created to fit specific needs.
For details write or telephone the office of the Director of
Special Markets, Avon Books, Dept. FP, 1790 Broadway,
New York, New York 10019, 212-399-1357.
MIG
Pilot
JOHN BARRON
PUBLISHERS OF BARD, CAMELOT, DISCUS AND FLARE BOOKS
Editorial from the Los Angeles Times: Copyright © 1976
Los Angeles Times. Reprinted by permission.
AVON BOOKS
A division of
The Hearst Corporation
1790 Broadway
New York, New York 10019
Copyright © 1980 by the Reader's Digest Association, Inc.
Published by arrangement with McGraw-Hill Book Company
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 79-20611
ISBN: 0-380-53868-7
All rights reserved, which includes the right
to reproduce this book or portions thereof in
any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S. Copyright Law.
For information address McGraw-Hill Book Company, a division of
McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York,
New York 10020.
The McGraw-Hill edition contains the following Library of
Congress Cataloging in Publication Data:
Barron, John, 1930 —
MiG pilot.
1. Belenko, Viktor. 2. Fighter pilots
Russia
— Biography. 3. Defectors — Russia — Biography.
4. MiG-25 (Jet fighter plane) 1. Title.
First Avon Printing: April 1981
AVON TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND IN
OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA REGISTRADA,
HECHO EN U.S.A.
Printed in the U.S.A.
Contents
CHAPTER I | Into the Unknown | 7 |
CHAPTER II | Viktor's Quest | 22 |
CHAPTER III | The First Escape | 61 |
CHAPTER IV | In a Japanese Prison | 109 |
CHAPTER V | "We Will Get You Back" | 124 |
CHAPTER VI | With the Dark Forces | 142 |
CHAPTER VII | Unwrapping the Present | 169 |
CHAPTER VIII | The Final Escape | 187 |
Index | 215 |
CHAPTER I
Into
the
Unknown
As he had done every day except Sunday during the past
four weeks, Lieutenant Viktor Ivanovich Belenko awakened
himself early to watch what the dawn might reveal.
The first light was promising, and upon seeing the fiery,
blinding sun rise, he knew: almost certainly this would be
the day. Above the vast forests of pine, cedar, birch, and
poplar stretching along the Pacific shores of the Soviet
Far East, the sky was azure and cloudless. The magnificent
weather meant that barring mistakes, malfunctions, or
some other vagary, in all likelihood he would fly as scheduled.
Probably he finally could attempt the supreme mission
which rain, fuel shortages, or bureaucratic caprice
repeatedly had forestalled. If the weather held, his chances
of reaching the objective would be as good as he ever could
expect.
Belenko estimated it all should be over within the next
six hours. At age twenty-nine, he would be either dead or
reborn into a new world. He felt tension in the muscles of
the arms, legs, and stomach, but the stress derived more
from the complexity of the mental tasks ahead than from
fear of dying. During his training as a MiG (Named for
its designers, Mikoyan and Gurevich) pilot he had lived
on the edge of death so long and seen sudden, violent death
so often that he had given up contemplating it. He had
come to regard it simply as an unfathomable phenomenon
to be avoided as long as possible, but not at any price.
Neither did he dwell on the infinite uncertainties and unknowns
that awaited him should he succeed and survive.
He had assessed them as best he could before making his
decision, and there was no profit in considering them further
now. The awareness that he was looking for the last
time at his pretty wife and three-year-old son, both sleeping
within his reach near the window, evoked no emotion
either. She had adamantly demanded a divorce and had
announced her intent to take their child back to her parents
in Magadan, some 1,250 miles away. The many failed
attempts at reconciliation had sapped all emotion from the
marriage, and there was nothing more to say. He was
tempted to pick up and hold his son. No! Don't! He might
cry. You wouldn't ordinarily pick him up at this hour.
Don't do one thing that you wouldn't ordinarily do.
Belenko put on his shirt, trousers, and boots quickly, trying not to awaken his family or the family occupying the other room of the apartment. From between the pages of a tattered Russian-English dictionary he removed a slip of paper on which he had written a three-sentence message succinctly explaining his mission. Preparation of the message the month before and its retention ever since had been dangerous. Yet it was necessary that he deliver a written message instantly if all went well, so he folded the paper into a tight square and buried it in his pocket.
In the small yard outside the frame apartment house
reserved for officers, he exercised for fifteen minutes, doing
push-ups on soggy ground and chinning himself from
the limb of a tree. Then he commenced jogging through
the muddy streets of Chuguyevka, a village situated in the
taiga 120 miles northeast of Vladivostok, toward the bus
stop about a mile away. Running and jumping puddles,
Belenko looked like a prototype of the New Communist
Man the Party spoke endlessly of creating. He stood just
over five feet eight inches and had an athletic physique,
with broad, slightly sloping shoulders powerfully developed
by years of boxing, arm wrestling, and calisthenics. A Soviet
[9] television program once pictured him — yellow hair,
fair complexion, and large blue eyes widely set in a handsome,
boyish face — as the very model of a young pilot.
Women, particularly older women, were beguiled by his
smile, which they found simultaneously shy and rakish.
At about seven that morning, September 6, 1976,
Belenko arrived in a decrepit bus, built before World War
II, at the headquarters compound of the 513th Fighter
Regiment of the Soviet Air Defense Command. Outside
the smallest of the red-and-white-brick buildings he hesitated.
No, you have to eat. You would be missed. Besides,
you will need the strength. Go on!
In the officers' mess, fresh white cloths covered the
tables, each set for four pilots, and still-life paintings of
fruit and vegetables adorned the walls. The waitresses,
girls in the late teens or early twenties, all employed because
they were pretty, enhanced the ambience. A physician
was tasting the breakfast of goulash, rice, fruit compote,
white bread, buttermilk, and tea to make sure it
was fit for fliers. After he approved the food, everyone
sat down in white plastic chairs and began.
Because Belenko was acting deputy commander of the
3rd Squadron, he customarily dined with the squadron
commander, Yevgeny Petrovich Pankovsky. More often
than not, by breakfast time Pankovsky's day had already
started unhappily. The regimental commander, Lieutenant
Colonel Yevgeny Ivanovich Shevsov, rose early to survey
the wreckage visited upon his domain during the night,
and by six-thirty he had the squadron commanders before
him to berate and degrade them for the most recent transgressions
of their underlings.
Shevsov was a sorely troubled officer. This was his first
command, and the difficulties besetting the regiment would
have taxed the capacities of the wisest and most experienced
leader. He did not quite know how to cope, but he
tried mightily, shouting, threatening, and often ridiculing
officers in front of one another and the men. Other pilots
dubbed him the Monster, but to Belenko he looked more
like a toothless boxer dog: short, husky, with receding red
hair, a protruding jaw, and a face that seemed in perpetual
motion, as if he were chewing or growling.
[10] Belenko greeted his squadron commander as always.
"Good morning, Yevgeny Petrovich."
"You think it's a good morning? Do you know that already
I got reamed? Did you know that our soldiers refused
to eat breakfast this morning? They threw their food
at the cooks, and one of them hit a cook."
"Would you eat that food from their mess hall?"
"No."
"I wouldn't eat that food either. I think if we would
take a pig from a good kolkhoz and put that pig in the
mess hall, that pig would faint."
"Well, I agree. But what can I do about it?"
At eight the regiment assembled on the asphalt parade
ground before the staff headquarters buildings. Pilots stood
at attention in the first rank; flight engineers, their assistants,
and the enlisted men in succeeding ranks behind.
"Comrade Soldiers, Sergeants, and Officers!" Shevsov
shouted. "Today we fly. Our mission is a vital mission, for
we will fire rockets. The results of this important mission
will depend on everybody, from soldiers to officers, working
together. In spite of all our troubles here, we each
must do our best today.
"We must remember that the Americans are not sleeping.
We must remember that the Chinese are only a day's
march away. We must remember that aircraft, fuel, and
rockets are expensive and that our government which supplies
them is not a milk cow. We cannot afford soon to
repeat this mission, so we must do it properly today.
"Now, next weekend we will give the Party a Communist
Weekend. Everybody will work, officers and soldiers;
everybody. Each squadron must gather sod and plant it
over the aircraft bunkers so that from the sky they will
appear to the Americans to be no more than green, grassy
fields.
"I have one other announcement, a very serious announcement.
Do you know that our regiment has a great
lover? Do you know whom he loves? Not his faithful wife
who waits far away, anxious to join him here as soon as
quarters are ready; no, he loves a whore in the village, a
common whore." While the officers winced and the enlisted
men snickered, Shevsov read aloud a telegram from
[11] the wife of a flight engineer, beseeching him to compel
her husband to cease a dalliance of which she suspected
him. "Here we have a big example of degenerate capitalist
morality. Let this be a warning to all. Henceforth in our
regiment we will abide by and tolerate only communist
morality.
"All squadron commanders report to my office. For
today that is all. Dismissed."
In the locker room Belenko changed into the dark-blue
cotton flight suit issued him nineteen months before. It
would be five more months before he was due to receive
another, and he had tried to keep this one serviceable by
neatly sewing patches on the knees and elbows. A duty
officer unlocked the safe and handed him an automatic
pistol and two clips of seven rounds each, for which he
signed a receipt.
Sometime back a pilot had parachuted from a disabled
plane into a remote wilderness, where he eventually died
of privation and hunger. Hunters who came upon the skeleton
many months later found a diary in which the pilot
recorded his suffering and complained about the lack of
any equipment that might have enabled him to survive in
the wilderness. The last entry read, "Thank you, Party, for
taking such good care of Soviet pilots." Soon combat pilots
were issued pistols, and their aircraft equipped with survival
kits containing food, water, medicine, fishing gear,
flares, matches, a mirror, and shark repellent. Newly
armed, a pilot came home, found his wife in bed with a
friend, and killed them both. Thereupon, in the interest of
domestic tranquillity, the Party ordered the pistols recalled
and kept locked up until just before flights.
During the next couple of hours briefing officers meticulously
reviewed the flight plans. Planes from the squadron
designated to fire missiles were to fly almost due eastward
over the sea, where Navy ships would launch the target
drones at which they would shoot. Belenko's squadron
would proceed to other exercise areas, practice intercept
approaches, and then, relying solely on instruments, return
to the base, and land. Because of the fine weather, many
MiG-23s from adjacent bases probably would be in the
air and perhaps also firing. Thus, it would be dangerous
[12] for any pilot to stray out of the zone to which Ground
Control directed him.
Belenko sat motionless, maintaining a pose of respectful
attentiveness while he contemplated his personal flight plan.
His mind raced far away, computing times, distance, speed,
fuel consumption, courses, points of probable intercept,
evasive maneuvers, deceptions, and all exigencies he could
imagine.
The fliers returned at eleven for a second breakfast of
sausage, boiled eggs, white bread, butter, tea, and a chunk
of chocolate, all again first tasted by a physician. Then a
military truck hauled them over a bumpy, unpaved road to
the Sakharovka Air Base two miles from squadron headquarters.
Belenko presented himself in the hangar dispensary
to the regimental physician for physical examination.
The doctor protected the pilots as much as he could. They
were forbidden to drink five days prior to flying; but everyone
drank some, and many drank heavily. He ignored
minor traces of alcohol, and if he judged the condition of
a pilot hazardous in consequence of imbibing, he disqualified
him for the day on other grounds — nasal congestion,
slight ear infection, temperature; something that would
soon pass.
He took Belenko's temperature, pulse, and blood pressure,
then examined his eyes, ears, and throat.
"How do you feel?" he asked.
"Excellent."
"What kind of flight do you have today?"
"Routine exercise."
The physician stopped talking and studied him carefully
— skeptically, Belenko thought.
"Tell me, Lieutenant, have you drunk any alcohol in the
past twenty-four hours?"
"No, not in the last five days," Belenko answered truthfully.
"Do you think you are ready to fly your mission?"
"I am certain."
"Well, your blood pressure is somewhat high. Nothing
to be alarmed about, but for you, rather high. Is something
troubling you?"
"Not at all." Anticipating that the body might betray
[13] his tensions, Belenko had readied an explanation. "Comrade
Doctor, if I don't exercise, I feel like lumpy potatoes,
and I've been cooped up for almost a week. This morning,
when I saw the sun, I went out and ran like a deer, more
than six kilometers. I'm probably still a little winded."
The doctor nodded. "That could account for it. Good
luck on your flight, Comrade Lieutenant."
Belenko joined other pilots, who, pending the latest report
from the meteorological officer, were standing around
the hangar, joking about the forthcoming Communist
Weekend. It was preposterous to cover the bunkers with
sod. Obviously the Americans long ago had located and
targeted the airfield. How could anyone think they would
believe it suddenly was not there anymore? Someone said,
"Besides, I heard that the cameras in their satellites can
photograph a soldier's boots from three hundred kilometers
up."
The conversation ceased, and the pilots edged off in different
directions at the sight of Vladimir Stepanovich
Volodin, the young KGB lieutenant assigned to the regiment.
"Good morning, Viktor Ivanovich, how are you?"
"Very well."
"And Ludmilla and Dmitri. How are they?"
"They are well also."
"What's new? What do you hear?"
"Well, the men rebelled again this morning, refused to
eat breakfast."
"Yes, I heard. What do you think the problem is?"
Answer him just as you regularly would.
"Vladimir Stepanovich, you know what the problem is
as well as I do. Everybody knows."
"I still would like to talk to you. Stop by this afternoon
after your flight. Let's talk."
There was nothing at all unusual about this. The KGB
officer naturally slinked around, asking, "What's new?
What do you hear?" Yet for a moment Belenko worried.
Why did he come to me just now? Why did he ask me
that? Well, so what? The bastard won't be seeing me this
afternoon, that's for sure.
The meterological officers reported that to the east,
where Belenko's squadron would fly, the skies were fair
[14] and should remain so throughout the afternoon. However,
to the southeast, where his actual objective lay, some cloud
formations were gathering. A front might be moving in
from Japan, but it was nothing to worry about this afternoon.
No! The forecast was clear everywhere. Idiots! How
thick is it? Think of a reason to ask him. No, don't. There
is no reason. Careful. Show no concern. You'll just have
to take the chance.
From the supply room Belenko drew his flight helmet,
oxygen mask, and gloves. "Comrade Lieutenant, you forgot
your life preserver," a sergeant called. Don't take it.
Fool them.
"Thanks. I won't be over water today."
Striding from the hangar, he saw the aircraft — twenty
MiG-25s — poised wing to wing on the runway some 200
yards away. Weighing twenty-two tons, with twin tail fins,
cantilevered tail planes, thick, short, swept-back wings, two
enormous engines, and a long rocketlike nose ending with
a radar needle, the MiG-25 reminded Belenko of a great
steel bird of prey, dark gray and angry. Few weapons in
the Soviet arsenal were more closely guarded from foreign
observation, and even among themselves the Russians in
official terminology simply referred to the MiG-25 as
Product No. 84. A stripped-down model in 1967 set a
world record by achieving a speed of 1,852 miles an hour,
and another in 1973 eclipsed altitude records by soaring to
118,898 feet. Aging American F-4 Phantoms, though
equipped with excellent missiles and flown by skilled pilots,
had been unable to intercept or shoot down MiG-25s which
occasionally streaked over the Mediterranean and the Middle
East, taking photographs. No Westerner ever had been
close to a MiG-25, and much about it was unknown.
Nevertheless, the MiG-25 in the autumn of 1976 was the
one plane most feared in the West. In 1973, U.S. Air Force
Secretary Robert C. Seamans, a scientist with impressive
aeronautical credentials, had characterized it as "probably
the best interceptor in production in the world today."
While Defense Secretary, James R. Schlesinger had warned
that the MiG-25 was so formidable that its widespread
development and deployment would force fundamental
[15] changes in Western strategy and weaponry. More than 400
of the interceptors had already been deployed. They embodied
the most advanced aeronautical technology and, in
a sense, the national pride of the Soviet Union. The comparatively
few young men chosen, trained, and entrusted
to fly them represented an acknowledged and honored
elite in the Soviet armed forces.
Swarms of men were making the planes ready. Tracks
filled each with fourteen tons of jet fuel and half a ton of
coolant alcohol and pumped oxygen into life-support systems.
From smaller trucks bearing electronic test equipment,
technicians checked the missiles, fire control, and
electronic systems. Others stepped under and around the
planes, physically inspecting the exterior surfaces and
controls.
Belenko climbed a fourteen-foot metal ladder, followed
by his flight engineer, who helped him settle into the green
cockpit, green because Soviet researchers believed it the
most soothing color. The cushioned seat was the most comfortable
in which he ever had sat. The various dials, gauges,
buttons, and levers were well arranged and easily accessible.
Conspicuous among them was a red button labeled
"Danger." Pilots were instructed that should they be forced
down or have to eject themselves from the aircraft outside
the Soviet Union, they must press the button before leaving
the cockpit. Supposedly it activated a timing device which
a few minutes later would detonate explosives to destroy
the most secret components of the plane. Some fliers wondered,
however, whether a press of the button might not
instantly blow up the entire aircraft, pilot included. He
also dared not touch the radar switch because the impulses
from the MiG-25 radar were so powerful they could kill
a rabbit at a thousand meters. Hence, it was a crime to
activate the radar on the ground.
Turning on his radio, Belenko spoke to the control
tower. "This is Number Oh-six-eight. Request permission
to start engines."
The tower answered quickly. "Number Oh-six-eight, you
have permission to start engines."
"Understood. I am executing," Belenko said, waving to
his flight engineer, who backed down the ladder, ordered
[16] the ground crew to remove the engine covers, and signaled
that the hydraulic systems were functioning. As Belenko
flicked switches and pushed buttons, the engines produced
a soft whine that soon swelled into a roar. "This is Oh-six-eight,"
Belenko radioed the tower. "I request permission
to taxi."
"Oh-six-eight, you have permission."
"Understood. I am executing."
Belenko taxied the MiG-25 to the end of the taxi ramp
about half a mile away. Four MiGs were ahead of him, and
he had to wait until a green light authorized him to turn
onto the runway. "This is Oh-six-eight. Request permission
to take off."
"Oh-six-eight, you have permission."
"Understood. I am executing."
He hesitated a few seconds to look once more at the surrounding
forests. Above all else in his homeland, he loved
the rugged, open expanses and the forests where he had
wandered since boyhood. There he could explore and discover
and meditate, be alone with a girl or with himself.
Only there and in the cockpit had he ever felt free. Under
brilliant sunshine, the leaves were turning copper, gold,
and ruby, and he thought that the forest never had appeared
more majestic, never more impervious and antithetical
to human squalor.
With ignition of the afterburner, the aircraft vibrated,
bucked, and strained forward. "Oh-six-eight, you have
afterburn," the tower confirmed. "We wish you all good."
Belenko released the brakes at exactly 12:50 P.M., and the
MiG surged down the runway and within fifteen seconds
into the air. While still perilously low, he shut the afterburner
prematurely to conserve fuel, which was precious,
so precious that he gladly would have exchanged some of
his own blood for extra fuel. Also to conserve, he ascended
more slowly than usual to 24,000 feet and took five minutes
instead of the normal four to enter Training Zone No.
2 on a course of 090 degrees. Beginning the wide 360-degree
turn which ground controllers were expecting of
him, he saw numerous other MiG-25s in the area, fully
armed and fueled. The needle, rotating swiftly around the
compass dial with his continuous change in heading,
[17] showed that he rapidly was approaching the point of no
return. For upon completion of the circle, he would have
to proceed either with the programmed flight or with his
own.
You can still go back, and nobody will know. If you go,
it's forever. I'm going.
Now he began his own secret flight plan.
Back on a course of 090, he let the plane glide downward,
hoping the descent would be so gradual the radar
controllers would not at once notice. At 19,000 feet,
Belenko suddenly jammed the stick forward and to the
left and plunged the MiG into a power dive toward the
floor of a valley ahead, shrieking and hurtling straight
down so that the whole earth seemed to be jumping right
into his face until he managed to level off at 100 feet.
Never had he attempted such a dive, nor had he ever tried
to fly a MiG-25 so low, for below even 1,000 feet it was
clumsy and difficult to control. Yet from study of American
tactics in Vietnam, he knew that at 100 feet he would
be safe from the thickets of SAMs (surface-to-air missiles)
and antiaircraft batteries emplaced on the peaks of the
valley and that these bristling peaks would hide him from
radar.
Applying power, he thundered through the valley and
in two minutes shot out over the Sea of Japan. He pushed
an emergency button which started broadcasting a continuous
signal indicating his plane was on the verge of
crashing. After about forty seconds he turned off the signal
to persuade all listening on the distress frequency that it
had crashed. Simultaneously he shut down his radar and all
other equipment whose electronic emissions might be
tracked. Lastly, he switched off his radio, even though it
gave off no emissions. He did not want to be affected or
distracted by what they might be saying, what they might
be doing, how they might be pursuing. He needed now to
concentrate purely and intently on the equations of fuel,
speed, altitude, time, and distance, which he calculated
mainly in his head, aided by only a pencil and tablet. Perhaps
use of the cockpit computer would have been more
practical and efficient. But he was resolved, as he had done
in all crises of his life, to rely on, to trust only himself.
[18] To evade detection by the long-range radars back on
land and the missile-carrying Soviet ships patrolling offshore,
Belenko flew so low that twice he had to swerve to
avoid hitting fishing vessels. Only when he perceived that
the waves were rising so high that he might smash into
one did he go to a slightly safer altitude of 150 feet.
Along with mounting waves, he encountered darkening
skies and rainsqualls which buffeted the plane and portended
worsening weather ahead. His mental computations
portended much worse. At sea level the MiG was devouring
fuel at a fatally gluttonous rate, far exceeding preflight
estimates. Rapid recalculations yielded the same grim results.
Unless he drastically reduced fuel consumption at
once by assuming an altitude of at least 20,000 feet, he
never would make landfall. Yet he had not flown far
enough to go up safely to that height. He still would be
within reach of Soviet radars and SAMs. He also might
be picked up on the radars of other Soviet aircraft hunting
to rescue him, had he survived a crash at sea, or to
kill him, were he still aloft.
Better possible death than certain death, Belenko reasoned,
pulling up into the clouds, which quickly encased
him in darkness. He had flown on a southeasterly course,
dead reckoning his way toward Hokkaido, the northernmost
of the Japanese islands and the one closest to his
base. At approximately 1:20 P.M. — just thirty minutes
after takeoff — he figured he was nearing Japanese airspace
and interception by Phantom fighters of the Japanese Air
Self-Defense Force. To signify lack of hostile intent and
facilitate interception, he throttled back the engines and
glided down toward Japan, scarcely sustaining airspeed.
Each moment he hoped to break free of the clouds and
into the clear, where the Phantoms could see him.
For years he had been taught to fear and fight these
planes created by the Americans. Now he awaited them as
saving angels. His whole flight plan was predicated upon
confidence that the Japanese would scramble fighters to
force him down as soon as he intruded over their territory.
He knew that the Russians were under orders to fire
SAMs at any foreign aircraft violating Soviet territory, and
[19] he feared the Japanese would do the same unless he were
met and escorted by their own interceptors. More important,
he counted on the Japanese interceptors to lead him
to a safe landing field. On an old map of Hokkaido he had
discerned only one field, the military base at Chitose, which
seemed large enough to accommodate a MiG-25. Perhaps
the Japanese would lead him to a closer field unknown to
him. Regardless, he probably had enough fuel to reach
Chitose if they escorted him there promptly and directly.
But they would have to find him on their own because his
radio frequency band was so narrow he could communicate
only with other MiGs.
Thrice during the descent the MiG sliced through thin
layers of blue only to be engulfed anew in swirling dirty
gray clouds, and not until it had dropped to 1,800 feet
did Belenko find himself in clear sky. He circled, attempting
to take visual bearings and locate Japanese interceptors.
Nowhere could he see an aircraft of any type. Where are
the Phantoms? Where are the damned Phantoms?
Both Phantoms and MiGs at that moment were all
around, desperately searching for him. His plane first appeared
on Japanese radar screens as an unidentified blip at
1:11 P.M. when he rose from the sea to 20,000 feet. Nine
minutes later, with the blip moving toward the center of
the screens, the commander of the Chitose base ordered
Phantoms to take off for interception. Simultaneously the
Japanese vainly tried to warn him away through broadcasts
in both Russian and English. At 1:22, about the time
he himself figured, Belenko breached Japanese airspace,
and the Phantoms, vectored from the ground, closed upon
him. However, at 1:26, as Belenko started to drift down
in quest of clear sky, his MiG disappeared from the radarscopes,
which, because of worsening atmospheric conditions,
were already cluttered with confusing reflections
from land and sea surfaces. Without any more guidance
from the ground, the Phantoms flew about futilely in the
overcast. Almost certainly, Soviet monitors heard the Japanese
broadcasts and concluded that the plane being warned
was Belenko's, for unidentified aircraft, presumably Russian,
streaked toward Japan.
[20] Ignorant of both the Japanese and the Soviet actions,
Belenko had no time to conjecture about what might be
happening. Neither did he have time for fear.
The Japanese aren't going to find you. At least, you
can't count on them anymore. You'll have to take a chance.
You have to decide, right now.
From the configuration of the coastline, initially visible
to him about 1:30, he deduced that he was approaching
Hokkaido's southwestern peninsula. Chitose lay to the
northeast, roughly toward the middle of the island, behind
a range of mountains still shrouded in clouds. The gauge
indicated he had sufficient fuel for another sixteen to
eighteen minutes of flight, maybe enough to carry him to
Chitose if he immediately headed there. If he went back
up into the clouds and over the unfamiliar mountains, however,
he would forfeit all control of his fate. Only by sheer
luck might he discover a hole in the clouds that would
enable him both to descend safely and to sight the military
field before exhausting his fuel. Without such good luck,
the probabilities were that he would crash into some invisible
peak or have to attempt a forced landing on impossible
terrain. Had his purposes been different, he might
have considered probing for a safe passage downward
until his fuel was gone, then bailing out. But to Belenko,
preservation of the MiG-25 was more important than
preservation of his own life, and he was determined to
land the plane intact if there was any chance, even one in
a thousand.
Hence, he decided to stay beneath the clouds, fly eastward
past the southern end of the mountain range, then
turn north toward Chitose. He appreciated that he did not
have enough fuel to follow this circuitous course all the
way to the air base. But so long as he could see, there was
a possibility of finding some place, a stretch of flat land,
a highway perhaps, to try to land.
A red warning light flashed in the cockpit at 1:42, and
an instant afterward a panel lit up, illuminating the words
"You Have Six Minutes of Fuel Left." Belenko reached
out and turned off the warning lights. Why be bothered?
He was over water again, having crossed the peninsula
above Volcano Bay, so he banked into a ninety-degree turn
[21] northward toward land, still flying at 1,800 feet. Straight
ahead he saw another mass of clouds, but he elected to
maintain altitude and plunge into them. They might form
just an isolated patch, and the lower he went, the more
rapidly the MiG would consume fuel, and the less his
glide range would be.
Suddenly a dulcet female voice startled him. Emanating
from a recording he did not know existed, the voice was as
calm as it was sweet: "Caution, Oh-six-eight! Your fuel
supply has dropped to an emergency level. You are in an
emergency situation."
Belenko replied aloud, "Woman, wherever you are, tell
me something I don't know. Tell me where is that aerodrome."
The fuel gauge stood at empty, and Belenko guessed he
had, at most, two minutes left. The clouds had not dissipated,
and there was nothing else to do. So he pointed the
MiG-25 down toward land and the unknown.
CHAPTER II
Viktor's
Quest
Why? Of all officers, why Belenko? Nowhere in the recorded
history of his life and career was an answer
discernible. None of the conventional causes that might
motivate a man to abandon homeland, family, comrades,
and privilege could be found. Belenko was not in trouble
of any kind. He never had associated with dissidents or
manifested the least ideological disaffection. Like all Soviet
pilots, he underwent weekly medical examinations,
and physicians repeatedly judged him exceptionally fit,
mentally and physically. He drank moderately, lived
within his means, was involved with no woman except
his wife, and had the reputation of being honest to the
point of fault.
In their initial consternation, the Russians did not believe,
indeed, could not bring themselves to believe, that
Belenko had vanished voluntarily. They preferred to think
that he had been lured by invisible forces beyond his control.
In a way they were correct, for Belenko was a driven
man. And in his flight from the Soviet Union, he was continuing
a quest that had motivated and dominated most of
his life, a quest that caused him also to ask why.
Belenko grew up as a child alone, left to chart his own
course according to destinations and bearings fixed by
[23] himself. He was born on February 15, 1947, in a mountain
village between the Black and Caspian seas, about a year
after his father's release from the Soviet Army. His father
had been conscripted in December 1941 at age seventeen,
eventually promoted to sergeant, trained as a saboteur and
assassin, then assigned to help lead partisan forces. Thereafter
he fought with partisans behind German lines, swimming
for his life across icy rivers, hiding in frozen forests,
and witnessing the slaughter of numberless comrades by
enemy patrols, which in combat with irregulars neither
gave nor received any quarter. Combat hardened him into
a physically powerful, blunt, strong-willed man concerned
with little other than survival and the pursuit of women.
When Viktor was two, his father divorced his mother,
took him away to Donbas, the great mining region of
southwestern Russia, and subsequently prohibited her from
seeing him. They shared a hut with another woman until
his father quit her, consigned him to the care of his own
mother and sister, and departed for a job 5,000 miles away
in a Siberian factory managed by a wartime friend.
The grandmother and aunt lived in one of some forty
mud and straw huts that constituted a village near Mine
No. 24. Coal dust darkened every structure of the village
and so permeated the atmosphere that after a storm temporarily
purified the air, food tasted strange. The women
occupied one room of the hut and built a bed for Viktor
in the other, where they cooked and ate. His aunt rose
daily at 5:00 A.M. to draw water from the communal well,
stoke the fire, and prepare soup and bread for breakfast
before she walked to the mine. There she worked from
7:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M., sorting debris and alien particles
from coal passing on a conveyor belt. She had no gloves,
and often her hands were bruised or bleeding. His grandmother,
in her seventies, hobbled about with a stick during
the day, acting as a good Samaritan, visiting the sick and
elderly and attending to an invalid widow who received
no pension. Each evening she chanted long litanies before
an icon in the corner.
Winter confined Viktor to the hut because, until he was
six, he had no shoes. From the sleeves of an old jacket
his aunt sewed slippers useful for dashes to the outhouse
[24] but unsuitable for prolonged wear in snow. Incarcerated
alone, he could amuse himself only by the exercise of his
own imagination and curiosity.
A few days after his fourth birthday Viktor sat close by
the stove, a source of both warmth and mystery. What
made it yield such good warmth? To find out, he slid open
one of the portals, and a burning coal tumbled out onto
the straw covering the clay floor. As the hut filled with
smoke, he sought escape by crawling into his grandmother's
bed and burying himself under blankets. Smoke still billowed
from the hut when he regained consciousness outside,
lying in the snow and coughing under the watch of
the neighbors who had rescued him. That evening, after
they had scrubbed and straightened the hut, his grandmother
said, "Viktor, God is watching over you."
During warm weather Viktor wandered and explored,
unrestrained, with older boys. A favorite playground was
a forbidden area in the woods off the main road between
the village and the mines. Here retreating German troops
had made a determined stand, and although some nine
years had passed, the battlefield had not been entirely
cleared. Among trenches and revetments there could still
be found live rifle and machine-gun bullets, which the
boys used to make firecrackers to scare "witches" — that is,
women who scolded them — and small "bombs" for killing
and surfacing fish in the river.
Digging for bullets, they unearthed a large, flat, cylindrical
object that seemed to them an authentic treasure — one
that could be smelted down for thousands of slingshot pellets.
Building a bonfire, they gathered around to begin the
smelting. The fire waned, and Viktor, being the youngest,
was ordered to gather more wood. As he returned, the
land mine exploded, hurling him against a tree and causing
a severe concussion. Hours later he awakened in the arms
of his grandmother, who said with conviction, "You see,
Viktor, it is as I said. God is watching over you." The blast
had killed two of his friends and badly crippled a third.
That same spring Viktor heard commotion and what
sounded like wailing outside the hut. People were gathering
in the street, mostly women but some older men also, commiserating
with one another, weeping and sobbing, a few
[25] hysterically. "Our savior and protector is gone!" a woman
moaned. "Who will provide for us now?" The news of the
death of Joseph Stalin had just reached the village. Always
portrayed by every Soviet medium as a kind of deity, Stalin
was so perceived in the village — the military genius who
had won the war, the economic genius who had industrialized
a feudal society, the political genius who had liberated
the Soviet people from capitalist slavery, the just and
benign patriarch who had secured the welfare of all.
Accidents frequently took lives in the mines, so Viktor
was familiar with mourning and funerals. He had always
seen the villagers confront death with stoic restraint, and
their bravery added to his regard of the miners as heroic
men who risked their lives for the Mother Country. But
never had he experienced such unrestrained outpouring of
grief and despair as now. It alarmed him and made him
wonder, too, how life would proceed without the noble
Stalin.
A letter in the autumn saddened both his aunt and his
grandmother. His father was coming to take him to Siberia.
The grandmother sewed a kind of knapsack for him,
and they packed it with food, including some smoked
meat, to which they never treated themselves. Through a
thick December snowfall the women walked with him and
his father to the rail station and held each other, then
waved as the train pulled away. He never saw either again.
Authorities in the Siberian city of Rubtsovsk had assured
his father that the room in the communal apartment for
which he had waited forty-two months would be available
by December. It was not, and Viktor was sent to stay on a
collective farm, or kolkhoz, to the south with relatives of
his father's friend, the factory manager. The family —
father, mother, and four children — were crowded into one
room, and his first evening Viktor stared in wide-eyed
wonderment as a cow was led into the hut for the night
so she would not freeze to death.
Despite the scarcity of space, the family welcomed him
as one of their own and, as had his aunt and grandmother,
shared with him unstintingly. He soon recognized, however,
that the kolkhozniks were far poorer than the miners of the
Donbas. The collective allocated each family grain for
[26] bread on the basis of the number of workdays credited to
the household, rather than according to the number of
members. The ration for families with very young children
or elderly relatives unable to work was thus short. The
small salary paid the kolkhozniks barely enabled them to
buy essential salt, soap, and kerosene. For purchase of
shoes, clothing, and other necessities, they depended on
proceeds from the sale of milk and produce grown on their
tiny private plots, which they tended fervently and carefully.
Throughout the winter their diet consisted of bread
and milk for breakfast, boiled potatoes, sauerkraut, and
bread for dinner and bread and milk for supper. After the
cow stopped giving milk, they drank water.
The winter of 1954 was especially severe in Siberia, so
cold that frozen birds littered the ground, and in February
the cow could not be allowed outside very long even in
daytime. The children amused themselves around the
wood-burning stove with games of their own design, and
Viktor devised the most popular. The hut was inhabited by
big reddish-brown cockroaches, which were accepted as
legal residents of all peasant homes and hence not necessarily
considered repellent. The intricacy of their bodily
composition and functioning fascinated Viktor, and he
studied them long and curiously. How did such complicates
creatures come to be? Why are they here? What
gives them life? Watching how quickly they skittered
about, he conceived the idea of harnessing the cockroaches
by attaching threads between them and toy carts carved
from wood. After many failed attempts and mangled insects,
he succeeded and began to stage races. The competition
became such a source of mirth for all that sometimes
after supper the father would say, "Well, Viktor, let us
have a race."
The spring thaws awakened and changed the kolkhoz.
The pure air turned pungent with the omnipresent stench
of ordure, but radishes, cucumbers, and tomatoes appeared
in the garden, and they tasted delicious. Viktor worked in
the fields eleven to twelve hours a day alongside other children,
women, and older men, in their fifties or sixties, who
constituted most of the labor force. The few teenagers
among them malingered and caviled, cursing their barren
[27] life in general and the paucity of meat in particular. Once
Viktor heard an old woman snap at them: "During the
war, we were glad to eat grass and acorns and mice and
grasshoppers. You should be grateful that things are much
better now." It never occurred to him that the toil was
onerous. He liked the outdoors, the physical exertion, and
the discoveries of how soil, moisture, sun, and time transform
seed into wheat. For a boy of seven it was a pleasant
summer.
His father retrieved him in September and in effect appointed
him housekeeper of their room on the second floor
of a frame apartment building housing employees of the
Altai truck factory in Rubtsovsk. His duties included some
shopping, preparing a cold supper, cleaning the room,
keeping the coke fire burning, and hauling water twice
daily from a well about 150 yards down the street. Straining
with the pails of water, he remembered the kolkhoz
and in a few days built a yoke that enabled him to carry
two buckets simultaneously. After slipping on winter ice,
he constructed a crude, yet serviceable sled to transport
water and other cargo. He did not object to the chores
any more than he had minded the work on the farm.
Rather, from them he gained a sense of partnership and
worth, and he prided himself in their accomplishment.
His father went out often in the evening and on Sundays
to visit women, and they talked mostly during supper or
while playing chess (which, by unspoken agreement they
quit after Viktor started winning easily). Only once did his
father ever discuss his future with him. "You will find
your own way in life. I have no friends or relatives in the
Party who can help you. I cannot give you money to buy
your way out of Rubtsovsk. If you wish a life different
from mine, you can find the way only through education.
The war took away my opportunity for an education. You
still have a chance."
Viktor needed no encouragement. Schooling excited him
from the outset and offered, so he thought, the opportunity
to learn the answers to all questions about life. And it was
through school that he sought an answer to the first question
about Soviet life that ever seriously troubled him.
In wartime desperation, the Russians had quickly transfigured
[28] Rubtsovsk from a placid market town into a raw,
roaring industrial city by transferring factories threatened
by the Germans in the west. The forced industrialization
was effected mainly by prison labor, and a web of concentration
camps developed around the city. Although many
camps were closed after Stalin died, those around Rubtsovsk
remained, and their inmates were utilized in industrial
construction with something akin to wartime urgency.
Barbed-wire fences, watchtowers, and lights were erected
around construction sites, and shifts of prisoners, or zeks,
as the Russians called them, were trucked in to keep the
work going twenty-four hours a day.
Viktor first sighted some zeks while leaning into a stinging
wind on the way to school. They were shivering and
huddled against one another for warmth inside wire cages
on the back of trucks, guarded by Central Asians clad in
heavy sheepskin coats and armed with submachine guns.
The thin cloth coats, painted with white numerals; the
canvas boots; the cloth caps partially covering their shaved
heads — all were ragged.
He had seen people in dirty, tattered clothes before.
Never had he seen eyes so vacant. There was no expression;
it was as if he were looking at men whose minds
and souls had died while their bodies continued to breathe.
The concept of political prisoners was unknown to him.
Criminals were criminals, and he was sure that each of
the gaunt trembling, hollow figures he saw must have done
something terrible. Yet he cried out to himself, Kill them!
Kill them or set them free! I would not treat a rat like
that. I would rather die than be in a cage.
His recurrent vision of the zeks subsequently caused him
to wonder: Why are they so rejected? What made them
that way? In tune, as schools taught him the verities of
Marxism-Leninism, he felt he understood. Man, political
instructors emphasized, is but the product of his social and
economic environment. Capitalism, although a necessary
stage in human evolution, created an inherently defective
socioeconomic environment based on selfishness, greed,
and exploitation of the many by the few. Given such a
defective environment, defective human behavior was inevitable.
The criminality, alcoholism, acquisitiveness, [29]
indolence, careerism, and other aberrant behavior that
admittedly persisted in the Soviet Union to some limited
extent were merely the malignant remnants of capitalism.
Viktor still pitied the zeks but now understood them for
what they were — unfortunate victims of the lingering influences
of decaying capitalism. Although the past could not
be altered, nor their plight remedied, the misery they personified
eventually would end with the advent of True
Communism.
Shortly before Viktor's tenth birthday his father married
a co-worker, the widow of a friend killed in an assemblyline
accident. They moved in with her, her mother, sixty-eight,
son, six, and daughter, three. She owned a house, a
real stucco house consisting of three rooms and a kitchen,
well built by her late husband and his relatives on a small
parcel of land her parents had been permitted to keep.
The outhouse was only a few paces away in the backyard,
and the well less than a minute's walk down the block.
The stepmother was a plump, shapeless woman of
thirty-five, slightly cross-eyed, and she wore her lusterless
hair swept straight back into a tight little bun, a style that
emphasized the plainness of her face. Formerly a teacher,
she managed both her accounting job at the factory and
the household well, for she was by nature efficient, industrious,
and, Viktor thought, conniving. He disliked her
instantly and, while treating her civilly, gave her no cause
to be fond of him.
Despite his father's admonitions, he addressed her formally
as Serafima Ivanovna, refusing ever to call her
Mother or even Serafima. One Sunday their soup contained
meat which he perpetually craved, but he said nothing
when his eye caught her deftly ladling out larger portions
of meat into the bowls of her own children. Always he had
asked his father for spending money to buy a hockey
stick, soccer ball, books, or whatever. Now his father required
that he ask Serafima Ivanovna, and usually she
declined, politely explaining that the family budget at the
moment could not accommodate any frivolities.
Looking for a pencil after school, he found some of her
papers and records, studied them, and made a discovery.
She was maintaining two bank accounts. Into one she put
[30] all of his father's salary and part of her own for general
family use; into the other she sequestered some of her
salary for the separate benefit of her children. That evening
Viktor confronted her with his findings, and during the
shouting, abusive argument that ensued, their mutual animosities
spilled out. In front of the family Viktor's father
took off his belt and flogged him furiously for three or
four minutes until his own exasperations were spent. Maybe
Viktor could have stopped it sooner, had he cried, but
he did not.
The next day he enlisted a schoolmate into a compact
to run away, south to the sunshine and orchards of Tashkent.
Eluding railway police, then an aged conductor, they
slipped aboard a train just as it started to roll out of the
Rubtsovsk station. The train, however, was headed north,
and they got off at a station some fifty miles away. As
they attempted to sneak onto a southbound train, police
grabbed them by their collars, dragged them into the station,
interrogated and beat them. Unable to verify their
false identities, authorities interned them in a detention
center for orphans and delinquents pending investigation.
The second night they escaped into the countryside by
scaling a barbed-wire fence and hid on a kolkhoz for a
few days before venturing back to the railroad station.
There the police again caught them, beat them, and
dragged them back to the center. Some three weeks later
Viktor's father arrived to bring him home. He was calm.
"I cannot stop you from running away. But if you do it
again, they will put you in reform school. That is like a
prison, and once you have been there, you will never be
the same. Think about it; you must decide."
Father is happy with Serafima Ivanovna, and they are
good for each other. I am a problem for them both. I do
not belong with them. Yet I am forbidden to leave. I cannot
change what is. So until I am older, I will stay away
as much as I can. Then, on the first day I can, I will leave.
The school maintained a superb library with a large
collection of politically approved classics. The room was
warm and quiet and it became a sanctuary into which
Viktor retreated in his withdrawal from home. Pupils were
not permitted to choose specific books; instead, the [31]
librarian selected for them after assessing their individual
interests and capacities.
Viktor wondered about the librarian because she was so
different from others. Although elderly, she walked erectly
and held her head high, as if looking for something in the
distance, and her bearing made him think of royalty. He
often saw her walking to or from school alone; he never
saw her fraternizing with the other teachers or, for that
matter, in the company of another adult. There were
stories about her. It was said that her husband had been a
zek and that many years ago she had come from Moscow,
hoping to find him in the camps. Some even said that she
herself had been a zek. Viktor never knew what the truth
was. But whatever her past or motives, the librarian
elected to invest heavily of herself in him.
Having questioned him for a while, she said, "Well, tell
me, young man, what interests you? History, geography,
science, adventure... ?"
"Adventure!" Viktor exclaimed.
She handed him a copy of The Call of the Wild, which
he brought back in the morning. "You disappoint me," she
said. "Why do you not want to read the book?"
"But I have read it."
"Really? Please, then, recite to me that which you read."
His accurate and detailed account of the novel by Jack
London evoked from her the slightest of smiles and a nod.
"Let us see if you can do as well with these," she said,
handing him copies of Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, and
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. "However, do
not neglect your studies. You have time for many adventures."
Guided and stimulated by the librarian, Viktor became
an omnivorous reader, each book she fed him intensifying
his hunger for another. He developed the capability of
reading any time, any place light allowed, his concentration
unimpaired by conversation, noise, or disturbance around
him. And he fell into what was to be a lifelong habit of
almost reflexively starting to read whenever he found himself
with idle tune, whether a few minutes or a few hours.
The authors he read became his true parents, their
characters his real teachers and, in some cases, his models.
[32] He saw in Spartacus, who had led Roman slaves in revolt,
the strengths and virtues he desired in himself. To him,
Spartacus was even more admirable than the forthcoming
New Communist Man because his worth originated from
within himself rather than from his external environment.
Then the works of the pioneering French aviator and author
Antoine de Saint-Exupery unveiled to him the brilliant
vistas of flight, and the pilots who braved the storms and
unknowns of the sky to discover and explore its beauties
were his heroes.
Discussing Saint-Exupery with the librarian, he said he
longed to fly.
"Why?"
"I think to fly would be the greatest of adventures. The
sky has no boundaries, no restrictions. There nothing is
forbidden."
"You know, Viktor Ivanovich, great adventure can be
found in poetry. Tell me, who is your favorite poet?"
"Lermontov. Absolutely. Lermontov." The great nineteenth-century
Russian poet was a dashing officer frequently
in official disfavor and sometimes in exile. Viktor
admired him both for his adventurous personal life, which
ended in a duel at age twenty-six, and for his art.
"Here is a collection of his works you might enjoy."
Leafing through it, Viktor noted the lightest of little
checkmarks penciled by a poem that began "An eagle cannot
be caged...."
Subconsciously or otherwise, Viktor tried to emulate the
exploits of fictional characters, and in school he behaved
like a Russian reincarnation of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry
Finn. Learning in physics class how to create short
circuits, he put out the lights in the entire school on a dark
whiter afternoon and forced dismissal of class for the rest
of the day. In chemistry class he taught himself to make
firecrackers with timing devices. He thus was able to keep
a class popping with a succession of little surprise explosions
while he was innocently far away. Once he stole a
key, locked the social philosophy classroom from the inside,
and jumped out a second-floor window, preventing
the class from convening for three hours. He achieved perhaps
his best coup by letting loose fifteen lizards in the
[33] Russian literature class. Girls shrieked and ran, and the
equally hysterical female teacher took refuge from the
beasts by jumping atop her desk. Manfully Viktor volunteered
to save them all by rounding up the lizards, and
the grateful teacher reported his gallantry and good citizenship
to the school director.
After a hockey game in a park in February 1958, four
boys, considerably larger and three to four years older than
Viktor, now eleven, surrounded him and demanded his
money. Instinctively and irrationally he refused. Before
taking his few kopecks, they beat him about the face, ribs,
and kidneys with a brutality unnecessary to their purposes.
He lay on the frozen snow for five or ten minutes before
gathering strength to make his way home slowly to the
censure of Serafima Ivanovna, who remarked about the
disgrace of hooliganism.
He tended to his wounds as best he knew how and stayed
to himself for several days. He could conceal the pain in
his sides but not the bloated discoloration of his face, and
besides, he wanted to think. What would Spartacus do?
The librarian evinced neither curiosity nor surprise when
he asked if there were any books about boxing and physical
culture. She came back with a book about each and a
third book — about nutrition. Viktor filled a burlap bag
with sawdust, hung it from the tree in the backyard, and
began methodically, obsessively, to punch the bag according
to the books. He ran through the streets, chinned himself
on the tree, and, with loud grunts, did push-ups and
pull-ups until Serafima Ivanovna admonished him to cease
the racket. For once his father interceded in his behalf.
"What he is doing is not so bad. Let him go his way."
Emboldened by the unexpected endorsement, Viktor
asked Serafima Ivanovna if they could add more protein —
meat, fish, eggs, cheese (he had never tasted cheese) — to
their daily fare of bread, potatoes, and cabbage. According
to the nutrition book, protein was essential to the strength
and health of the body, especially growing bodies. "All you
ask is expensive and hard to buy," she replied. "We do the
best we can; I cannot promise more."
The witch is telling the truth. There is nothing she can
do. All right, I will find protein for myself.
[34] The hunt for protein led Belenko into the forest beyond
the river that curved along the eastern edge of Rubtsovsk.
They may have exaggerated, but old men claimed that the
Aley River before the war was so clean you could see
plentiful schools of big fish swimming five or six feet below
the surface and catch them almost effortlessly. But around
the city, continuous pollution from chemicals and factory
wastes had turned the river into an open sewer, and the
despoilment had eaten into the forest, shriveling flora and
leaving a belt of scrubland.
About a thousand yards past the scrubland, Viktor entered
heavy underbrush and, after pushing on for another
half mile or so, came into a dense primeval forest colored
and perfumed by wild flowers. He felt like Fabien, the
doomed pilot in Saint-Exupery's Night Flight, who, lost
and buffeted in a South American storm, suddenly was
lifted out of the blackness of the clouds into tranquil heavens
lit by stars. Uncontaminated, uninhabited, silent, and
serene, the endless forest imbued Viktor with the same
sense of space and freedom he was sure awaited him in the
sky. And after school recessed for the summer, he virtually
lived in the forest.
With a slingshot he killed birds — mostly sparrows, crows,
and quail — that abounded in the forest and roasted them
on a spit. He learned to detect birds' nests which often
yielded eggs. And he gathered wild blackberries, strawberries,
cranberries, and tart little green apples. Some days
he came alone and, after gorging himself until he could
eat no more, settled in a patch of light and read until darkness.
More often he invited friends, most of whom were
veritable waifs like him, and just as hungry. They constructed
a log lean-to, and from this base ranged out in
all directions to hunt and explore; their explorations were
rewarded by discovery of a clear stream populated by
plump trout.
Between May and September Viktor gained thirteen
pounds, and with the resumption of school, he looked forward
to presenting himself to the librarian. He expected
that she would acclaim him for his growth just as she did
for his reading. But she was not there. The new librarian
would say only that she had retired and "moved away." To
[35] where? None of the other teachers knew, or if they did,
they would not say. Why would she go away without saying
good-bye to me? What happened to her? He never did
find out.
Viktor continued to pound the punching bag, to exercise
and run, and by December he felt ready to stalk the four
assailants who had jumped him the preceding February.
He encountered one in the same park where they had
beaten him. "I have come to pay you back," he announced.
"I am going to fight you. Are you ready?"
The boy tried to shove him away, as if not deigning to
take him seriously. With a short, quick left jab, Viktor hit
him squarely in the face, and he himself was surprised by
the force of the blow. It is working! He dazed the boy
with a left to the jaw, then a right to the ribs. The teenager
tried to fight back, but the blow to the ribs had hurt him.
Viktor hit him in the jaw with another left and then, with
a right, knocked him down. He got up, and Viktor
promptly knocked him down once more, this time with a
left hook. "Have you had enough?" Viktor shouted.
"All right, let's stop," said the boy, who was breathing
heavily on the ground. He slowly got to his feet, whereupon
Viktor, without warning, hit him with all his might
in the right eye and felled him a third time.
"I did that so you will understand," Viktor said. "The
next time I will kill you."
He caught two of the other three and battered them
just as badly. His inability to find the fourth did not matter.
He had avenged himself, and the fights, the third of
which was witnessed by fifty to sixty students after school,
established his reputation as someone who had best be left
alone.
It also gained him an invitation to an adolescent party
on New Year's Eve, 1958. Everyone was gulping homemade
vodka, which smelled like a combination of kerosene
and acetone. Although Viktor had never drunk alcohol
before, he joined in, partially out of curiosity, partially
because he thought drinking was expected of him. After
about an hour he staggered outside, unnoticed, and collapsed
in the snow. He awakened caked in his own vomit.
His head throbbed with both pain and fright born of the
[36] realization that, had he lain there another couple of hours,
he surely would have frozen to death. In his sickness and
disgust he made a vow: Never will I do this to myself
again. Never will alcohol get a hold on me.
Later he came to enjoy alcohol, particularly wine and
beer. But he drank it in circumstances and amounts of his
own choosing. The ability to control alcohol, or abstain
from it entirely, gave him an advantage over many of his
peers at each successive stage in his life, if only by granting
him more time and energy than they had for productive
pursuits.
On a wintry Sunday afternoon a light aircraft crashed
near the truck factory. The wreckage was still smoldering
and ambulance attendants were taking away the body of
the pilot, wrapped in a sheet, when Viktor arrived. The
scene transfixed him, and he stayed long after everyone
else had gone. Like a magnet, the wreckage kept drawing
him back day after day, and he contemplated it by the
hour.
Why did he die? Why did I not die in the fire when the
mine exploded? Is there a God who decides who will die
and when? They say that God is only the product of superstition
and that the whole world happened by chance. Is
that so? Do the trees and berries grow, do the cockroaches
scoot, does the snow fall, do we breathe and think — all
because of chance? If so, what caused chance in the first
place?
No, there must be some Being, some purpose in life
higher than man. But I do not understand. Maybe that is
the purpose in life — to try to understand. The pilot must
have tried in the sky. What he must have seen! Someday I
will take his place and see for myself. Some way I will give
my life meaning. I would rather that my life be like a
candle that burns brightly and beautifully, if only briefly,
than live a long life without meaning.
This embryonic ethos foreordained Viktor to conflict.
He wanted to find meaning, to dedicate himself to some
higher purpose, to be all the Party asked. Yet he could no
more give himself unquestioningly to the Party on the
basis of its pronouncements than he could give himself to
his grandmother's God on the basis of her chanted litanies.
[37] He had to see and comprehend for himself. As he
searched and tried to understand, his reasoning exposed
troublesome contradictions between what he saw and what
he was told.
His inner conflict probably had begun with the announcement
in school that First Party Secretary Nikita
Sergeyevich Khrushchev had delivered a momentous and
courageous address to the Twentieth Party Congress. The
political instructor who gravely reported the essence of
the speech suddenly turned Viktor's basic concept of contemporary
Soviet history upside down. Stalin, the father of
the Soviet people, the modern Lenin, Stalin, whose benign
countenance still looked at him from the first page of
each of his textbooks, now was revealed to have been a
depraved monster. Everything he had heard and read
about Stalin throughout his life was a lie. For the leader
of the Party himself — and who could know better? — had
shown that Stalin had been a tyrant who had imprisoned
and inflicted death upon countless innocent people, including
loyal Party members and great generals. Far from having
won the war, Stalin had been a megalomaniac who
had very nearly lost the war.
The revelations so overwhelmed and deadened the mind
that for a while he did not think about their implications.
But as the teachers elaborated upon the Khrushchev
speech and rewrote history, questions arose. It must be
true; else they would not say it. But how could Stalin fool
everybody for so long? Khrushchev worked with Stalin
for years. Why did it take him so long to find out? Why
did he take so long to tell us? If everything the Party
said before was untrue, is it possible that what it is saying
now is also untrue?
Khrushchev returned from his 1959 visit to the United
States persuaded that corn represented a panacea for Soviet
agricultural problems. In Iowa he had stood in seas
of green corn rising above his head and seen how the
Americans supplied themselves with a superabundance of
meat by feeding corn to cattle and pigs. The American
practice, he decreed, would be duplicated throughout the
Soviet Union, and corn would be grown, as the radio declared,
"from ocean to ocean." Accordingly, corn was
[38] sown on huge tracts of heretofore-uncultivated land —
uncultivated in some areas because soil or climate were
such that nothing would grow in it.
But the most stupid kolkhoznik knows you can't grow
corn in Siberia. I have seen it with my own eyes. It is not
even a foot high, a joke. How can the Party allow something
so ridiculous?
The effort to amend the laws of nature by decree, combined
with adverse weather, resulted not in a plethora of
corn but rather in a dearth of all grain, which forced the
slaughter of livestock. Serious shortages of meat, milk,
butter, and even bread inevitably followed. Nevertheless,
the radio continued to blare forth statistics demonstrating
how under the visionary leadership of the gifted agronomist
Khrushchev, Soviet agriculture was overcoming the errors
of Stalin and producing ever-larger quantities of meat,
milk, butter, bread, and other foodstuffs.
If we have so much bread, why am I standing in line at
four A.M., hoping I can buy some before it runs out? And
milk! There has been no milk in all Rubtsovsk for five
days and no meat for two weeks. Well, as they say, if you
want milk, just take your pail to the radio. But why does
the radio keep announcing something which anybody with
eyes knows is not true?
The population of Rubtsovsk included an abnormally
high percentage of former convicts because most inmates of
the surrounding concentration camps were confined to the
city for life upon completing their sentences. Many were
irredeemable criminals habituated to assault, robbery, rape,
and murder. Armed with knives or lead taped to the palms
of their hands, they killed people for no more than the
gold in their teeth and robbed men and women of the
clothes off their backs in broad daylight. Innocent citizens
lost their lives in theaters or on buses simply because
criminals in card games sometimes used as their stakes a
pledge to kill somebody, anybody.
One Saturday night Viktor rode homeward from a skating
rink on a bus with passengers so jammed together that
it was hard to breathe deeply, and he had room to stand
on only one foot. At a stop the front and back doors
swung open, people poured out as if a dam had burst, and
[39] Belenko was swept outside with them. From within the
bus he heard a heart-rending scream. "They have cut her
up. Police! Ambulance!" Lying lifeless on a seat was a
young woman, a large, wet crimson splotch on her thin
pink coat. There were no public telephones on the streets,
and calls for help had to be relayed by word of mouth or
runners. The police arrived about an hour later. They
could do nothing except haul away the body.
Viktor examined the newspapers the next day. They did
not mention the murder, as he was almost certain they
would not, for crimes of violence in Rubtsovsk never were
reported. They did report the rising crime rate in Chicago
along with the rising production of Soviet industry and
agriculture.
Of course, I know there are many criminals in Chicago
and everywhere else in capitalist countries. How could it
be otherwise? They always are having one crisis on top of
another. The people are exploited and poor and hungry
and plagued by all the other ulcers of capitalism. We don't
need the newspaper to tell us that. We need to know what's
going on here.
Why do we have so many criminals, so many people who
don't want to live openly and honestly? They say the criminals
are the remnants of capitalism. But the Revolution
was in 1917. That was nearly half a century ago. All these
criminals grew up under communism, not capitalism. Why
has our system brought them up so poorly?
Having fractured his wrist in a soccer match, Viktor
took a bus to the dispensary for treatment. Although his
wrist hurt, he recognized that his condition did not constitute
an emergency, and he thought nothing of waiting.
Ahead of him in the line, though, was a middle-aged
woman crying with pain that periodically became so acute
she bent over double and screamed. Her apprehensive
husband held her and assured her that a doctor would see
her soon. Viktor had been there about an hour when a
well-dressed man and a woman appeared. A nurse immediately
ushered them past the line and into the doctor's
office. The husband of the sick woman shouted, "This is
not just! Can't you see? My wife needs help now!"
"Shut up and wait your turn," said the nurse.
[40] If we are all equal, if ours is a classless society, how can
this happen? And why do some people get apartments
right away, while everybody else waits years? And look at
Khokhlov [son of a local Party secretary]. He's a real murderer
and robber; everybody knows that, and everybody is
afraid of him. But every time he's arrested, they let him
go. Why does the Party pretend everybody is equal when
everybody knows we are not?
One of Viktor's political instructors, the teacher of social
philosophy, genuinely idolized Khrushchev as a visionary
statesman whose earthy idiosyncrasies reflected
his humanitarian nature and his origins as a man of the
people. Khrushchev had freed the people of the benighting
inequities bequeathed by the tyrannical Stalin, and by
his multifaceted genius was leading the people in all directions
toward a halcyon era of plenty. On the occasion
of Khrushchev's seventieth birthday the instructor read
to the class the paeans published by Pravda. Everyone
could be sure that despite advancing years, the Party leader
retained his extraordinary mental acumen and robust
physical vigor. We are lucky to have such a man as our
leader.
Some months later the same instructor, as if mentioning
a minor modification in a Five-Year Plan, casually announced
that Khrushchev had requested retirement "due
to old age." For a while nothing was said in school about
the great Khrushchev or his successors. Then it began.
Past appearances had been misleading. Fresh findings resulted
from scientific review by the Party disclosed that
Khrushchev actually was an ineffectual bumbler who had
made a mess of the economy while dangerously relaxing
the vigilance of the Motherland against the ubiquitous
threats from the "Dark Forces of the West." Under Brezhnev,
the nation at last was blessed with wise and strong
leadership.
This is incredible! What can you believe? Why do they
keep changing the truth? Why is what I see so different from
what they say?
Recoiling from the quackery of social studies, Viktor
veered toward the sciences — mathematics, chemistry,
physics, and especially biology. Here logic, order, and [41]
consistency prevailed. The laws of Euclid or Newton were not
periodically repealed, and you did not have to take anybody's
word for anything. You could test and verify for
yourself.
He shifted his reading to popular science magazines and
technical journals, to books and articles about biology and
medicine, aviation and mechanics. At the time, Soviet students
were required to study vocational as well as academic
subjects, and those who excelled could participate in an extracurricular
club the members of which build equipment
and machinery. Viktor designed a radio-controlled tractor
which was selected for a Moscow exhibition displaying
technical achievements of students throughout the Soviet
Union. As a prize, he received a two-week trip to the
capital.
The broad boulevards of Moscow, paved and lighted;
subway trams speeding through tiled and muraled passages;
theaters, restaurants, and museums; ornate old Russian architecture;
department stores and markets selling fresh
fruits, vegetables, and flowers; traffic and official black
limousines — all represented wondrous new sights. Collectively
they elated him while they inspired pride in his
country and hopeful questions.
Is not the Party right after all? Does not what I have
seen prove that we are making progress? Will not all cities
someday be like Moscow?
The final morning he joined a long line of men and
women waiting four abreast outside the Kremlin to view
the perpetually refurbished body of Lenin. The Kremlin,
with its thick red walls, stately spires, and turrets, connoted
to him majesty and might, and upon finally reaching
the bier, he felt himself in the presence of history and
greatness. He wanted to linger, but a guard motioned him
onward. Leaving reverently, he asked the guard where the
tomb of Stalin was. The answer astonished him. They had
evicted Stalin from the Lenin mausoleum. Why, they've
thrown him away like a dog!
While telling his classmates back in Rubtsovsk about
Moscow, Viktor heard disturbing news. The KGB had arrested
the older brother of a friend for economic crimes.
He remembered how admiring all had been the year [42]
before when the youth had bribed a Party functionary to
secure employment in the meat-packing plant. There, as
everybody knew, a clever person could wax rich by stealing
meat for sale on the black market, and procurement
of the job had seemed like a triumph of entrepreneurship.
He will be imprisoned. He will be one of them in the
trucks. He will be a zek.
The specter shocked Viktor into recognition of a frightening
pattern in the behavior of many of his peers. Some
had taken to waylaying and robbing drunks outside factories
in the evening of paydays. Others had stolen and
disassembled cars and machinery, to sell the parts on the
black market. A few, sent to reform school for little more
than malicious mischief or habitual truancy, had emerged
as trained gangsters, who were graduating from petty
thievery to burglary and armed robbery.
They are becoming real criminals. They never will be
New Communist Men. Nothing is going to fix them. How
did our communist society do this to them? I do not understand.
But if it can make them that way, it could make
me that way. That I will not allow. It is as Father said. I
must make my own way. I must start now before it is
too late.
Always Viktor had received good marks in school without
especially exerting himself. He attended to his homework
dutifully but quickly so he could devote himself to
his own pursuits. Frequently in class, particularly during
political lectures, he read novels concealed behind textbooks.
Now he resolved to strive during the remainder of
school to earn the highest honors attainable, to obey all
rules and laws, to try to mold himself into a New Communist
Man. Through distinction, he would find his way out
of Rubtsovsk and into the sky.
Faithful to his vows, he disassociated himself from most
of his friends, studied hard, and parroted the political
polemics, even when he believed them absurd. As part of
the final examinations in the spring of 1965, he artfully
wrote three papers entitled "Progress of the Soviet System,"
"Crisis of the Western World," and "Principles of
the New Communist Man." They faithfully regurgitated
the dogma of the day and were brightened by a few original
[43] flourishes of his own. The teacher, who read portions
of "Progress of the Soviet System" aloud, commended his
selection of the tank as the best exemplification of the
supremacy of Soviet technology. Although Viktor achieved
his goal in social philosophy, a perfect grade of five, he
was not entirely proud because he suspected that not all
he wrote was true.
Certainly, his assessment of the crisis of the Western
world was valid. The grip of the Dark Forces which controlled
governments, policies, events, and the people of
Western societies was weakening. The Dark Forces, that
shadowy cabal, comprised of the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency, the American military, the Mafia, Wall Street,
corporate conglomerates and their foreign lackeys, clearly
themselves were in retreat and disarray. Everywhere in the
West, signs of decay and impending collapse were apparent.
*
However, he was not so sure that the progress
of Soviet society was as real and fated as his paper asserted.
And he personally doubted the perfectibility of the
New Communist Man, whose evolution and character he
delineated in detail.
Maybe it was guilt that caused him to speak out to his
detriment. His Russian literature teacher, in some casual
comment, said that light is matter. "Of course it isn't,"
Viktor interjected. "That's basic physics."
What began as a polite discussion degenerated into an
angry argument, and Viktor embarrassed the teacher before
her class by opening his physics book to a page that
stated light is not matter. She ordered him to report to
her at the end of the day.
His excellent work, she noted, ordinarily would entitle
him to a grade of five. But literature taught, among other
things, proper manners. She could not in good conscience
award a perfect mark to a student so unmannerly. The
difficulty could be eliminated were he to acknowledge his
error, recant before the class, and apologize for his impertinence.
[44] No! Why should I say I am wrong when I am right? In
science, at least, you must be honest. I will not be dishonest.
The teacher gave him a grade of four, and as a consequence,
he was graduated with a silver medal instead of a
gold. Still, he had his academic degree, a diploma certifying
him as a Grade 3 Mechanic (Grade 6 being the
highest), and a letter from school attesting to his good
character and ideological soundness. He also had a plan.
The Soviet Union maintains a military auxiliary, the
Voluntary Society for Assistance to the Army, Air Force
and Navy, which is known by its Russian acronym
DOSAAF. Among other functions, DOSAAF provides
young volunteers with technical military instruction preparatory
to their entry into the armed services. Viktor
learned that the branch in the city of Omsk, 380 miles
away, offered flight training. By finding a job in Omsk to
support himself, he reasoned, he could learn to fly through
DOSAAF.
His farewell to his father and stepmother was awkward,
for all pretended to regret that he was leaving home, while
each knew that everyone was relieved. His father gave him
a note to a cousin living in Omsk and, shaking hands,
pressed twenty rubles into his palm. He did not know
whether his father wished to conceal the gift from Serafima
or whether he simply was too embarrassed to make it
openly. He did realize that his father could ill afford the
gift, which equaled roughly a sixth of his monthly takehome
pay.
Omsk, larger, busier, and colder than Rubtsovsk, was an
important center of armament production, a major waystop
on the Trans-Siberian Railway, and a hub of air
traffic between Siberia and the rest of the country. When
Viktor arrived in June 1965, the factories manufacturing
tanks, armored vehicles, artillery, aircraft engines, and
other military hardware were running full blast day and
night seven days a week, and they continued to operate at
the same forced pace as long as he was there. Jobs were
plentiful; the problem was finding a place to live. Therefore,
his father's cousin steered Viktor to the repair garage
of Omsk Airport, which maintained a dormitory and cafeteria
for its employees, gave them substantial discounts on
[45] airline tickets, and issued them warm work clothing, including
heavy jackets and comfortable boots lined with
dog fur.
The garage, a cavernous brick hall with an arched tin
roof that rattled loudly in the rain, was cold and dark. A
dozen mechanics were under the supervision of senior
mechanic Igor Andronovich Yakov. He was a big, husky
man with thick white hair, a red nose, deep voice, and
huge hands calloused by forty years of labor on the roads
and in the garages of Siberia. For some three decades he
had driven heavy trucks until, after repeated arrests for
drunken driving, he finally lost his license. The airport
nonetheless was glad to have him as a Grade 6 mechanic
because, drunk or sober, he could fix vehicles. He shared
his skills with anyone who asked his help, and he could
not resist lending money, no matter how many times the
borrower had previously defaulted. He was the undisputed
and popular boss. And his standing and kindness possibly
saved Viktor's life on his first day at work.
About 11:30 A.M. the master welder shoved some money
at Viktor and in a patronizing tone said, "Kid, go buy
some juice."
"I don't want anything to drink."
"I didn't ask what you want. I told you to go buy
vodka."
"No! I won't."
Brandishing a wrench, the welder approached Viktor.
By not retreating, he created a confrontation which neither
man could back out of except through humiliating surrender.
He will swing from the right. I should duck under to
the left. No. If I fail, the wrench will kill me or cripple me.
Viktor jumped at the welder and with a succession of
rapid jabs knocked him against the wall and twisted the
wrench out of his hand.
He turned and saw three other mechanics coming at him
with wrenches. Stepping left, then right, then backward, he
tried to prevent any of them from getting behind him, but
they succeeded in maneuvering him toward a corner.
"Enough!" Yakov shouted. "All of you!"
Wielding a wrench of his own, Yakov grabbed Viktor
[46] by the arm and, jerking him away, announced, "The young
man and I will buy the vodka."
They walked four or five minutes before Yakov spoke.
"You realize they would have killed you."
"Maybe I would have killed some of them first."
"And in your grave, would you have been proud?
Listen to me, young one; I know. In a socialist society do
not be a white crow among black crows; else you will be
pecked to death. If you want to be a different kind of bird,
never let the others see your true colors."
At Yakov's insistence, Viktor attempted an apology to
the welder; it was hard, but he offered his hand, which
the welder refused. After they drank awhile, though, he
slapped Viktor on the back and shook hands.
Viktor had violated both a daily ritual and a longstanding
custom requiring the most junior man to fetch the
vodka.
Typically, about 11:30 A.M. Yakov signaled the effective
end of the workday. "Well, enough of that business. We can
do that anytime. Let's talk real business. I have eighty
kopecks. Let's organize something and send the kid. He'll
bring us gas."
The ensuing exchanges seldom varied. "I have a ruble."
"I'll support you with seventy kopecks."
"I can't. I have no money today."
"Well, I'll lend you fifty kopecks."
"All right, kid. Take the money, and do your job."
Viktor jogged or ran, which he liked to do anyway, to a
store a quarter of a mile away to arrive before the noon
crowd formed. His duty was to bring back the maximum
amount of alcohol purchasable with the money collected,
after he had set aside enough for bread and canned fish.
The cheapest vodka cost three rubles sixty-two kopecks a
half-liter, and a bottle of Algerian red wine one ruble
twenty kopecks; a kilogram of good Russian bread could
be bought for sixteen kopecks, and a can of foul-tasting
fish for forty kopecks.
Yakov entertained his colleagues by lining up the glasses,
shutting his eyes, and, measuring by sound, pouring almost
exactly the same amount of vodka or wine into each glass.
Glasses filled, the party began and lasted until there was no
[47] more to drink. The men then settled by the coal stove to
play dominoes, smoke, and tell jokes, allowing only an
emergency to intrude on their leisure. The garage manager
did not bother them; they accomplished in half a day
all that was demanded, his superiors were happy, and by
keeping in their graces, he could count on the mechanics
if serious need arose.
Viktor in turn empathized with them; he understood that
the garage was their prison and that they had given up
even dreaming of parole. He realized, too, the meaning of
the words that followed Yakov's first swig of vodka. "Ah,
this puts a little pink in the day." For him the garage became
a comfortable haven from which he could pursue his
overriding goal of flight.
Having survived scrutiny of his ideological stability,
study of his education, and a rigorous physical examination,
Viktor was one of forty young men selected for DOSAAF
preflight training. Five nights weekly he hurried from work
to the cafeteria, then took a bus across town to DOSAAF
offices located in a prerevolutionary bank building. The
subjects — aerodynamics, navigation, design and construction
of aircraft, radio and electronics, meteorology, and
rules of flight — were not inordinately difficult. Many
cadets, though, could not manage both the volume of
study required and a daily job, and by the end of the first
month fully a fourth had dropped out.
Viktor never had been so happy as in DOSAAF classes.
They were devoid of cant, pretense, hypocrisy. Defying
regulations, the chief instructor omitted the teaching of
political theory. Careers and lives might hinge on how
much and how well they learned, and there was no time
for trivia. The instructors were retired Air Force pilots,
and in Viktor's eyes they stood as real men who had
braved and survived the skies. They treated the cadets as
both subordinates and comrades, as future partners from
whom nothing should be hidden. Direct questions to them
elicited unequivocal, comprehensible answers, and for any
question concerning flight, they had an answer. The closer
they led him to flight, the more its challenge engrossed him.
The first parachute jump was scheduled in December,
and a parachutist, an Air Force major, readied them for
[48] it. He said that although he had jumped more than a thousand
times, he still was afraid before jumping. "Do not
fear your own fear," he told them. "It is natural." The
temperature was forty degrees below zero as Viktor and
eight other cadets climbed into the small AN-2 transport
at an airfield thirty miles from Omsk. He was not afraid;
he was terrified. He felt only like an automaton irreversibly
programmed to proceed to its own doom. When the parachutist
swung open the door and freezing air rushed and
whistled into the cabin, he had to reach into his deepest
reserves of strength and will to make himself stand up and
take his place, third in line. Will it open? Will I remember?
Am I now to die?
The parachutist slapped his shoulder, and he plunged
headlong into the void. Remember! Count! Now! Pull! A
tremendous jerk shook his body, and he yelled in exultation.
He was suspended, adrift in endless, pure beautiful
space; he was free, free from the earth, unfettered to any
of its squalor, confusion, pettiness, meanness. He laughed
and sang and shouted. I am being foolish. But what does it
matter? No one can hear me. No one can see me. I am free.
Absorbed in the rhapsodies of the sky, Viktor returned
to earth ingloriously, landing squarely on the back of a cow.
Under the impact, the startled cow involuntarily relieved
herself and bounded away, dumping him in the manure.
He only laughed at himself, for nothing could detract from
his joy. He wanted to go back up immediately and jump
again. Before, he had longed, hoped, imagined. Now he
knew. His future was clear. As long as he lived, he would
live to be in the sky.
After written examinations in mid-April, the students
met their future flight instructors. Viktor was mortified
upon being introduced to his. He had counted on being
taught by a real fighter pilot, perhaps one who had flown
against the Americans in Korea or Vietnam. Instead, he
was assigned to a woman, Nadezhda Alekseyevna, who was
about thirty-five. She still had the figure of a gymnast, and
despite a rather rough complexion and bobbed hair, she
was pretty. It almost would have been better had she been
ugly.
The sullenness with which he etched a hollow outline
[49] of his background betrayed to her his disappointment. She
recognized all the cues of male resentment, for she was one
of the few female pilots in DOSAAF, if not the sole one.
She had earned her wings and place only through prodigious
determination. At age eighteen, she had joined a
parachutist club open to women and subsequently finagled
her way into a glider club. Through influence in Moscow,
she had graduated from gliders to DOSAAF flight training
and so excelled that she won grudging acceptance as an instructor.
For the past eight years she had taught, always
having to be better to be equal, always having to prove
herself anew, always having to tolerate the lack of any
separate facilities for women at air bases.
"Do you really want to fly?" she asked Viktor.
"Very much."
"All right, we will work on it together. I am proud of
many of my students. Some now are fighter pilots. I hope
you will make me proud of you."
By law, the garage had to grant Viktor leave of absence
with three-fourths pay during his flight training at an airfield
north of Omsk. The field had long ago been abandoned
by the Air Force to DOSAAF, and it was closed
except during late spring and summer. They had to open
the mess hall and World War II barracks and keep wood
fires burning around the clock because even in early May
the temperature was below freezing. Instructors, cadets,
Air Force administrators, mechanics, cooks, and guards all
joined in clearing the runways of snow and making the
base serviceable.
On their first training flight in the YAK-18U, an old,
yet excellent trainer easy to handle, Nadezhda Alekseyevna
told him, "Place your hand lightly on the stick and throttle
and your feet on the rudders. Do not exert any pressure.
Just follow my movements." She climbed leisurely to
about 5,000 feet. Suddenly she threw the plane into violent
maneuvers — dives, an inside loop, an outside loop,
barrel rolls, a stall, then a spin. The whole earth was
rushing up into Viktor's face to smash him. He did not
know what was happening, only that the end was imminent.
Persuaded that she had scared him enough, Nadezhda
Alekseyevna deftly pulled out, circled, and landed.
[50] Viktor stood uneasily, still adjusting to the ground. "Do
you still want to fly?" she asked.
"Yes."
"Do you think I can teach you?"
"I know you can."
"All right, from now on, let's work together like adults."
On their fourth flight, she instructed, "Make a ninety-degree
turn to the left." He banked and, pulling out a
little late, altered course about 100 degrees but otherwise
executed flawlessly. "Okay, ninety degrees to the right".
This time he watched the compass carefully and straightened
out on a heading exactly ninety degrees from the
previous course. "I'm going to put us into a spin and let
you try to rescue us." She arched the plane upward and
throttled back the power until it stalled, then nosed over
into a dizzying spin. "Now it's up to you!"
Easily Viktor pushed the stick forward, stepped on the
rudder, halted the spin, and pulled back out of the dive.
"Very good! Try a loop."
Viktor dived, then lifted the plane upward and over and
backward into a loop. At the height of the loop, when
they were upside down, he snapped the plane into a half
roll and righted it, effecting an Immelmann turn, a much
more difficult maneuver than could be expected of him.
"Impudent! But good!"
Without instructions, he did a full loop, then a series of
quick rolls.
"All right! All right! Let's see if you can land."
Unharnessing their parachutes, Nadezhda, who heretofore
had addressed Viktor formally as Viktor Ivanovich,
said, "Viktor, you can do it. You have the talent. You can
be a great flier."
Everyone else saw it, too. Viktor could fly, as naturally
as a fish swims. And to him the sky had become as water
is to a fish. Before his first solo flight, he was cocky and,
afterward, still cockier. When he landed after his final
flight test, the lieutenant colonel who flew in the back seat
shook his hand. "Young man, outstanding. I hope we see
you in the Air Force."
The instructors and cadets gathered in the mess hall on
a Friday night, their last before returning to Omsk, for a
[51] great party. Even before vodka began to evaporate inhibitions,
Nadezhda abandoned her role as a superior and
confided that his performance had won her a commendation.
"You have made me proud, Viktor."
In the morning melancholy replaced euphoria as Viktor
canvassed his immediate future. It was too late to apply
this year for Air Force cadet training. He could continue
the nightly DOSAAF classes, but now the theory of flight
seemed a pallid substitute for the reality of flight. He
would have to subsist during the next months in the dark
void of the garage without adventure or meaning. What a
miserable fix. Well, whining won't help you. That is the
way it is. Do something about it.
Returning to Omsk in August, Viktor heard that because
the military anticipated need for many more doctors, there
would be an unusual number of openings in the fall classes
at the local medical school. Out of a whim to test his
capacities, he took the entrance examinations. Toward
the end of the month the medical school notified him that
he ranked near the top of all applicants and advised him to
report for enrollment. Why not? If you could be a doctor
as well as a flier, think of all the adventures you could
have! One of the cosmonauts is a doctor. If he could do it,
why can't you?
Just three days after medical-school classes convened,
they abruptly and unexpectedly were suspended so students
could participate in the harvest. Legions of young people
from factories, the universities, the Army were being
trucked into the countryside. The manufacture of goods,
the education of physicians, the training of the nation's
guardians must wait. All available manpower had to be
mobilized for the frantic, desperate battle of the harvest.
Why are we so unprepared? The harvest is not something
that happens only once every twenty or thirty years. It is
known that each fall crops must be harvested. Why do we
have to tend to the business of the kolkhozniks?
Viktor and some of his classmates were deposited on a
kolkhoz outside Omsk, hundreds of miles away from the
collective where he had stayed as a child in 1954. The
years had brought some improvements. The kolkhoz manager
traveled about in a little car instead of a horse-drawn
[52] buggy. Some of the kolkhozniks had transistor radios, and
once a week they were shown a movie on portable screens.
But Viktor could identify no other substantive changes.
The huts, the muddy streets, the stink were the same.
The bedraggled work force was composed mainly of the
elderly, women, children, half-wits, or men too dull to escape
into more prestigious and less onerous jobs at the
tractor station or dairy. Abused and neglected, machinery
still broke down and rusted. And nobody gave a damn
about anything except his small private plot of land that
he was allowed to cultivate.
It's all the same. Everything's still messed up. Why,
we've made no progress at all. Something is wrong here.
Having been told they would be paid the same wages as
the kolkhozniks, Viktor expected that since he had spent
none of his salary, a nice sum awaited him. However, after
deductions for food and lodging in the hut of a widow,
his pay for fifty-eight consecutive days of labor, sunup to
sundown, totaled thirty-nine rubles forty kopecks. Exploitation!
Why, the kolkhozniks are exploited as badly as
capitalist workers!
Relieved as an inmate released from a labor camp,
Viktor eagerly immersed himself in his premed courses.
All the academic subjects, especially anatomy and biology,
fascinated and challenged him. Like teachers everywhere,
the professors were stimulated by, and in turn stimulated,
the strongest minds, and they favored him with extra
attention.
There were problems, however. Political courses of one
form or another robbed him of about a third of his academic
time. He had heard it all before, ever since the first
grade, in fact. All right! Capitalism is horrible; communism
is wonderful. Let us try to make it better by studying. Let
us learn how to be doctors. Don't waste our time with all
this crap.
By January 1967 the savings he had accumulated from
the unspent salary paid him by the garage during DOSAAF
training were nearly depleted, and he obviously could not
survive on the monthly stipend of thirty rubles granted
medical students. There being no room in the dormitory, his
[53] father's cousin generously took him into his small apartment.
But his presence added such a conspicuous burden
to the overcrowded family that he was ashamed to impose
on them much longer.
To afford the family privacy, Viktor usually skated in
the park on Sunday afternoons. The pond was crowded, a
light snow falling, and he did not recognize the heavily
bundled figure waving at him until they were almost upon
each other. "Nadezhda!"
"Cadet Belenko! Join me for a cup of tea?"
They went to a state teahouse near the park. Shorn of
her wraps, her cheeks pinkened by the cold, Nadezhda
looked radiant. She had been in the Caucasus, qualifying
herself to fly the Czech L-29 jet trainer. "You haven't
flown until you've flown a jet. Everything is different and
better: the sound, the feel, what you can do. Why don't
you come back to class and learn about jets? If you do, I'll
be one of your teachers."
Viktor quit medical school in the morning, registered for
DOSAAF classes, and began looking for a job, any job that
carried with it a dormitory room. Factory No. 13 had
dormitories close by its sprawling facilities, and it was so
hungry for people that he was hired on the spot and immediately
trundled off, with four other men and two
women, for orientation. A young KGB officer solemnly
discoursed about the momentous import and honor of the
duties they were beginning. Factory 13 was an important
defense installation, and all that transpired inside was
strictly secret. "If anyone asks what you make, you are to
say cookware, toys, and assorted other household hardware."
This is ridiculous. Is every official in the whole Soviet
Union not only a liar but a stupid liar?
Everyone in Omsk who cared to know knew what came
out of Factory 13, one of the largest plants in the city —
tanks and only tanks. How could they not know? More
than 30,000 people worked there. When the freight trains
failed to come on tune and output backed up, you could
see the tanks, sleek, low-slung, with thick high-tensile steel
armor and a 122-millimeter gun protruding like a lethal
[54] snout, parked all over the place. And even after they were
loaded on flatcars and covered with canvas, their silhouettes
revealed them to be, unmistakably, tanks.
Stepping into the building where wheels and treads were
made, Viktor reflexively clamped his hands over his ears.
Clanging, banging, strident, jarring noise assailed him from
all around, from up and down. It came from the assembly
line, from the lathes, and, most of all, from the mighty
steam press, forged by Krupp in the 1930s, confiscated
from Germany, and transplanted to Siberia. He felt as if
he were locked in a huge steel barrel being pounded on the
outside with sledgehammers wielded by mad giants. He
soon began to perspire because the heat from the machinery,
all powered by steam, was almost as overwhelming
as the noise.
His section employed approximately 1,000 people in
three shifts, and the sheer number of personnel, together
with the incessant noise, precluded the kind of easygoing
intimacy he had known at the airport garage. There were,
however, some distinct similarities.
The dominant subject of conversation among the men
was when, where, and how to drink. In the aftermath of
accidents and failed quotas, alcohol had been banned from
the premises, but workers regularly smuggled in bottles so
they could "take the cure" in the morning after a night of
heavy imbibing. And with the ban on alcohol, a "factory
kitchen" had been opened just outside the plant gate,
ostensibly to sell snacks for the convenience of the employees.
It actually was a full-fledged, rip-roaring saloon,
where, beginning at noon, workers belted down as much
vodka as they could afford. If drinking continued inside
the plant in the afternoon, custom and prudence necessitated
setting aside a hefty portion for the supervisors, who,
having become co-felons, retired to their offices for a nap.
On payday little work was attempted as excitement at the
imminent prospect of limitless drinking mounted, and
workers prematurely quit their posts to line up for their
money. Quarrels, accompanied by curses, screams, or
tears, erupted as wives endeavored to intercept husbands
and some money before the drinking began.
His own budget enabled Viktor to appreciate the [55]
desperation of the women. Like virtually all other workers at
the tank factory, he earned 135 rubles a month, about 15
percent more than the standard industrial wage then prevailing
in the Soviet Union.
*
Some 15 rubles were withheld
for taxes, dues, and room rent; his minimum monthly bus
fares amounted to 10 rubles; by eating at the cheapest
factory cafeterias and often making sandwiches in his
room, he could keep the cost of meals down to 90 rubles.
So he had about 20 rubles left for clothing, personal necessities,
and recreation. He could manage, but he did not
understand how a man with a wife and children managed,
especially if he drank vodka every day.
Viktor came to feel that even were the prohibition
against alcohol effectively enforced, it would not materially
increase production or efficiency. For the attitudes, habits,
and work patterns of the men were, as they said, "cast in
iron." Most were quite competent at their craft. They
worked well and diligently in the morning and, unless
machinery broke down, usually fulfilled their quota by
noon. But once a quota was met, they ensured it was not
exceeded. They would stop the furnace to extract a 200-kilogram
mold "which was stuck" or change the stuffing
box in the press cylinder because "the steam pressure is too
low" or intentionally make something defective so that it
would have to be remade.
An ironsmith in Viktor's section was a veritable genius
at his work and ordinarily discharged his assigned duties
in an hour or so, then loafed the remainder of the day,
smoking, strolling about, and chatting with friends. Out of
[56] curiosity rather than censure, Viktor frankly asked why he
did not make a hero of himself by surpassing his quota, as
the Party constantly exhorted everybody to do. "You
know nothing of life, young fellow," he replied. "If I
chose, I could do ten times as much work. But what would
that bring me? Only a quota ten times as high. And I
must think of my fellows. If I exceed my quota, they will
be expected to exceed theirs."
The Educational Section of the Cultural Division of the
tank factory employed ten or eleven artists full time to
paint posters intended to correct such attitudes and inspire
the workers. Some of the posters Viktor saw were labeled
"Be a New Communist Man," "Marching Toward True
Communism," "Building a New Base for Communism,"
"I Will Exceed My Quota 100 Percent," "Be a Hero of
the Party," "The Party and People Are One." The posters
and the weekly political lectures by Party representatives
did provide conversation pieces, and a favorite topic they
raised was the Utopian life True Communism would introduce.
The Twenty-second Party Congress in 1961 had proclaimed
that the Soviet Union would largely realize True
Communism by 1980. True Communism, by definition,
would inundate the land with such a bounty of goods and
services, food and housing, transport and medicine, recreational,
cultural, and educational opportunities that each
citizen could partake of as much of the common wealth
as he or she wished. And all would be free! Born of an
environment that fully and continuously gratified all material
needs, a new breed of man would emerge — the New
Communist Man — unselfish, compassionate, enlightened,
strong, brave, diligent, brotherly, altruistic. He would be
unflawed by any of the imperfections that had afflicted
man through ages past. There would be no reason for
anybody to be otherwise.
But on the oil-soaked floors of the factory, the assemblyline
workers took their indoctrination sessions with more
than a great deal of skepticism:
"Since everybody can have as much of everything as he
wants and everything will be free, we can stay drunk all
the time."
[57] "No, I'm going to stay sober on Mondays because every
Monday I will fly to a different resort."
"I will stay sober on Sundays; half sober anyway. On
Sundays I will drive my car and my wife will drive her
car to the restaurant for free caviar."
"And we won't have to work. The tanks will produce
themselves."
"Hey, this New Communist Man, does he ever have to
go to the toilet?"
The irreverent mockery of the promised future usually
was accompanied by obscene complaints about the real
present. Someone's mother still was not being paid the pension
to which she indisputably was entitled. The facade of
the apartment building had fallen off, and wind was blowing
through the exposed cracks. Somebody had been informed
he would have to wait another year for the
apartment that was supposed to have been his two years
ago and for which he already had waited five years. Some
son of a bitch had stuffed up the garbage chute again, and
the whole building was beginning to stink like a cesspool.
Half the meat somebody's wife had stood in line three
hours for turned out to be spoiled when unwrapped.
The slogans, exhortations, theories, and promises of the
Party were as irrelevant to their lives, to the daily, precarious
struggle just to exist, as the baying of some forlorn
wolf on the faraway steppes. To the extent they took note,
it was to laugh, to jeer at the patent absurdities and hypocrisies.
Yet in the tank factory, as on the kolkhoz and
in the garage, everyone appeared to accept the circumstances
against which he inveighed as a chronic and natural
condition of life. Never did he hear anyone suggest that
the fault might lie within communism itself or insinuate
that the system should be changed. And no such thought
occurred to Viktor.
At the time, he had never heard of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,
Andrei Sakharov, or any other dissidents. He had
never read a samizdat publication or any other illicit writings,
nor had he ever heard a foreign radio broadcast. He
was unaware that anyone in the entire Soviet Union opposed
the system itself, except, of course, the traitors
traduced by the Dark Forces.
[58] For all the unconcealable defects, the admitted mistakes
of the past, the conspicuous inefficiencies, there was empirical
evidence that the system, after a fashion, did work.
The harvest, after all, had been gathered. Workers after
some years did get apartments. Before holidays, meat and
even toilet paper could be bought in the stores. Tanks
were manufactured, and as he himself had written, they
were the best tanks in the world, and the Soviet Union had
thousands of them. Besides, things were worse in the West,
where capitalism inexorably was disintegrating in accordance
with the laws of history.
There remained in his mind, however, corrosive thoughts
that he could not extirpate, contradictions that multiplied
doubts while sapping faith. You can't be sure of anything
the Party says. It was wrong about Stalin; it was wrong
about Khrushchev. Little that I see is like what it says. We
are not equal. Each of us is different, and nothing will
ever make everybody the same. There never will be a perfect
man. Why, that's ridiculous. The workers know that;
everybody knows that. And this new base for True Communism;
at the rate we're going, we won't build that for
a hundred years, two hundred years. Something's wrong
here. I just don't know what.
Although Viktor did not try to be "a white crow among
the black crows" at the factory, he did attract the attention
of management. Noticing his mechanical aptitude and how
quickly he learned, a supervisor made him a kind of utility
man who substituted for absentees, and he became adept at
a variety of jobs. Solely because he preferred to do something,
anything, rather than lounge about idly, he always
was willing to work. Sometimes on Saturday, when there
was no DOSAAF class, he did contribute to the purchase
of vodka and share a glass or two with his colleagues.
Otherwise, he did not drink on the job, and he never
showed up incapacitated with a hangover.
One morning in April his supervisor told him to report
to the office of the factory manager. Also present were a
Party representative, who was part of management, and
the deputy personnel director, who probably was a KGB
officer. The manager, an earnest man, stated that the
factory required engineers combining the talents and [59]
personal qualities he exemplified. Therefore, the factory was
willing to send him to a university to study industrial engineering
for five years. It would pay him three-fourths of
his present salary, plus an allowance for food, lodging, and
travel. Because the factory was a vital defense installation
and in light of his DOSAAF training, he would be exempt
from military service. In return, he would have to commit
himself to work at the factory for at least two years after
his graduation. The manager said he realized that the offer
was a surprise and that he wanted him to ponder his answer
carefully. He would need an answer by June.
The honor and opportunity were enormous, and to almost
any young man of his status, the offer would have
been irresistible, as it was intended to be. Out of politeness,
Viktor thanked the manager and promised to deliberate
in the coming weeks. To himself, he instantly answered
no. This is a swamp, and it will trap you, and you
never will escape. I would live a little better than the
workers, but for what purpose would I live? Here there is
no meaning, no hope, nothing to look forward to.
Outside the factory Viktor did have something to look
forward to — the possibility of entering the Air Force in the
fall and, every week or so, a few hours with Nadezhda.
From her manner in class no one would have discerned
that they knew each other personally. But on Sundays,
when they skated, attended a hockey match or the theater,
to which she once invited him, or merely walked in the
park and drank tea, neither disguised their liking for the
other.
Toward the end of the month she called him aside before
classes began. "Pay close attention tonight. This may be
your chance."
There was a special speaker, a colonel who had come to
solicit applications for the Soviet Air Defense Command
flight-training program conducted at Armavir in the Caucasus.
The colonel was candid and businesslike in his
briefing. Khrushchev believed that rockets alone could
defend against aircraft, and consequently, he had cashiered
thousands of fighter pilots who now were dispersed in
civilian life, their skills rusted by disuse. The performance
and tactics of American aircraft in Vietnam increasingly
[60] proved that Khrushchev was wrong. Valuable as missiles
were, aircraft also were essential to combat aircraft. The
Mother Country required a new generation of fighter pilots
to rebuild its interceptor forces. Only the best would be
chosen; their training would be long and arduous. But for
those who succeeded, the career opportunities, material
rewards, and honor of joining the elite of the Soviet armed
forces would be great. Selected applicants would report
to Armavir in June for the examinations that would determine
whether they were admitted to the program.
The colonel in charge of DOSAAF helped Viktor prepare
an application the next evening and forwarded it with
an ardent endorsement. Two weeks later the colonel informed
him he had been accepted for the examinations.
Viktor took three bottles of vodka with him to say
good-bye to the men with whom he had worked at Factory
13. They congratulated and toasted him; sincerely, he was
sure. After two bottles were gone, they sent for more
vodka, and as he left, the celebration was growing more
boisterous.
In a few hours, their happiness will evaporate, and they
will be lost again in the swamp. Their lives are over. Something
is wrong; I don't know what.
CHAPTER III
The
First
Escape
An overpowering, unrelenting stench saturated the unventilated
coach, emanating from its filthy toilet, from the
vomit of drunks, from bodies and clothes too long unwashed.
The windows, grimy and flyspecked, could not be
opened. And the unupholstered wooden benches of the
coach, with their high, straight backs, made any posture
miserable. Yet the very squalor of the train sustained him
by reminding him that he was journeying away from
squalor.
On the fifth morning he awakened from a half sleep and
saw that during the night the train had entered the rich
plains surrounding Armavir. Under the yellow sunshine
they were moving through fields of green wheat, then past
blooming orchards and vineyards. Bounding from the
train as if springing out of a cage, he delighted in the
comparative cleanliness, warmth, and gaiety of Armavir.
It was an old city with cobblestoned streets, trees, flowers,
and a number of colorful prerevolutionary buildings that
had withstood war and social change. Among the 200,000
inhabitants were substantial numbers of indomitable Armenians
and Georgians and an abnormal proportion of
pretty girls, many of whom attended a nursing school or
teachers' college.
[62] The clime was balmy and benign, and wanting to exercise,
Belenko jogged to the camp for applicants eight miles
outside the city. A spirit of high expectancy and camaraderie
pervaded the throngs of young men he joined there.
They had traveled from all reaches of the Soviet Union,
more than 4,000 of them, lured and united by the hope
that they would be chosen to fly. No one told them that
the slightest physiological flaw, no matter how irrelevant
to health or flying, would disqualify them. No one told
them that survivors of the physical scrutiny would have to
score almost perfectly on the written tests to have a
chance. No one told them that out of the thousands, only
360 would be selected. Consequently, they talked of imminent
glories and rewards in the sky, never acknowledging
that they might be among the rejected, condemned to two
years of harsh servitude as common soldiers. Few complained
about the drudging tasks assigned them while they
waited their turn to be examined — unloading bricks, digging
ditches, laying concrete slabs for runways, weeding
fields. This was a small price.
Physicians inspected, probed, pressed, X-rayed, tested,
interrogated, and listened to Belenko for five days; then
one stamped his medical records "Fit for Flight Training
Without Restrictions." For him, the written examinations
assessing basic knowledge of the sciences and Party theory
were easy, and he did well. When the names of the first
180 successful candidates were posted in alphabetical
order the last week of June, his was there.
The morning Belenko was formally sworn into the Soviet
armed forces, a squat sergeant, the right side of his
face jaggedly scarred almost from ear to chin, lined him
and nineteen other cadets into a squad. Pacing the line,
he put his face close to that of every second or third cadet,
glowered, and sniffed like a dog. Belenko thought he was
either slightly daft or trying to be funny. Suddenly the
sergeant stepped back and commenced to revile them, obscenely
and furiously. "So, you dripping chickens, you're
in the Soviet Army, and I'm going to tell you something
about our Army. They say that life in the Soviet Army is
like life in a chicken coop. You know you're going to get
screwed; you just don't know when, how, and by whom.
[63] Well, I'11 tell you when — whenever you do anything different
from what I say. You obey me absolutely, day and
night, or I'll have your head as well as your ass. We have
another saying. The chicken began to think and wound up
in the soup, shit soup. From now on, I think for you.
You will think, you will behave, you will look just as I
say. Look at your miserable selves; you look just like the
scum you are. The next time I see you, I want you to look
like Soviet soldiers. I want your boots to be as shiny as
the balls of a cat...." In ever more curdling language
the abasement and intimidation continued until Belenko
concluded the man was serious, that all this was real.
Well, millions of others have been in the same situation.
It's bound to be better when we start flying.
They would not fiy, however, for a long while. After
completing basic military training, the standard Course
for Young Warriors administered to all recruits, the cadets
were transferred to an air base on the other side of Armavir.
There they began fifteen months of academic studies:
science of communism, history of the Party, Marxist/
Leninist philosophy, mathematics, physics, electronics,
tactics, navigation, topography, military regulations, and
aerodynamics. Classes started at 7:30 A.M., after breakfast
and inspection, and continued until 7:30 P.M. six days a
week. On Sunday morning they swabbed, swept, or dusted
all crannies of the barracks; then a political officer treated
them to a two-hour dissertation about current world events.
A television crew preparing a special program about
flight training at Armavir filmed the cadets as they took
state examinations in September. A couple of days afterward
Belenko was summoned to the office of the commandant
and informed that because of his handsome
appearance and because he ranked first on the exams, he
had been designated to appear on the program. A commentator
interviewed him before the cameras, and he became
something of a celebrity after the program was
shown on Armavir television.
The cadets received their first leave in September and
vouchers enabling them to fly via Aeroflot anywhere in the
Soviet Union for a few rubles. Various friends invited
Belenko to stay with their families in Moscow, Leningrad,
[64] and Kirov. But a feeling of obligation or the yearning for
a sense of family he never had had or a vague hope that
things might be different impelled him to visit Rubtsovsk.
He appeared in a new blue uniform with the gold, black,
and blue shoulder boards of a cadet, emblems denoting
that he was, as he looked, a special soldier picked and destined
by his country to be much more. The pride he
thought he saw in his father's face momentarily made him
proud, and his stepmother fawned over him. They were
impressed, and wanting their acquaintances to be impressed,
they gave a party ostensibly in his honor. His father's wartime
friend, the truck factory manager, a Party underling
assigned to the factory, and a couple of others from the
plant were invited. Belenko realized that all were people
who might help the family in the future, that the party
really was not for him. He did not blame them. He felt
only embarrassment at the irreducible emotional distance
apparent between him and his father and stepmother
whenever they were alone. They had nothing meaningful
to say to each other. They did not know each other; they
never had and never would. Politely lying about his schedule,
he moved out on the third day and looked up friends
from high school.
One of his schoolmates had been killed in an automobile
accident, and another imprisoned for black marketeering.
Two had escaped to Moscow, one was in medical school,
and another studying engineering. Most were working in
factories, mainly the truck factory. The approbation his
uniform and status evoked saddened, rather than heartened,
him as he contrasted the richness of his future with
the desolation of theirs.
In Omsk, Belenko sought out his best DOSAAF friend,
Yuri Nikolayevich Sukhanov, who had grown up pretty
much like him, largely forsaken by divorced parents. He
remembered him as a tall, broad-shouldered boxer good
enough to try out for the 1968 Olympics team, a freespirited
hell raiser, and one of the most promising flight
students.
Now the sight of him appalled Belenko. He had gained
twenty-five pounds, looked fifteen years older, and seemed
sapped of all his characteristic vibrance. Nevertheless, he
[65] insisted that Belenko share a bottle of vodka in his room,
and the entreaties were so earnest Belenko had to accede.
An injury Sukhanov sustained in boxing had permanently
impaired his vision, precluding him from passing
Air Force physicals and from fighting anymore. He had
married a wonderful girl, a secretary at the electronics
plant where he worked, and had tried to study electronic
engineering at night school. But with the birth of their
baby, the combined pressures of work, study, and family
overwhelmed him, and he dropped out of school. They
could find time for little other than what daily subsistence
required. Sometimes food shopping alone, which they
could undertake only before or after work, consumed two
to three hours because they had to line up at different
stores for bread, vegetables, staples, and meat.
Sukhanov's wife, Irina, was sitting on the bed nursing the
baby when they entered. Belenko judged the room was
about nine yards long and three yards wide. The bed, a
crib, a small desk, one chair, and the cupboard and refrigerator
took up most of the space. There was a small
communal kitchen at the end of the hall; the toilet was in
an outhouse. Irina welcomed Belenko as graciously as the
circumstances allowed, putting the baby in the crib and
setting out bread and canned fish on the desk, which also
served as a dining table. Half-consciously, Belenko, in recounting
life in flight school, tried to emphasize the negative
— the petty tyrannies, hardships and restrictions and
seeming stupidities of military life. Sukhanov finally
stopped him. "Thank you, Viktor. But I would give anything
to be in your place."
Raucous shouts greeted Belenko at Factory 13, and a
crowd of workers formed around him. "Send out for
juice!" But Belenko produced the vodka, making himself
all the more of a hero. He questioned them, hunting for
evidence of change, of some improvement. There was none.
It was the same except that in his eyes the swamp now was
more fearful than ever. For once, he drank with them
without restraint and for the same reason, but no amount
of alcohol could blur or alter what he saw.
There was alarm at Armavir when Belenko returned
from leave. A cholera epidemic had spread from the shores
[66] of the Black Sea through the region, and all military personnel
were being quarantined indefinitely on their bases.
A military physician briefed the cadets about the nature
and dangers of cholera, noting that one good antidote was
"vodka with garlic." Belenko was astounded, for from his
own reading, he already knew about cholera.
Cholera! If we have the best medicine in the world, why
should we have cholera? Cholera is a disease of the yellows
and blacks. It is a disease of filth. Well, of course. There
is shit and filth and garbage everywhere: on the beaches,
in the outhouse and garbage pit of every house, every
apartment building. People can't bathe or even wash their
dishes properly. What can you expect? How many toilets
could we build for the price of one spaceship?
The cholera epidemic was followed by an outbreak of a
virulent and infectious respiratory ailment, then by an
epidemic of hoof-and-mouth disease. In consequence, the
cadets were locked on base throughout the autumn and
winter. The knowledge that he could not look forward to
even a few hours of freedom had a claustrophobic effect on
Belenko and may have contributed to his brooding. Regardless,
he experienced a resurgence of intellectual conflict
and corrosive doubts. The political officers, to make
their points intelligible, had to disclose some facts, and
Belenko's analysis of these facts plunged him into ever-deepening
spiritual trouble.
To demonstrate the inherent injustice and totalitarian
nature of American society, a political officer declared
that the Communist Party was terribly persecuted in the
United States. Wait a minute! You mean they have a Communist
Party in the United States; they allow it? Why, that
would be like our allowing a Capitalist Party in the Soviet
Union!
To illustrate the persecution of the Communist Party,
political instructors dwelt on the case of Angela Davis, a
black and an avowed communist, once dismissed from the
faculty of the University of California on grounds of incompetence.
She was subsequently arrested but ultimately
acquitted of murder — conspiracy charges arising from the
killing of a California judge abducted in the midst of a trial.
You mean the Americans allow communists to teach in
[67] their universities? Why did the Dark Forces let her go?
Why didn't they just kill her?
To prove that the American masses were basically sympathetic
to communism and opposed to the imperialistic
policies of the Dark Forces that held them underfoot, the
political officers showed films of some of the great antiwar
demonstrations.
You mean that in America you can just go out and
demonstrate and raise hell and tear up things if you don't
like something! Why, what would happen here if people
rioted to protest our sending soldiers to Czechoslovakia?
Well, we know what would happen.
To dramatize the poverty, hunger, and unemployment of
contemporary America, the political officers showed films
taken in the 1930s of Depression breadlines, current Soviet
television films of New York slums and of workers eating
sandwiches or hot dogs and drinking Coca-Cola for lunch.
The narrative, explaining that a sandwich or hot dog was
all the American could afford for "dinner," struck Belenko
because in the Soviet Union the noon meal is the main
one of the day.
If they are starving and can't find jobs and prefer communism,
why don't they come over here? We need workers,
millions of them, especially in Siberia, and we could
guarantee them all the bread they need and milk, too. But
wait a minute. Who owns all those cars I see?
In a spirit of logical inquiry, Belenko asked about the
cars visible everywhere in the films. The instructor commended
him for the prescience of his question and answered
it with relish. True, the Dark Forces permitted
many workers to have cars and homes as well; not only
that, they also had built highways all across the land. But
they charged the workers tolls to travel the highways, and
they made the worker mortgage his whole life for the car
and house. If he lost his job or got sick, he was ruined,
wiped out, impoverished for life; he was a slave to the
bankers and thus controlled by the Dark Forces.
That's very clever of the Dark Forces. But... if I had
to choose between having a car and a house now and maybe
being wiped out later or waiting maybe fifteen years for
an apartment, which would I choose?
[68] The West and especially the United States were depicted
as being in the throes of death. The forces of socialism, led
by "our Mother Country," were advancing everywhere —
in the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, and Cuba
(referred to as "our aircraft carrier"). The Americans no
longer were all-powerful. To see their deterioration, one
had only to look at their internal strife and the irresolute
flaccidity they displayed in Vietnam.
Yet no week passed without warnings of the dreadful
threat posed by the encircling Dark Forces of the West and
then — plots "to kidnap our Mother Country." This ubiquitous
threat justified every sacrifice of material and human
resources necessary to build Soviet armed forces into the
mightiest in the world.
If they are so weak, why are they such a threat? What
is the truth?
In tactics, the cadets studied mostly the methods of the
Americans, the Main Enemy, whom they primarily were
being trained to confront. A professor who had flown
MiGs in Korea and served as an adviser to the North Vietnamese
was frank in his characterization of U.S. pilots.
They were professionally skilled and personally brave.
Even when ambushed by larger numbers of MiGs jumping
up at them from sanctuaries in China, they would stay
and fight rather than flee. They drove on toward their
targets no matter how many missiles, how muck flak was
fired at them. The Americans were quick and flexible in
adapting to new situations or weapons, and they were ingenious
in innovating surprises of their own. You never
could be sure of what to expect from them except they
always loved to fight.
The students asked a number of questions, as they were
encouraged to do, and one wanted to know why the Americans
were so good.
The professor explained that over the years they had
perfected an extremely effective training program. They
had developed psychological tests that enabled them to
identify candidates with the highest aptitudes for flying
and combat. Their recruits already had attended universities
and thus began training with a "strong theoretical
base." And virtually all their instructors had a great deal
[69] of actual combat experience because the Americans always
were fighting somewhere in the world.
Yes, but how can such a rotten and decadent society produce
pilots so brave?
A political officer supplied the answer. "Oh, they do it
for money. They are extraordinarily well paid. They will
do anything for money."
I wonder how much they pay them to make them willing
to die.
His analysis of the case of the My Lai massacre in
Vietnam probably disturbed Belenko most of all. Political
officers proclaimed the slaughter of more than a hundred
Vietnamese men, women, and children at the village of
My Lai the ultimate example of American inhumanity and
degeneracy. To demonstrate that the mass murder had
actually occurred, they quoted verbatim from numerous
American press accounts reporting the atrocity in macabre
detail. There could be no doubt about it. The Americans
themselves publicly had charged one of then: own officers
with the killing of 109 innocent civilians.
*
But why are the Dark Forces putting him in jail? If they
are pure and true Dark Forces, he did just what they
wanted. They should be giving him a medal. And why do
the Dark Forces allow their newspapers to tell about àll
this? Every society has its animals. I myself have seen
some of ours in Rubtsovsk. Our newspapers won't even report
one murder. But the Americans are shaming themselves
in front of the whole world by reporting the murder
of one hundred nine men, women and babies. Why?
His disquietude, however, receded before the prospect of
flight. Belenko and some ninety other cadets were transferred
to an air base eight miles outside Grozny near the
Caspian Sea. Grozny was an ancient city of nearly 400,000,
and undoubtedly it once had been lovely. The baroque
architecture, ornate buildings, and cable cars gliding
through narrow brick streets still made it somewhat attractive.
But it stood in a valley which captured and held
the smoke, pollutants, and stench discharged from
[70] surrounding oil refineries and chemical factories, and the river
running through the city was an open sewer of industrial
wastes.
At the base a KGB officer delivered an orientation
lecture. After cautioning against Western spies, he spoke at
length about the Chechens, one of some hundred ethnic
and racial minorities that constitute the Soviet population.
Native inhabitants of the eastern Caucasus, the Chechens
were fiercely independent Muslims, racially akin to Iranians,
who never had been satisfactorily subjugated by the
czars or communists. Fearing that out of their hatred for
Russians they would collaborate with the Germans, Stalin
had deported them en masse to Kazakhstan. Cast into cold
deserts and infertile mountains, they had suffered privation
and hunger and perished in vast numbers. Khrushchev had
allowed the survivors to go back to their native region
around Grozny. When they returned, they found their land,
homes, shops, and jobs had been appropriated by Russians.
Convinced of their righteousness, they commenced to kill
Russians indiscriminately and barbarically, usually with
knives. A young Russian sailor coming home from five
years at sea was slashed to death in the railway station
before his terror-stricken mother in 1959. Russian residents
thereupon formed vigilante groups armed with axes, took
out after the Chechens, then stormed government offices,
demanding intervention to protect them from the wild
Muslims. Troops, backed by tanks and armored cars, had to
be called in to restore civil order. The government warned
the Chechens that if they persisted in cutting up Russians,
they all would be "sent far north where the polar bears
live." The wholesale butchery largely subsided, but not
individual murders, and many Chechen youths still subscribed
to the credo that true manhood could not be attained
without the killing of at least one Russian.
"Most of all, you must guard yourself against the
Chechens," the KGB officer said. "The Chechens use knives
wantonly, and under stress they will butcher you. You
know how valuable you are to our country. It is your patriotic
duty to take care and ensure your own safety. Never
sleep on duty. Always stand watch with a long knife."
It sounds like hell around here! They will just butcher
[71] you for nothing! It sounds like we're in the darkest of
Africa in the last century, like an outpost among savages.
But this is 1969! The Soviet Union! And the Party says
we've solved the nationality problem.
Flight instructor Grigori Petrovich Litvinov, tall, thin,
and prematurely bald at thirty-one, looked and acted like
an ascetic, abstaining totally from alcohol, tobacco, and
profanity. He wore about him an air of perpetual calm
and, in Belenko's hearing, never raised his voice. Upon
being introduced, he insisted that they address each other
by first names and admonished Belenko not to fear asking
questions, however naive. "I will answer the same question
a hundred times, I will stay up all night with you if need
be, until you understand."
There was no need for such special attention. After
being familiarized with the L-29 jet trainer, Belenko managed
it more easily and surely than he had the old prop
plane in which he had learned. The wasteful, melancholy
waiting in Omsk, the submission to the straitjacket life of
a cadet were now repaid by his certainty that he had done
right. Alone in the cockpit, he was serenely free and unbound;
he was where he knew he belonged.
Toward the end of the six months of basic flight training
at Grozny, Litvinov and Belenko were changing clothes in
the locker room. As Litvinov picked up his flight suit to
hang it in the locker, a thick little book, small enough to
be hidden behind a man's palm, tumbled out of a front
flap pocket onto the floor. Belenko glanced down and saw
the title of the book: Holy Bible. Litvinov's eyes were
waiting to meet his when he looked up. They asked: Will
you inform? Belenko's answered: Never.
Neither said anything, nor was the incident ever mentioned
subsequently. Belenko thought about it, though. It's
his business what he reads. If the Bible is full of myths and
fairy tales, let everybody see that for himself. Everybody
knows that a lot of what the Party makes us read is full of
shit; we can see and prove that for ourselves. Why not let
everybody read anything he wants to? We know our system
is the best. Why be afraid of other ideas when we can
show they are not as good? Unless... unless, of course,
we're afraid that our ideas aren't the best.
[72] The schedule stipulated that the cadets would study the
MiG-17 for two months back at Armavir preparatory to
the final phrase of training. But the two months stretched
into four because an emergency had sprung up in the
countryside — another harvest was nearing. Each weekend
and sometimes two or three more days a week, officers
and men alike were packed into buses and trucks to join
the battle of the harvest. For Belenko, it was a pleasant
diversion. They mostly picked fruit and ate all they wanted.
Because the schools and colleges of Armavir had been closed
for the harvest, many pretty girls worked and flirted with
them in the orchards. The farmers were hospitable and
slipped them glasses of cider and wine. And at night they
went back to the barracks, a good meal, and a clean bunk.
Yet Belenko despaired at the acres and acres of apples,
tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands of apples,
rotting because nobody had arranged for them to be picked
in time. He remembered how precious apples were in Siberia,
how once in Rubtsovsk he had paid a whole ruble
to buy one apple on the black market.
Why doesn't anything work? Why doesn't anything
change? It's barely ten years before 1980. But we're no
farther along toward True Communism than we were when
they first started talking about it. We're never going to
have True Communism. Everything is just as screwed up
as ever. Why?
In April 1970 Belenko was assigned to a MiG-17 training
regiment seventy-five miles northwest of Armavir near
Tikhoretsk, whose 40,000 residents worked mainly in canneries
and wineries. Although not accorded the privileges
of officers, the cadets now, by and large, were treated as
full-fledged pilots. They arose at 4:00 A.M. for a bountiful
breakfast, then flew two or three times, breaking for a
second breakfast around 9:30. The main meal at noon,
which always included meat and fruit, was followed by a
nap of an hour or so. They attended classes from early
afternoon until early evening — tactics, future trends in
aerodynamics, technology of advanced aircraft, military
leadership, political economics, science of communism,
history of the Party, Marxist/Leninist philosophy. Passes
[73] were issued on Saturday nights and Sundays, unless they
were called to clean factories or work in the fields on
weekends, requests which occurred roughly every other
week.
Fortune again gave Belenko a good flight instructor,
Lieutenant Nikolai Igoryevich Shvartzov, who was only
twenty-four. He longed to be a test pilot and was able
enough; but he had given up this ambition because he had
no influence in Moscow, and nobody, so it was believed,
could become a test pilot without influence. At the outset,
Shvartzov gave Belenko only two instructions: "Let's be
completely honest with each other about everything; that
way we can trust and help each other," and, "If a MiG-17
ever goes into a spin, eject at once. You can pull it out of a
spin, but it's hard. We can always build another plane. We
can't build another you." Throughout their relationship,
they were honest and got along well.
The MiG-17, light, swift, maneuverable, was fun to fly,
and Belenko had confidence in it. Vietnam had proven
that, if skillfully flown at lower altitudes, it could cope
with the American F-4 Phantom. Should he duel with an
American pilot in an F-4, the outcome would depend on
which of them was the braver and better pilot. It would
be a fair fight. That was all he asked.
Every four or five weeks the regiment received a secret
intelligence bulletin reporting developments in American
air power — characteristics, strengths, weaknesses, numbers
to be manufactured, where and for which purposes they
would be deployed. The bulletins were exceedingly factual
and objective, devoid of comment or opinion and dryly
written.
Reading quickly, as was his habit, Belenko scanned a
description of the new F-14 fighter planned for the U.S.
Navy and started another section before the import of
what he had read struck him. "What?" he exclaimed aloud.
"What did I read?" He reread the data about the F-14. It
would be equipped with radar that could detect aircraft
180 miles away, enable its fire-control system to lock onto
multiple targets 100 miles away, and simultaneously fire
six missiles that could hit six different aircraft eighty miles
[74] away — this even though the F-14 and hostile aircraft
might be closing upon each other at a speed up to four
times that of sound.
Our radar, when it works, has a range of fifty miles. Our
missiles, when they work, have a range of eighteen miles.
How will we fight the F-14? It will kill us before we ever
see it!
Belenko put the question frankly to an aerodynamics
professor the next afternoon. The professor stammered,
equivocated, evaded. Every aircraft has certain weaknesses.
It is only a question of uncovering them and learning how
to exploit them. It may be possible to attack the F-14
from close range with superior numbers.
Shit. That's ridiculous. Besides, if what our own intelligence
says is true, the F-14 still could outfty anything we
have even if we got close to it.
The professor who taught the technology of advanced
aircraft was respected for his intelligence and technical
background, so Belenko asked him openly in class. He
answered succinctly. We presently have nothing to equal
the F-14. We are experimenting with something that could
be the answer. It is designated Product 84.
Subsequently Belenko read details of the F-15 being built
as an air-superiority fighter for the U.S. Air Force, then
accounts of the planned B-l bomber, and they were still
more devastating to him. The F-15 would fly at nearly
three times the speed of sound and climb to altitudes above
60,000 feet faster than any plane in the world, and at very
low levels, where metallurgical problems restricted the
speed of Soviet fighters, it could hopelessly outdistance
anything the Russians had. The capabilities of the B-l
seemed other-worldly. A thousand miles away from the
Soviet Union, it could commence firing missiles armed
with decoys and devices to nullify radar and nuclear
weapons to shatter defenses. Then it could drop to tree-top
level, beneath the reach of radar and missiles, and, at
speeds making it impervious to pursuit, skim over the
target area. Having unleashed a barrage of nuclear bombs,
it could skyrocket away at extreme altitudes, at 1400
miles an hour.
[75] The professor of technology again was candid. He said
that presently there was no known defense, practical or
theoretical, against the B-l should it perform approximately
as designed. The history of warfare demonstrated
that for every offensive weapon, an effective defensive
weapon ultimately emerged, and doubtless, one would be
developed. The broader difficulty lay in Soviet technological
deficiencies. The Russians still could not develop an aircraft
engine that for the same weight generated the same
thrust as an American engine. They were behind in electronics,
transistors, and microcircuitry. And all technological
difficulties were compounded by the comparative
inadequacy of their computer technology. Cadets should
not be discouraged by these handicaps but rather consider
them a further stimulus to becoming better pilots
than the Americans.
But if our system is so much better than the Americans',
why is their technology so much better than ours?
Again, though, the thrill of flight, the excitement of personal
success diverted him from the concern and skepticism
such questions inspired. In July 1971 he passed his final
flight examinations, receiving both the highest grade of
five and a commendation. The 258 cadets remaining from
the original class of 360 were ordered back to Armavir
to study for the state examinations. But Belenko knew
these were meaningless. It was over. Having brought them
this far, the Party did not intend to lose any of them. He
had done it. For more than four years he had done all the
military, the Party, the Mother Country demanded. He had
done it on his own, despite the oppressions, brutalities,
risks, and stresses of cadet life, despite multiplying, heretical
doubts about the Party he was sworn to serve. He was
about to be what since boyhood he had aspired to be. And
he was proud of himself.
The professors now tacitly treated the cadets as officers,
and Belenko for the first time learned of all the benefits and
perquisites bestowed on a Soviet pilot. To him they were
breathtaking.
Whereas the average Soviet doctor or scientist was paid
120 to 130 rubles a month, and an educator only about
[76] 100, he would earn 300. The typical young Soviet couple
waited seven to eight years, and often much longer, for
an apartment, and the majority of Soviet dwellings still
were without indoor plumbing. As a pilot Belenko was
guaranteed an apartment with bath and kitchen, wherever
stationed. Food constituted the largest item in most Soviet
family budgets; meat and fresh vegetables frequently were
unavailable; shopping was arduous and time-consuming.
Pilots, wherever based, were entitled to four excellent free
meals a day seven days a week. Ordinary citizens were
allowed two weeks of vacation; pilots forty-five days. Additionally,
during vacation, pilots could fly anywhere in the
Soviet Union on Aeroflot for a nominal fee. Normally a
Soviet citizen did not retire before sixty-five; Belenko
could retire at forty, receiving two-thirds of his regular
salary for the rest of his life. There was more — the best
medical care, free uniforms and shoes, little preferential
privileges, and enormous prestige.
Belenko had known of some of these benefits. But their
full range was kept secret, never published or discussed.
No wonder! If people knew how much more we get, they
would detest us instead of liking us.
A political officer at Armavir spoke to them about marriage,
and though well intentioned, his advice was somewhat
contradictory. He explained that because of the
status and glamor of pilots, many girls were eager to
marry them. Quite a few enrolled in school or took jobs
in Armavir for that express purpose. While most were
wholesome, a few were prostitutes. No one should enter
into marriage quickly or lightly, because the effects of
marriage would endure throughout life.
At the same time, though, the political officer emphasized
the personal and professional advantages of marriage.
It represented a healthy and natural form of life. Married
pilots could awaken fresh in the morning, ready to fly,
whereas bachelors were likely to dissipate themselves by
prowling around bars, looking for women.
For reasons probably having little to do with the lectures,
most cadets did marry shortly before or after graduation,
and in late August Belenko attended one of the
weddings. At the party afterward the bride introduced
[77] him to a twenty-year-old nursing student, Ludmilla
Petrovna. She was blond, pretty, sensuous, and, to Belenko,
ideal. Their physical attraction to each other was instant
and mutual.
Their backgrounds, however, were dissimilar. Ludmilla
was the only child of wealthy parents living in Magadan in
the far northeast. Her father managed a large factory, her
mother ran a brewery, and both had high Party connections
in Moscow. She had never worked or wanted for
anything and was accustomed to restaurants, to theaters,
and to spending money as she pleased. Her parents had
lavished clothes and jewelry on her, often taken her to
Moscow and Leningrad and to special spas reserved for
the well-connected. She shared none of his interests in
literature, athletics, or the romance of flying. But the
sexual magnetism between them was powerful and delightful,
and even though they had seen each other only seven
or eight times, they married after he was commissioned
in October.
Belenko never had thought of himself as other than a
fighter pilot. He expected to join a MiG-17 squadron, from
which he hoped to graduate to MiG-23s or even MiG-25s,
which continued to be cited as the most promising counter
to the new generation of American fighters being deployed
in the 1970s. When the Party commission released the
assignments of the new officers, he ran to the office of the
commandant to protest and appeal. He had been appointed
a MiG-17 instructor — to him, the worst duty conceivable.
He would be doing, albeit in a reverse role, the same thing
he had been doing for the past two years. There would be
no opportunity to improve professionally by flying more
advanced aircraft, no excitement, no adventure.
"You have been honored, and you should feel honored,"
the commandant said. "The Party commission chose the
best to be instructors."
"But I do not want to be an instructor."
"What kind of bordello would we have around here if
everybody did only what he wants to do? You must serve
where the Party decides you are needed, and I assure you
we need instructors."
The December night was black, cold, and drenched with
[78] pelting rain, and when Belenko stepped on the train at
8:00 P.M., his mood matched the weather. He had been
there before, twice, actually: on the train that had taken
him from the Donbas to Rubtsovsk in 1953, and the train
that had brought him from Omsk to Armavir in 1967.
Everything was the same — the close, putrid air, the high
wooden seats, the reeking toilet, the lack of beer or any
amenities, the foul, unrelenting stink. His first duty station,
Salsk, a city of 60,000, was only 100 or so miles away,
but the train stopped frequently and did not arrive until
2:00 A.M.
The rain was still falling hard as he waded and slogged
through muddy streets to the city's only hotel. It was full
and locked for the night, and at that hour there was no
transportation to the base five miles away, so he waded
back to the station. All benches and virtually every square
inch of the station floor were occupied by human bodies —
kolkhozniks who had come to buy bread, salt, and soap;
vagabonds and beggars in rags; dirty children, some with
ugly red sores, others with pocked faces, resembling old
potatoes — all trying to sleep on newspapers, using their
canvas boots or little shoes as pillows. The odor was almost
as bad as on the train. There being no place to sit, he
nudged out enough space to stand through the night,
leaning against a post.
I wish they could see this, smell it, all of them, the whole
Politburo, all those lying bastards who tell us every day and
make us say every day how wonderful our progress is, how
well-off and happy we are, how perfect everything will be
by 1980. Look at these New Communist Men our society
has produced! I would make them sit near the toilet so
they could smell what is creeping out under the door. I
would make them hold those children in their arms and
look at those sores and then make speeches about the
science of communism. Liars! Filthy liars!
At daylight a policeman halted a six-wheel truck able to
negotiate the mud and induced the driver to deliver Lieutenant
Belenko to his first post. His new uniform and boots
were soiled and splattered with mud. In his thoughts, much
more was indelibly soiled.
Nevertheless, Belenko shared the elation of all the other
[79] newly arrived officers when they were handed keys to their
apartments in a building that had been completed and certified
for occupancy only a month before. To be promised
an apartment was one thing; to be given an apartment as
promised, quite another. Eagerly and expectantly Belenko
unlocked the door and smelled dampness. The floor, built
with green lumber, already was warped and wavy. Plaster
was peeling off the walls. The windowpane in the kitchen
was broken, and no water poured from the faucet. The
bathtub leaked; the toilet did not flush. None of the electrical
outlets worked.
Already gathered in the halls were other officers, who
had found comparable conditions in their apartments.
Together they marched forth to collar the construction
superintendent responsible for building the apartments.
Unmoved by their recitation of ills, he told them that the
building had been inspected and approved by an acceptance
commission from their regiment. Any deficiencies
that might have developed subsequently were none of
his concern.
This is outrageous. The Party must know. The Party
must correct this.
Belenko and another lieutenant confronted the first Party
representative they could find, a young political officer
quartered in the same building. He was cynical, yet truthful.
The building had not been inspected. The military
builders sold substantial quantities of allotted materials on
the black market, then bribed the chairman of the regimental
acceptance commission and took the whole commission
to dinner. There the acceptance papers were
drunkenly signed without any commission member's ever
having been inside the building. What was done could not
now be undone.
During the day Belenko studied pedagogy, psychology,
methodology of flight instruction, and political education
in the course for instructors, and on weekends he visited
Ludmilla in Armavir. At night he mastered the building
trade. He relaid the floor, replastered the walls, calked the
bathtub, repaired the toilet, replaced the faucets, and rewired
the electrical sockets. He procured all the materials
easily enough, not from stores, of course, but from the
[80] construction superintendent in exchange for vodka. By late
February he had redone the whole interior rather handsomely.
Then one night he was awakened by a loud boom followed
by crunching noises. The building was splitting. A
seam about a foot wide opened from the living room out
into the world, and a much more gaping one exposed his
bedroom to his neighbor's living room. Huge cranes,
trucks, and an army of workers were marshaled to save
the building. They trussed and wrapped it in steel belts as
if staving a barrel and inserted steel beams through the
interior to keep it intact. The beam running through Belenko's
living room looked odd, but he found it useful for
chinning and other exercises.
The emergency measures proved effective for a while.
But after three weeks or so the center of the building
started to sag and kept sagging until the whole edifice assumed
the configuration of a canoe.
It's an architectural marvel!
Still, the ceilings in his apartment dropped only a foot or
two, and it was home, a private, unshared home, and he
was intent on furnishing it as commodiously as possible for
Ludmilla before she joined him in the spring after her
graduation. Living alone and dining at the base, he had
few expenses, and by March he had accumulated about
1,500 rubles, counting the 600 given him at commissioning.
He bought a television for 450, a refrigerator for 300, and,
for 250, a sofa that converted into a bed. The rest he conserved
for a delayed wedding trip to Leningrad in April
and to enable Ludmilla to pick furnishings of her choice.
One of the lieutenant colonels teaching the course for
instructors was an irreverent cynic, marking time until his
fortieth birthday and retirement, and he liked to regale the
young lieutenants with caustic sayings about life in the
Soviet military. Three of them were to recur often to
Belenko.
To succeed in the Soviet Army, you must learn from the
dog. You must know when and where to bark and when
and where to lick.
A Soviet pilot without a pencil is like a man without a
prick, for the mission of a Soviet pilot is to create [81]
paperwork. The more paper you have, the better to cover your
ass.
Two close boyhood friends met for the first time since
their graduation from the military academy twenty years
before. One was a captain; the other, a general. "Why are
you a general and I only a captain?"
"I will show you," replied the general, picking up a
rock, holding it to his ear, and then handing it to the
captain. "Listen to the noise the rock makes."
The captain listened and threw the rock away. "No, it
makes no noise at all."
"You see, that is why you are still a captain. A general
told you a rock makes noise, and you said no to a general."
To protect himself, the lieutenant colonel always emphasized
with mock seriousness that such sayings represented
misconceptions. Belenko was to learn, though, that
each originated in reality.
After he commenced his duties as an instructor, the Party
decided to expand and accelerate pilot training without,
however, increasing the number of personnel and aircraft
allocated for training. Previously one instructor had at his
disposal two MiG-17s, two flight engineers, and four enlisted
mechanics to teach three students. But with the same
resources Belenko had to teach six students, and in good
weather he flew incessantly, taking them up successively
throughout the day. Flying still was fun, although not as
much fun as when he flew alone. After the fortieth or
fiftieth loop of the day, a loop was not so interesting.
The serious problems all occurred on the ground. Belenko
did not just supervise the twelve men under him. He was
held personally accountable for their behavior twenty-four
hours a day. He was supposed to regulate, record, and report
their every action and, insofar as possible, their every
thought, to know and watch every detail of their lives, including
the most intimate and personal details. And he
had to draft and be prepared to exhibit for inspection by
political officers at any time a written program specifying
precisely what he was doing daily to develop each of his
subordinates into a New Communist Man.
Having landed for the ninth time on a day that had begun
at 4:00 A.M., Belenko was exhausted. Dusk was
[82] settling, and a light drizzle starting to fall, when a messenger —
there were no telephones — delivered a summons from the
political officer.
"So, Comrade Lieutenant, we see that you do not know
your men; you do not know how to educate them."
"I do not understand, Comrade."
"Read this, and you will understand." The KGB had uncovered
a letter written by one of Belenko's mechanics, a
twenty-year-old private, to his parents. The soldier recited
his miseries — the sparse, repulsive rations, the congested
barracks, the practice through which second-year soldiers
extorted food from first-year soldiers by pouncing upon
the recalcitrants during the night, covering them with
blankets, and beating them mercilessly.
"Do you see what a dark shadow such a letter throws
over our Army?"
"But, Comrade, look at the date. The letter was written
ten months ago, long before I was here."
The point was unarguable, and the political officer was
flustered, but not for long. "Let me see your program for
this man."
Belenko handed over the notebook he always was required
to keep with him. "Your failure is clear. There is
not one mention here of the works of Leonid Ilyich
[Brezhnev]. How can your mechanic develop politically
without knowledge of the thoughts of the Party's leader?
You see, Comrade Lieutenant, you have not worked very
productively today."
You pig, I ought to smash in your fat face. I flew my
ass off today, flew all to hell and back. I did one hundred
rolls, sixty dead loops, sixty Immelmanns. What do you
know about work? I'd like to put you to work in an aircraft.
You'd puke and fill your pants in one minute.
"Comrade, I see my mistake. I will try to do better."
Belenko repeatedly was upbraided because of the behavior
of one of his flight engineers, who was an alcoholic.
He stole, drank, and sometimes sold the alcohol stored in
copious quantities for the coolant and braking systems of
the MiG-17. Now everybody in the regiment — the commander,
the officers, the men, Belenko himself — at times
drank this alcohol. Not only was it available and free, but
[83] became the alcohol was produced for aircraft, it was more
purely distilled than the standard vodka produced for the
people. In fact, the aircraft alcohol was so valued on the
black market that in the regiment it was called white gold.
The trouble was that the flight engineer drank so much
and continuously that he staggered around all day, frequently
making a spectacle of himself and, as Belenko's
superiors stressed, setting an "improper example."
Belenko talked several times to the engineer, who was
sixteen years older than he and had been in the service
twenty-two years. He reasoned, he pleaded, he threatened,
he appealed, all to no avail, because the man in his condition
could no more stop drinking than he could stop
breathing.
Finally, Belenko was rebuked for "leadership failure." In
response he wrote a formal letter recommending that the
engineer either be provided with psychiatric treatment or
be dismissed from the service. The next morning a deputy
regimental commander called Belenko in and told him that
if he would withdraw the report, his reprimand would
also be withdrawn, and the flight engineer transferred.
Amazed, Belenko shrugged and complied.
Training standards inevitably suffered under the intensified
pressures to graduate more pilots. In his training
Belenko had flown 300 hours — 100 in the L-29, 200 in the
MiG-17 — and these had been "honest" hours — that is, they
actually were flown. Now cadets were flying only 200
hours, and not all these were "honest." There also was a
slight slippage in the quality of pilot candidates, and although
five of Belenko's students were able, the sixth was
beyond salvage. He simply lacked the native ability to fly.
Belenko dared not allow him to solo in a MiG-17, and
whenever he entrusted him with the controls, the results
were frightening. Though he personally liked the cadet,
Belenko formally recommended his dismissal. Another uproar
and demand that he rescind the recommendation
ensued. But this time Belenko in conscience could not
accede. Aloft, the cadet was a menace to everybody and to
himself. Even if he learned to take off and land, he never
could do much else except fly in circles, and his every
flight would be a potential disaster. Thus, the issue and
[84] Belenko ultimately were brought before the regimental
commander, who also tried to induce retraction of the
report. Failing, the commander announced that he himself
would fly with the cadet and pronounce his own judgment.
Most likely he intended to overrule Belenko, but he
was sufficiently shaken upon landing to concur, reluctantly,
that dismissal was the only option.
Belenko spent the better part of a month completing the
mountains of paperwork requisite to dismissal. In the
process he finally comprehended why no one in his own
class had been expelled, why second-year soldiers who
preyed on neophytes were not prosecuted, why the flight
engineer was not cashiered, why the cadet would not have
been dismissed had he not been egregiously hopeless.
Party had decreed that a certain number of qualified
pilots would be trained in a given time. The Party had decreed
that pilots, officers, soldiers, all would be transformed
into New Communist Men. That was the plan. A commander
who publicly disciplined a subordinate or dismissed
a student risked the wrath and punishment of the Party by
convicting himself, ipso facto, of incompetence, of undermining
the plan.
The consequent fear created a system in which problems
were masked and perpetuated, rather than eliminated, and
it spawned corruption or a psychological environment in
which corruption flourished. Prior to an inspection by
senior officers of the Air Defense Command, Belenko was
scheduled to perform a complicated one-hour exercise in
which he and a student in another MiG would intercept
and down a third MiG. The exercise would be recorded
on the films of gun cameras and chronometer tapes for
examination by the inspectors. But the morning of the
planned exercise, the sky was filled with thunder and
lightning.
Nevertheless, a deputy regimental commander ordered
them to fly. "What! That's impossible."
"Listen to me. Just tell your student to climb up to five
hundred meters. You make a quick intercept, and both of
you come right back down. It won't take five minutes. I'll
show you how to fix it when you get back."
[85] For the next three days Belenko and the deputy commander
juggled films and tapes to fabricate a record of an
elaborate and successful exercise. When they finished, one
obstacle remained. What about the fuel? They had flown
six minutes. The records showed the exercise had lasted
sixty minutes. How to explain the leftover fuel? Dump it.
So thousands of gallons of jet fuel were dumped on the
ground.
On a typical flying day, Belenko arose at 3:30 A.M. to
catch the bus that left at 4:00 for the base, where he had
breakfast, underwent a medical examination, and briefed
his students prior to the first takeoff at 7:00. He flew with
them until 1:00 P.M., when the main meal of the day was
served. From 2:00 to 3:00 P.M. he and his fellow instructors
customarily were berated by the training squadron
commander and a political officer for the failures, on and
off duty, of their students and subordinates. Unable to
articulate or manifest his anger at the daily censure, he
attended to paperwork and counseled students until supper
at 6:00 P.M. Unless paperwork or political conferences
detained him, he usually arrived home by bus around
7:30 P.M. To be fresh and alert by 3:00 the next day, he
needed to go to sleep as quickly as possible.
On Sunday, his lone day off, he wanted and needed to
rest. Ludmilla, who worked at a hospital six days a week,
wanted to go out, to do something, and they argued about
how the day should be spent. Ludmilla complained about
much else.
She abhorred Salsk and the life of a military wife, and
Belenko understood her feelings. Salsk, a place where "undesirables"
had been sent in Czarist times, was a drab,
dingy, poor city set on treeless flatlands over which stinging
winds howled. Dust intruded everywhere except when
rain turned it to mud. The two motion-picture theaters
were small, and you rarely could enter without waiting
more than an hour. Service in the city's few restaurants
also meant more than an hour's wait and the fare was not
worth the delay. There was no officers' club at the base,
nor any other facility that wives might enjoy. Unable to
change these circumstances or his working hours, which
[86] she also resented, Belenko could only sympathize and ask
that she bear up in hope of eventual transfer to a more
pleasant duty station.
Money was another and more disruptive source of conflict.
Ludmilla earned 65 rubles a month as a nurse, and
their combined income of 365 rubles was princely by Soviet
standards. Unless he were to become a KGB officer
or Party official, and either possibility was unthinkable,
there was no pursuit that would pay him as much. But she
nagged him for not earning more, and they often were
short because she spent so capriciously and made costly
trips to Magadan. At first he tried to indulge her.
Let life teach her. She is young and will grow.
On the chance that they could duplicate the happiness of
their wedding trip, he proposed that during his next leave
they vacation in Leningrad. About a week before they were
to depart, he discovered that she had bought a ring for
140 rubles, spending most of the money he had saved for
the trip. He vented his rage, and she announced her intention
of divorcing him and returning to her parents.
He dissuaded her by reasoning that they simply were experiencing
the kind of crisis that besets all young married
couples, and soon she was pregnant. A child, he thought,
would reunite them emotionally by giving them a new,
shared interest. And for a while after the birth of their
healthy son, Dmitri, in January 1973, they did share parental
joy. But working twelve to fourteen hours daily six
days a week, Belenko seldom could be with the child. The
necessity of caring for him confined Ludmilla and thereby
intensified her disdain of their mode of life. Instead of
lessening their tensions, the baby exacerbated them. Their
marriage deteriorated into sullen hostility, and disagreements
over trivial issues erupted into acrimonious quarrels.
In their continuing efforts to inculcate pilots with the
conviction that the United States symbolized the quintessence
of degeneracy, political officers dwelt on the unfolding
Watergate scandals. The details confused Belenko, and
by now he was skeptical of anything the political officers
said. But what he did understand at the culmination of the
scandals heightened his skepticism. The President of the
United States had been compelled to resign in disgrace,
[87] and other ranking figures of the American government
faced prosecution and probable imprisonment, all because,
so far as he could determine, they had lied.
You mean they can throw out their leader and put his
men in jail just because they lied! Why, if we did that here,
the whole Politburo and every Party official in the country
would be in jail! Why, here, if you know somebody in the
Party, you can do anything you want, you can kill a man,
and you won't go to jail. I've seen that for myself.
And where are the Dark Forces? If the Dark Forces control
everything in America and put their own men in
power, why would they let their men be thrown out? The
truth must be that the Dark Forces can't control everything.
But if they don't control everything, then the Party
is lying again. What does the Party tell the truth about?
Belenko seldom had cause or time to venture into downtown
Salsk at night, but bachelor pilots did, and though
they often were assaulted by robbers who knew they had
money, they were under the strictest of orders never to
engage in violence lest they injure themselves. The attacks
proliferated, and one evening a gang of sadistic thugs killed
an officer, blinded a second with sulfuric acid, and partially
blinded a third as they emerged from a restaurant.
Thereafter pilots were forbidden to enter Salsk after dark.
Sometimes Belenko did go into the city to shop for
Ludmilla at the bazaar where on Sundays kolkhozniks sold
poultry and produce from their plots. Beggars congregated
at the open-air market, and some brought along emaciated
children to heighten public pity; tramps crawled around
the stalls like scavengers searching the ground for scraps
of vegetables. Generally there was much to buy at the
bazaar, but everything was expensive. A kilogram of potatoes
or tomatoes cost one ruble; a small chicken, ten; a
duck, twelve; a turkey, forty — one-third the monthly
salary of the average doctor. In winter prices were much
higher.
Each fall Belenko had to organize his twelve subordinates
into a labor squad and sortie forth into the annual
battle of the harvest. Treading through the dust or mud and
manure of the kolkhoz, they reaped grain, tinkered with
neglected machinery, and tried to toil usefully alongside
[88] the women, children, students, and old men. The sight of
Air Force pilots, engineers, and mechanics so deployed
made him alternately curse and laugh.
They brag all the time of our progress — in the newspaper,
on radio, and television. Where is the progress? It's
all the same: the crime, the poverty, the stupidity. We're
never going to have a New Communist Man; we're never
going to have True Communism.
Each squadron at the base had a Lenin Room, where
pilots could watch Brezhnev's televised speeches and read
Pravda, as they were required to do, and occasionally chat.
After a Brezhnev speech, someone referred sarcastically to
an exchange of letters between a worker and Brezhnev,
published in Pravda. "Let's write him a letter about our
shitty aircraft and ask him for some nice F-15s." Nobody
talked that way except Lieutenant Nikolai Ivanovich
Krotkov. There was no doubt that Krotkov was brilliant.
He had graduated from flight school with a gold medal,
played guitar and sang superbly, and could recite forbidden
poetry verbatim by the hour. This was perilous. He had
already been warned about singing the forbidden songs of
Aleksandr Galich, the famous Russian satirist who was
expelled because of his ideological irreverence.
Shortly before supper three or four days later, Belenko
and other instructors saw Krotkov acting as if he had gone
mad. Furiously cursing, he was smashing his guitar to bits
against a tree. When quieted, he told them he had just come
from a confrontation with the KGB.
You have a big mouth, the KGB officer told him. If you
keep opening it, we are going to kick you out of the service.
Despite your gold medal, you will find no job; nobody will
touch you. So, unless you want to starve, you had better
stop singing duty songs and reciting dirty poems. You had
better zip up your mouth for good.
Belenko recalled a stanza from a patriotic Soviet
march — "Where can man breathe so freely...." What
kind of freedom do we have when we are afraid of a song
or a poem?
About the time of the Khotkov incident Belenko — who
had been made an instructor for the SU-15 high-performance
interceptor — heard a rumor. Supposedly a
[89] pilot had stolen an AN-2 transport and attempted to fly to
Turkey. MiGs overtook and shot him down over the
Black Sea.
If I were in an SU-15 and had enough fuel, nobody
would ever catch me.
The thought was terrible, obscene; instantly and in
shame he banished it, daring not entertain it a millisecond
more. But the thought had occurred.
In the autumn of 1975 Belenko decided to request officially
a transfer to a combat unit, preferably a MiG-25
squadron. The squadron commander, deputy regimental
commander, and regimental commander all tried by a
combination of cajolery and ridicule to dissuade him from
"forsaking duty" or "acting like a test pilot." But the
transfer request was submitted precisely as military regulations
authorized, and each had no legal choice except to
forward it until the matter reached the school commandant,
Major General Dmitri Vasilyevich Golodnikov.
The general, a portly, bald man in his late fifties, sat
behind a polished desk in his large office furnished with a
long conference table covered by red velvet, a dozen
chairs, red curtains, wall maps, and a magnificent Oriental
rug. Belenko, who had never met a general, was surprised
that he spoke so affably.
He understood, even admired Belenko's motives. He himself
would prefer to be with combat forces in Germany or
the Far East, where one might "see some action." But
the overriding desire of every officer must be to serve the
Party, and the Party needed him here. In a combat squadron
he would provide the Party with one pilot; as an instructor
he was providing the Party with many. Therefore,
Golodnikov asked that Belenko withdraw his request, take
some leave, and resume his duties with fresh dedication.
If he had any problems, with his apartment or anything
else, they could be worked out.
Belenko thanked the general but said that having been
an instructor almost four years, he believed he could best
serve the Party by becoming a more accomplished pilot,
and that he could not do unless he learned to fly more
sophisticated combat aircraft.
"Belenko, let's be frank with each other. You are an
[90] excellent instructor and a fine officer. Both your record and
your superiors tell me that. You know as well as I that
many of the young instructors they are sending us are not
ready to be instructors; they barely can fly themselves.
That is why we cannot afford to lose experienced instructors.
I am not proposing that you spend the rest of
your career as an instructor. I will be retiring in a couple
of years, and I have friends. When I leave, I shall see that
they help you."
Belenko understood the invitation to accept initiation
into the system, to sell himself to the system. Yet it only
reinforced his determination. When he said no a second
time, Golodnikov abruptly dropped the mask of reason and
affability.
"You are defying me!"
"No, sir, Comrade General. I am making a request in
accordance with the regulations of the Soviet Army."
"Your request is denied."
"But, Comrade General, the regulations say that my request
must be forwarded."
"That matter is closed."
"You will not forward my request?"
"You are dismissed. You may leave."
Belenko stood up and stared straight into the eyes of the
general. "I have something to say."
"What?"
"I will stay in this school. I will work harder to follow
every rule and regulation, to teach the students to fly, to
enforce discipline in our regiment and school, to combat
drunkenness, the theft of alcohol, the forgeries, embezzlement,
and corruption that exist everywhere in our school.
To do that, it wffl be necessary to dismiss from the Army
certain officers and commanders who are aiding and abetting
these practices. And to do that, it will be necessary
for me to write a letter to the Minister of Defense, in accordance
with the Soviet Army Manual of Discipline, proving
what is going on in our school."
"You may not do that."
"Why not? It's strictly in accordance with regulations.
Let me tell you some of the things I will say. I will talk
first about the death of Lieutenant Lubach and his student.
[91] The investigating commission said it was an accident. It
was murder. You said that many of our young instructors
are not qualified. But why do you certify them as qualified?
Why did you send Lieutenant Lubach's records to a
combat squadron and have them returned so it would look
as if he had experience in a combat squadron when you
knew he couldn't fly? Why did you let him take that
student up and kill himself and the student?"
The general's face flushed. "That is none of your business."
Belenko cited a colonel, one of the general's deputies,
who, while piously haranguing officers to curb alcoholism,
supervised the wholesale theft of aircraft alcohol, even
using military trucks to transport it into Salsk for sale.
"All right. We know about that. That is being taken
care of."
Next, Belenko detailed how officers forged records and
reported more flight time than had been flown so as to obtain
excesses of alcohol and how huge quantities of aviation
fuel were being dumped to keep the records consistent.
"All right. What next? Go on."
Belenko recalled how during a recent practice alert another
of Golodnikov's aides, a lieutenant colonel, had
staggered among students on the flight line, raving incoherently,
provoking laughter, and causing one student to
say aloud, "To hell with all this. Let's go have a drink."
"That officer has been punished."
But Belenko sensed that his blows were telling, and he
went on, reconstructing a suppressed scandal involving a
colonel in charge of housing. The colonel kept a second
apartment that was supposed to be allocated to an officer,
and there employed prostitutes to entertain visiting dignitaries.
A general from Moscow was so taken by one of
these young ladies that he locked her in the apartment for
three days and nights. It happened that the girl was, or at
least the KGB believed her to be, a Western agent, and
during one of those three nights she was scheduled to
meet her clandestine supervisor, in whom the KGB was
most interested. When she failed to appear, the other agent
became alarmed and escaped. The KGB ascertained some
of the truth, but Golodnikov or others concealed enough
[92] to allow the colonel to retire quietly without being punished
and without calling down upon themselves the righteous
vindictiveness of State Security.
Golodnikov, who had avoided Belenko's stare, now
stared back at him with sheer hatred.
"There is more...."
"Enough! Nothing you have said has anything to do with
your duties as an instructor. This is pure blackmail."
Golodnikov pressed a buzzer, and an aide appeared. "Tell
the chief of the hospital to report to me immediately. Immediately!
No matter what he is doing."
Belenko saluted and started to leave. "No, Belenko. You
stay. You had your chance. Now it is top late for you."
Shortly, Colonel Malenkov, a trim, dignified figure who
always looked composed in an immaculate uniform, appeared.
"This lieutenant urgently needs a complete examination."
"Dmitri Vasilyevich, only two weeks ago I myself gave
Lieutenant Belenko a complete physical examination."
"This will be a psychiatric examination. It is clear to me
that this officer is insane. I am sure that is what the examination
will find."
Belenko, clad in a ragged robe, was locked alone in a
hospital room. Nobody, not even the orderlies who brought
the repugnant rations which must have come from the soldiers'
mess, spoke to him. Probably the solitary confinement
was meant to intimidate him, but it afforded him sufficient
respite to realize that he must say or do nothing which
might give anybody grounds for labeling him insane.
On the third morning he was led to Malenkov's office,
and the doctor shut the door behind him. The pilots liked
Malenkov because they felt he appreciated both their mentality
and frustrations. He had been a combat infantryman
in World War II, then trained as a physician, not because
he wanted to be a physician — he yearned to be an architect
— but because the Party needed doctors. He had served
the Party as a military doctor for a quarter of a century.
Asked what had happened, Belenko explained, and they
talked nearly an hour.
"Viktor Ivanovich, I know you are all right. I know that
[93] what you say is true; at least, I have knowledge of some of
the incidents you describe. But why try to piss into the
wind? If you want to live in shit the rest of your life, go
ahead and express your feelings. If you want to sleep on
clean sheets and eat white bread with butter, you must
learn to repress your feelings and pay lip service.
"Golodnikov is not a bad fellow; he's a friend of mine.
You drove him into a corner, and you have to let him out.
If I tell him you were temporarily fatigued from overwork,
that you recognize your mistake, that you regret it, that
you will pursue this no further, I'm reasonably sure it all
will be forgotten. Why don't we do that?"
If I do that, I always will know that I am a coward. For
what purpose do I live? To grovel and lie so I may eat
white bread? What would Spartacus do?
"I will not do that. I will tell the truth."
Malenkov sighed. "Oh, Viktor Ivanovich. Now you drive
me into a corner. What can I do? I will have to tell the
truth, too, and try to help you. But we still have to go
through with the psychiatric examination."
Although Malenkov could have chosen a local psychiatrist
or a military psychiatrist, he instead drove Belenko to
the medical institute in Stavropol, one hundred miles away.
There he had a personal friend, an eminent psychiatrist
whose name Belenko never caught. As they entered, he
said, "All you have to do is relax and tell the truth."
The psychiatrist and Malenkov talked alone some twenty
minutes before calling in Belenko. "Well, well, what do we
have here?" he asked Belenko, who as factually as he knew
how reported his confrontation with Golodnikov. "Why, we
have an open rebellion! Nothing less," exclaimed the psychiatrist.
"You must be very distraught or very brave."
For an hour and then, after a brief pause, another two
hours the psychiatrist questioned Belenko about all aspects
of his life, from early childhood to the present. Neither his
mannerisms nor wording disclosed anything to Belenko
about his reactions to the answers, and until the last few
seconds Belenko did not know whether he had "passed"
the examination.
"So, Lieutenant, tell me. Just what is it that you want?"
[94] "I want to be a fighter pilot I want to grow professionally.
Most of all, I want to get away from all this
lying, corruption, and hypocrisy."
"Well, that seems to me like a healthy, progressive ambition.
We shall see. You may go now."
Escorting Belenko to the door, the psychiatrist extended
his hand and gripped Belenko's very hard. In a half whisper
he said, "Good luck, Lieutenant. Don't worry."
Four days later Belenko learned the results of the examination
entirely by chance from an Armavir classmate
who was visiting the base with an inspection team. An ear
problem had forced him to quit flying, and he worked in
the personnel center of the Air Defense Command. When
he offered congratulations, Belenko asked what he meant.
"Haven't you been told? You're going to a MiG-25
squadron in the Far East. The general here gave you a
fantastic recommendation. Said you're such an outstanding
pilot you belong in our most modern aircraft. You
must have been licking his ass every day the past four
years."
Belenko did not ask whether the records mentioned the
psychiatric examination. Obviously they did not. Doubtless
Malenkov and/or the psychiatrist had convinced
Golodnikov that in the interests of his self-preservation he
had better give Belenko what he asked and ship him as far
away as possible as soon as possible.
Belenko was thankful for the transfer but unmollified
and unforgiving, and in the days preceding his departure,
his bitterness swelled. While he was away, word had spread
or had been spread that he was insane. Krotkov, the guitar
player, and a couple of other instructors welcomed him.
Everybody else avoided him; they feared to be seen near
him. He thought of scenes in The Call of the Wild. If a
husky in a dogsled team was helplessly wounded, accidentally
or in a fight, the other huskies, along whose side
it had toiled, would turn on it as one and devour it.
I knew them as individual human beings. Now they act
like a pack of animals. Our system makes them that way.
There is nothing I say say to them. There is no way I
can defend myself, against them or our system. There is
[95] no way anybody can defend himself. If it hadn't been for
Malenkov, I'd be in a lunatic asylum right now. If our
system can do that to me, it can do it to anybody.
He was not conscious of it at the time. But within him
the dam that contained the poisonous doubts, the disastrous
conclusions, the recurrent rage had burst, and nothing
could repair it. In a sense different from that in which they
were spoken, the words of Golodnikov did apply. For
Belenko it indeed was now too late.
Ludmilla cried every day their first week or so in
Chuguyevka, 120 miles northeast of Vladivostok, almost a
continent away from Salsk. By comparison with this village
of 2,000 souls, isolated in forests not far from Korea to
the south and Manchuria to the west, Salsk, which she so
despised, seemed glittering and glamorous. The streets
were unlighted and unpaved, the frame houses were unpainted,
the outhouses and open garbage pits in their yards
buzzed with flies and crawled with worms, and the whole
place stank as bad as the poorest kolkhoz on the hottest
summer day. The social center of the village was Cafe No.
2, popular because it sold beef which local entrepreneurs
imported from Vladivostok. The patrons laced the beer
with vodka, and because of the effects of overindulgence,
the cafe also reeked. Sausage and meat were unavailable in
the three stores, and fruit and vegetables also were scarce
except at the bazaar on Sunday.
A sawmill was the main employer of the village. A few
citizens, among them a number of Ukrainians exiled to
the Far East for life, worked as supervisors at a kolkhoz
a couple of miles away or at the chemical factory on the
outskirts. Electrified barbed-wire fences guarded the
chemical factory, the labor force of which was composed
of zeks. They were marched in each morning in a column,
their shaved heads bowed, their hands clasped behind
their backs, watched by dogs and guards with machine
guns. Their rags, their canvas boots, their forlorn, empty
eyes were the same as those Belenko remembered seeing
twenty years before in Rubtsovsk.
A few days after Belenko reported to the base seven
miles from the village, the commandant, Lieutenant Colonel
[96] Yevgeny Ivanovich Shevsov, and the chief political officer
convened all pilots and officers in a secret meeting. To
Belenko, their candor bespoke desperation.
"Drunkenness induced by aircraft alcohol is constant
and widespread," they said. "The soldiers are running
away from the base and taking girls from the villages away
into the forests for days. Several times the soldiers have
refused to eat their food. We have had strikes here! We
have brawls among the soldiers, and to our shame, some
officers have been involved in them. Soldiers are writing
letters to their parents about what a horrible situation we
have here, and the Organs of State Security have been
investigating. At any time we could have an inspection. If
there is an inspection, it will show that this regiment is
not combat-ready. Our planes often cannot fly because
everybody is so drunk or people have run away.
"Each of you is responsible. You must concentrate your
attention on the soldiers. Explain to them that our difficulties
are temporary and will be eliminated eventually.
Tell them that our country is not yet rich enough to build
planes and barracks at the same time. Emphasize that the
Dark Forces of the West have enlisted the Chinese and
Japanese in their plot to kidnap our Mother Country."
How many times, thousands of times, have I heard that
the Dark Forces want to kidnap our Mother Country? Do
they want our food? That is very funny. They are starving,
but they sell us wheat to keep us from starving. Our system
is the best, but we want to learn to grow corn and fly
and do everything else just as they do. Do we have anything
that they want? That anybody wants?
The collapse of morale and discipline and the resultant
chaos were outgrowths of a massive and urgent military
buildup progressing throughout the Soviet Far East. At
Chuguyevka three squadrons of MiG-25s (thirty-six combat
aircraft plus four or five modified with twin seats as
trainers) were replacing three MiG-17 squadrons. A far
more complex aircraft, one MiG-25 required four to five
times more support personnel — engineers, mechanics, electronics,
and armament specialists — than a MiG-17. Within
the previous two months the number of officers and men
at Chuguyevka had quadrupled, and more were arriving
[97] weekly. But no provision whatsoever had been made to
expand housing, dining, or any other facilities to accommodate
the enormous influx of people.
Belenko and Ludmilla were comparatively lucky in that
they shared a two-room apartment with only one family, a
flight engineer, his wife, and two children. Other apartments
were packed with three or four families of officers,
and despite the best of will, conflicts over use of the bathroom
and kitchen inevitably arose, afflicting everyone with
strain and tension. Ludmilla was able to work part time as
a nurse at the base dispensary, but for most other wives,
some of whom were teachers or engineers, employment
opportunities were nil.
Each pilot periodically stood watch as duty officer for
twenty-four hours, during which he supervised the enlisted
personnel, inspected the barracks and mess hall, and generally
tried to enforce discipline. What Belenko saw on his
first watch appalled him.
Between 180 and 200 men were jammed into barracks
marginally adequate for 40. Bunks stood in tiers nearly
against each other, and the congestion was such that it was
difficult to move without stumbling into somebody. There
were two water faucets in each barracks, the toilet was outside,
and sometimes during the night men relieved themselves
in their neighbor's boots. They were given a change
of underwear once a week and allowed to go into the village
for a steam bath once every ten days, there being no
bathhouse on the base.
Comparable congestion in the mess hall made cleanliness
impossible, and the place smelled like a garbage pit. While
one section of forty men ate, another forty stood behind
them waiting to take places and plates. If they chose, they
then could wait in line to dip the plate in a pan of cold
water containing no soap. Usually they elected to simply
brush the plate off with their hands. For breakfast the men
received 150 grams of bread, 10 grams of butter, 20 grams
of sugar, barley mush cooked with water, and a mug of tea.
Dinner consisted of thin soup, sometimes thickened with
cereal, buckwheat groats, perhaps a piece or two of fatback,
and a mug of kissel, a kind of starchy gelatin. Supper
was the same as breakfast.
[98] Except for a television set, no recreational facilities of
any kind were available to the enlisted men (or the officers,
for that matter), and there was little they could do. There
was much they were forbidden to do. They were forbidden
to listen to a transistor radio, to draw pictures of women,
to listen to records, to read fiction, to write letters about
their life in the service, to lie or sit on their bunks during
their free time (there was no place else to sit), to watch
television except when political or patriotic programs were
shown, and to drink. But drink they did, in staggering
quantities, for alcohol was the one commodity available
in limitless amounts.
To fly seventy minutes, the maximum time it can stay
aloft without refueling, a MiG-25 needs fourteen tons of
jet fuel and one-half ton of alcohol for braking and electronic
systems. So wherever MiG-25s were based, huge
quantities of alcohol were stored, and in the Soviet Air
Force the plane was popularly known as the Flying Restaurant.
And officers from surrounding bases — Air Force,
Army, political officers — seized on any pretext to visit
Chuguyevka and fill their bottles.
According to a story circulated at Chuguyevka, a group
of Air Force wives, distraught over their husbands' habitual
drunkenness, staked a protest at a design bureau in
Moscow, appealing to it to design aircraft that would not
use alcohol. Supposedly a representative of the bureau
told the ladies, "Go screw yourselves. If we want, we will
fuel our planes with cognac."
In April 1976 Belenko's squadron commander asked him
to take a truck and pick up a shipment of office supplies
from a railroad freight terminal thirty miles north of
Vladivostok, paper and office supplies being essential to
the functioning of the squadron. It was a task that should
have been performed by the deputy squadron commander,
but he never stayed sober enough to be trusted with the
truck.
The morning was bright, the dirt road empty and not
yet dusty, and forests through which he drove were awesome
in their natural, unspoiled beauty. They reminded
him of man's capacity to despoil nature and himself and
of delicious hours in other forests.
[99] Starting back, Belenko saw a frail, ragged figure walking
along the road, and the man looked so forlorn he decided
to give him a lift. The hitchhiker, who had few teeth,
gaunt eyes, sparse hair, and a sallow, unhealthy complexion,
looked to be in his sixties. He explained that he
worked at the freight terminal and walked or hitchhiked
daily to and from his hut eight miles down the road.
"How long have you been here?"
"Almost twenty-five years. After the war I spent ten
years in the camps, and ever since, I've worked around
here, doing whatever I could find. I am not allowed to go
back to the Ukraine, although I miss my home very much.
I have relatives, but it is too expensive for them to visit me.
You know how life is. The first years were very hard for
me because it is so cold here. The Ukraine is warm and
sunny, you know, and there are flowers and fruit. I wish
I could see it once more before I die. But I guess I won't,
I have no passport."
*
"How old are you?"
"Forty-seven."
"Are you married?"
"Oh, yes. She spent eight years in the camps. She's also
from the Ukraine. Her relatives were exiled. They've all
died now, and there's just the two of us. We thought about
children, but we were afraid we couldn't take care of
them. It's not easy to get a good job if you're an exile. You
know how life is."
"What did you do? Did you kill someone?"
"No, I gave bread to the men from the forest."
**
What can he do, that poor man, to our country? Look
[100] at him. He hardly has any teeth; he won't live much
longer. What kind of enemy is he? What kind of criminal?
Whatever he did, ten years are punishment enough. Why
not let him go back to his home and die? Why be so hateful?
What kind of freedom do we have here?
Belenko was sent to a training center near Moscow for a
few weeks' intensive study of the MiG-25, and when he returned
in Mid-June, a state of emergency existed in
Chuguyevka. A dysentery epidemic had disabled fully 40
percent of the regiment, two soldiers had committed suicide,
at least twenty had deserted, there had been more
hunger strikes, and the enlisted men now were verging on
open mutiny. Fuel shortages had prevented pilots from flying
as much as they needed to master their new aircraft.
American reconnaissance planes, SR-71s, were prowling off
the coast, staying just outside Soviet airspace but photographing
terrain hundreds of miles inland with side-angle
cameras. They taunted and toyed with the MiG-25s sent
up to intercept them, scooping up to altitudes the Soviet
planes could not reach, and circling leisurely above them or
dashing off at speeds the Russians could not match. Moscow
was incensed, and Commandant Shevsov lived in terror
of an investigation. Already they had been notified that
the regional political officer was flying in next week to
lecture all officers of the regiment.
Shevsov announced that a pilot from each squadron
would have to speak at the scheduled assembly, present an
assessment of the regiment's problems, and propose solutions.
He instructed his political officer to pick those likely
to create the most favorable impression. The regimental
political officer was not from the political directorate of the
armed forces; rather, he was a pilot who in the frenzied
formation of the regiment just happened to be saddled with
the job. He thought as a pilot, and he was the only popular
political officer Belenko ever knew. When asked, Belenko
told him bluntly and in detail what he thought was wrong
and what should be done.
"Well, I agree. You will speak for your squadron. If you
say just what you said to me, maybe it will shock them into
letting us do something."
The regional political officer, a corpulent, perfumed man
[101] with bags under his eyes, appeared in a resplendent uniform
bedecked wtih medals that made the pilots smile at
each other because they knew that no political officer had
ever participated in battle, except perhaps at a bar.
"Comrade Officers, your regiment is in a serious situation,
a desperate situation.
"Around us the SR-71 is flying, spying on us, watching
us in the day and in the night.
"The Chinese are a day's walk away from us. We should
not let the Chinese frighten us. We can massacre them anytime
we want. They have a few nuclear bombs, but they
can deliver them only by donkey. Their planes are so old
we can wipe them out of the sky. But we cannot underestimate
the Chinese because there are so many of them,
and they are fanatical, mad. If we kill a million of them
a day, we still will have three years of work ahead of us.
"So the Party requires that you increase your vigilance,
your readiness, your discipline in order to defend our
Mother Country. You have been given our country's best
interceptor. It has the highest speed and the highest altitude
of any plane we have. It is a very good weapon. Yet
your regiment is in such disgraceful condition that you
cannot use this weapon properly. Your soldiers and, yes,
some officers, too, are drinking the alcohol for the planes,
and your regiment is too drunk to defend our Mother
Country."
We know all that. We've heard all that. It's as if they
sent us a recording instead of a man.
Belenko was the fifth member of the regiment to speak,
following Shevsov, the deputy regimental commander, and
two other pilots.
"We must consider our problems in light of the principles
of Marxism/Leninism and the science of communism,"
he began. "These principles teach us that man is a
product of his environment. If we examine the environment
in which we have placed our men, we can see the
origins of our problems and perhaps, in the origins some
solutions.
"On the kolkhoz I have seen livestock housed better than
our men are housed. I have seen pigs fed better than our
men are fed. There is no place for our men to wash
[102] themselves. That and the filthy mess hall are why we have so
much dysentery. There is no place for our men to play, and
they are forbidden to do almost anything that a normal
young man would want to do. We have created for them
an environment from which any normal person would want
to escape, so they try to escape through alcohol.
"We must change that environment. First of all, we must
build decent barracks, a decent mess hall, a decent latrine,
and a bathhouse with fire for hot water. There are nearly
eight hundred of us here. If we all went to work, officers,
sergeants, soldiers, we could do that in a month. If there
is not enough money, let us go into the forest and cut the
logs ourselves. If every officer would contribute 30 rubles
from his salary, we would have more than six thousand
rubles to buy other materials.
"We should organize social parties at the base and invite
students so that our men can meet nice girls in a normal
way. It is unnatural and unhealthy to try to keep our men
from seeing girls.
"The forests and streams are full of deer, elk, rabbits,
ducks, geese, quail, and fish. We should take our men to
hunt and fish. It would be enjoyable for them, and the game
would enrich their diet. We should start our own garden
and plant our own potatoes right here on the base.
"Each weekend officers should be appointed to take
groups of men on the train into Vladivostok and let them
just walk around the city. We can ride the tram free, and
we can sleep in the station, and we can take up a collection
among the officers to buy them some sausage and
beer instead of vodka. It will give them something to look
forward to. It will show that we care about them.
"When we can, we should build a football field and a
library so the men can improve their professional skills and
education. And if they want to read detective stories, why
not let them? That's better than having them drink alcohol.
"If we demonstrate to our men that we are loyal to them,
that we respect them, then they will be loyal and respect us
and obey us. If we given them alternatives to alcohol, most
will take those alternatives.
"Comrade Colonel, I have spoken frankly in the hope
[103] that my views will be of use to our regiment and our
Mother Country."
As Belenko sat down, the officers clapped their hands,
whistled, stomped their feet, pounded the table until
Shevsov stood and silenced them.
The visiting political officer, who had been taking notes,
rose, his face fixed with a waxen smile.
"Comrade Officers, this has been a productive gathering.
I find some merit in what each of you has said. I find that
underneath, this regiment is imbued with determination to
eliminate drunkenness, to enforce discipline, and to serve
our Mother Country. That is what I shall report.
"But to you, Comrade Belenko, I must say a few words
frankly, just as you spoke frankly. You do not ask, 'What
may I give to the Party?' You ask the Party to give, give,
give; give me Utopia, now. You show that you lack the
imagination to grasp the magnitude of the problem, much
less the difficulty of solving it. You do not understand that
our country cannot build complex aircraft, modern airfields,
and barracks all at the same tune, and your priorities
are exactly the reverse of what they should be. You
spoke of the principles of Marxism/Leninism. I urge you
to restudy these principles until you understand that the
Party and the people are one and that, therefore, the needs
of the Party always must be first. We will do everything
in time, step by step, and the Party wisely has decided
which steps must be taken first, threatened as we are by the
Chinese and the Dark Forces of the West."
The faintest of hopes, the tinest flicker of light sparked
by Belenko's speech evaporated. Nothing would be done.
They filed out silently, Shevsov among them and for once
one of them.
Pig! No, that is an insult to a pig. In the order of the universe,
a pig serves some useful purpose. You and all you
stand for are to the universe like cancer.
I wish I could put you for one night in those barracks
and see how you feel when someone shits in your boot. I
wish I could march you into that mess hall where a maggot
would retch. Oh, there you would learn the science of
communism.
[104] Well, go back to your fresh fruits and meat and perfume
and lying while our men lie disabled by dysentery, cholera,
and alcohol, while the Americans look down and laugh at
us from the skies. But you leave me alone.
All my life I have tried to understand, tried to believe
you. I understand now. Our system is rotten, hopelessly,
incurably rotten. Everything that is wrong is not the result
of mistakes by bureaucrats in this town or that; it is the
results of our system. I don't understand what is wrong;
but it is wrong. It produced you. You, not the Dark Forces,
have kidnapped our Mother Country.
Soon after this climactic and decisive intellectual rebellion,
Ludmilla announced that she was leaving. They had
tried as best two people could; they had failed; it was
pointless to try anew. Her parents were overjoyed by the
prospect of having her and Dmitri with them in Magadan,
and they could guarantee Dmitri's future and hers. She
would stay until October, when her commitment to the
dispensary expired. But after she left it would be best for
all if he never saw her or Dmitri, who would only be confused
by his reappearance.
Her statement was so dispassionate and consistent with
previous demands for divorce that Belenko could find
neither energy nor desire to try anew to dissuade her. Besides,
she was right about Dmitri.
Conditions at Chuguyevka were not atypical of those
throughout the Far East. Reports of desertions, suicides,
disease, and rampant alcoholism were said to be flooding
into Moscow from bases all over. In late June, Shevsov
convened the officers in an Absolutely Secret meeting to
convey grave news. At an Army base only thirty-five miles
to the southwest, two soldiers had killed two other soldiers
and an officer, confiscated machine guns and provisions,
and struck out through the forest toward the coast, intending
to steal a boat and sail to Japan. They dodged and
fought pursuing patrols several days until they were killed,
and on their bodies were found diaries containing vile
slanders of the Soviet Army and the grossest misrepresentations
of the life of a soldier. These diaries atop all the reports
of trouble had caused such concern in Moscow that
[105] the Minister of Defense himself was coming to the Far East
and to Chuguyevka.
The career of every officer would depend on his impressions,
and to make a good impression, it would be necessary
to build a paved road from the base to the helicopter pad
where the Minister would land, about four miles away. The
entire regiment would begin work on the road tomorrow.
It never was clear just where in the chain of command
the order originated; certainly Shevsov had no authority to
initiate such a costly undertaking. In any case, the Dark
Forces, the SR-71s, the Chinese, the desirability of maintaining
flying proficiency — all were forgotten now. Pilots,
engineers, technicians, mechanics, cooks, everybody turned
to road building — digging a base, laying gravel, pouring
concrete, and covering it with macadam.
It's unbelievable. For this we could have built everything,
barracks, mess hall, everything. We could have built a
palace!
But the crowning order was yet to come. Within a radius
of about a mile, the land around the base had been cleared
of trees to facilitate takeoffs and landings. The Minister, it
was said, was a devotee of nature and its verdancy. He
would want to see green trees as he rode to the base. Therefore,
trees would have to be transplanted to line the mile
or so of road.
You can't transplant trees here in the middle of the summer!
Everybody knows that!
But transplanted they were, hundreds of them, pines,
spruces, poplars, dug up from the forest, hauled by truck
and placed every fifteen yards along the road. By the first
week in July they were dead, shriveling and yellowing.
Dig them up and replace them. So they did, with the
same results.
Do it again. He may be here anytime now.
So again saplings and some fairly tall trees were imported
by the hundreds from the forests. Again they all
died. Finally acknowledging that nature would not change
its ways for them, someone had had an idea. Leave them
there, and just before he arrives, we'll spray them all with
green paint. We'll drive fast, and he won't know the
difference.
[106] It all was to no avail. In early August they were advised
that illness had forced cancellation of the Minister's inspection.
He wasn't coming after all. It was time to fly again.
To fly well and safely, a pilot must practice regularly. His
skills, like muscles, grow flabby and can even atrophy
through disuse. Because of fuel shortages and preoccupation
with the road, they had flown little since May.
The second day they resumed, a pilot suffered vertigo as
he descended through clouds preparatory to landing. In
his disorientation he panicked and ejected himself. Scrub
one MiG-25 and the millions of rubles it cost.
Subsequently a MiG-25 malfunctioned at takeoff. The
runway was conspicuously marked by a line and guideposts.
If a plane was not airborne upon reaching this line,
the pilot was supposed to abort the takeoff, deploy his drag
chute immediately, brake the aircraft; if he did, he could
stop in time. But on this morning the pilot neglected to
abort soon enough, and the MiG-25 plunged headlong off
the runway. By terrible misfortune a civilian bus was
passing, and like a great steel knife, the wing of the MiG
sheared off the top third of the bus, decapitating or dismembering
five children, three women, and two men and
badly injuring other passengers. When Belenko went to
help, he saw three soldiers from the rescue party lying on
the ground, having fainted at the horror of the sight.
The crashes might have occurred in any circumstances,
even if the pilots had been flying regularly, even if they
were not fatigued from working twelve hours a day seven
days a week on the road. But Belenko did not think so.
It was murder.
That night he knew it was futile to try to sleep, futile to
try to postpone a decision any longer. A fever of the spirit
possessed him, and only by a decision could he attain relief.
He told Ludmilla that he had to return to the base, and
through the night he wandered beneath the moonlight in
the forests.
For hours, thoughts, recollections, apprehensions — half-formed,
disjointed, uncongealed, contradictory, disorderly
— tumbled chaotically through his mind until he realized
that, as in other crises, he must gather sufficient strength,
courage, and poise to think logically.
[107] I cannot live under this system. For me there can be no
purpose or meaning to life under this system. I cannot
change this system. I cannot overthrow it. I might escape
it. If I escape it, I might hurt it.
Why should I not try? I will have no family. Mother I
have not heard from in twenty-five years. Father I have not
seen for eight years. They are not like father and mother
to me anyway. Ludmilla does not want to see me again.
Dmitri, maybe I could see him a few times in my life, but
we would be strangers. Privilege, yes, I have privilege; I
could retire in 1987. But was I born to think only about
whether I eat meat and white bread? No, I was born to
find my way, to understand; to understand, you must be
free.
Is there freedom in the West, in America? What would
it be like there? I don't know. I know they have lied about
everything else, so maybe they have lied about the West,
about the Dark Forces. I know that however bad it is in
the West, it cannot be worse than here. If the Dark Forces
are the way they say, I can always kill myself; if they are
as bad as they say, there is no hope for the world or mankind.
All right. I will try. And I will try to hurt this system as
badly as I can. I will try to give the Dark Forces what this
system most wants to keep secret from them. I will give
them my plane and all its secrets.
The fever had broken, replaced by a serenity, a purposefulness
exceeding any he ever had known.
On a navigation map Belenko drew from Chuguyecka an
arc representing the maximum range he estimated he could
expect to attain, considering the evasive maneuvers and
altitudes he would have to fly. Within the arc he discerned
only one potentially hospitable airfield large enough to
accommodate a MiG-25, the military field at Chitose on the
Japanese island of Hokkaido. All right. It has to be Chitose.
He could not attempt the flight until two conditions obtained
simultaneously: The planes had to be fully fueled,
and the weather very good. Because a MiG-25 cannot land
safely with much fuel aboard, they were not loaded to
capacity unless they were going to try to intercept the
SR-71s or engage in an important exercise such as the
[108] firing of missiles. To prevent MiG-25 pilots from talking
with foreign pilots, the radios were restricted to a very
narrow frequency band that permitted communications
only with other MiGs and Ground Control. Thus, he
would be unable to tell the Japanese of his intentions or to
ask their guidance. He could only hope that Japanese interceptors
would force him down or that he could locate the
field himself. In either case, clear weather was essential.
Any commander had the right at any time to ask a pilot
the most recondite technical questions about his aircraft,
tactics, production, or any other professional matter. To
prepare himself for these quizzes, Belenko kept notes in a
thick tablet which he carried in a flap pocket of his flight
suit. Now he began methodically and cryptically recording
in the tablet every Soviet military secret he had ever heard,
every thought, and all data that might be beneficial to the
United States.
There was one more thing to do. It was imperative that
as soon as he landed, the Japanese take all measures necessary
to protect the MiG-25 and prevent its recovery by the
Russians. He wanted to tell them that, but he could speak
not a word of Japanese or English. So he decided that he
must write a message in English to hand to the first Japanese
official he met. He drafted the message first in Russian:
"Immediately contact a representative of the American
intelligence service. Conceal and guard the aircraft at
once. Do not allow anyone near it." Laboriously, with the
aid of a little Russian-English dictionary, he translated as
best he could the message into English.
That done, he could do nothing more except wait for
the day, not knowing when it might come. He knew that
when it came, the chances would be very much against him.
But he was at peace with himself. For the moment he had
found a purpose.
CHAPTER IV
In a
Japanese
Prison
Barely maintaining airspeed, Belenko slid the MiG-25
downward through the seemingly interminable darkness of
the clouds, each second of descent diminishing the chances
of success and survival. He watched the altimeter...,
600 meters .... 500 .... 400 .... 300.......
I'll pull up at one-fifty if I'm still in the clouds. Any
lower would be suicide.
At 250 meters, the world lit up; he was under the clouds
and could see ... an airfield. It was not the base of Chitose
he sought but the commercial airport at Hakodate, ninety
miles to the southwest. The runway was shorter by a third
than any on which he had ever landed a MiG-25, and he
knew it would be impossible to stop on the field. But maybe
he could keep the plane and himself largely intact.
He banked steeply to the right, turned about 260 degrees,
and began his approach toward the south end of the
runway. Then, within seconds, he had to make an excruciating
choice. A Japanese airliner, a Boeing 727, was
taking off, right into his flight path. The gauge showed
empty, and he could not be sure that he had enough fuel
to circle again for another approach. If the fuel ran out
and he lost power during another turn, the aircraft would
plummet straight down like a twenty-two-ton boulder and
[110] smash itself into mostly worthless pieces. If he continued
his approach, he might collide with the airliner, and the
range between it and the MiG-25 was closing so rapidly
that neither the commercial pilot nor he would have any
margin for a mistake.
No, I cannot do that. I was not born to kill those
people. Whatever I think, I do not have that right. Better
one life than many.
He jerked the MiG into the tightest turn of which it was
capable, allowed the 727 to clear, dived at a dangerously
sharp angle, and touched the runway at 220 knots. As he
deployed the drag chute and repeatedly slammed down the
brake pedal, the MiG bucked, bridled, and vibrated, as if it
were going to come apart. Tires burning, it screeched and
skidded down the runway, slowing but not stopping. It ran
off the north end of the field, knocked down a pole, plowed
over a second and finally stopped a few feet from a large
antenna 800 feet off the runway. The front tire had blown,
but that was all. The tanks contained enough fuel for about
thirty more seconds of powered flight.
Belenko was conscious of no emotions: no sense of
triumph, no relief at being alive. There was no tune for
emotion, just as there had been no time in the air.
Get out! Protect the aircraft! Find the Americans! Act!
Now!
He ripped off his oxygen mask, unharnessed the parachute,
slid back the canopy, and climbed out on the whig.
The plane had come to rest near a highway, cars were
pulling over, and motorists hopping out with their cameras.
Schooled for years in secrecy, drilled to understand that a
MiG-25 represented one of the most important state secrets,
Belenko impulsively reacted as if he still were in the Soviet
Union.
You may not do that! This aircraft is absolutely secret!
The taking of pictures is strictly forbidden! Stop!
Unable to communicate by words, he whipped out his
pistol and fired into the air. In Japan the possession or discharge
of firearms is a grave, almost unheard-of-crime, and
had he detonated a small bomb, the effects on the onlookers
would not have been more traumatic. They immediately
[111] lowered their cameras; some took out the film and tossed it
on the ground before him.
A procession of three cars drove slowly down the runway
and halted prudently out of pistol range. Two men got
out and approached warily, holding high a white flag. They
kept pointing and gesturing toward the pistol until he put
it back in the holster. Only then did one of the Japanese
come close enough to talk. Belenko jumped off the wing to
meet him.
"Do you speak English?"
"Nyet."
The Japanese waved to his companion, a very elderly
little man, who walked forward and addressed Belenko in
pidgin Russian. "Pistoly, pleezy." Belenko handed him the
pistol. "And knify, too." He surrendered the knife protrading
from a flap pocket of his flight suit. "Follow us,
pleezy. Do not wolly."
Near pandemonium reigned in the airport terminal as
crowds of people strained and shoved to see, to try to touch
this exotic being who so suddenly and unexpectedly had
landed in their midst from another world. When Belenko
entered, a Japanese stood by the door, holding a handsome
aircraft manual open to a page displaying a drawing of a
MiG-25. Grinning and nodding his head rapidly, he held
out the manual before Belenko, as if to ask, "Am I right?"
Yes, nodded Belenko. The man put down the manual,
grinned more broadly, and clapped.
Within ten minutes after Belenko landed, the Japanese
had summoned an official who spoke Russian superbly. Although
he introduced himself as a representative of the
Japanese Foreign Office, Belenko suspected that he was an
intelligence officer. In the office of the airport manager
Belenko gave him the note he so laboriously had attempted
to write in English precisely for an occasion such as this.
"Who wrote this?" the Japanese official asked.
"I did."
"Good! Now, tell me how it happened. Did you lose
your way?"
"No, I did not. I flew here on purpose. I am asking political
asylum in the United States. Conceal the aircraft,
[112] and place guards around it at once. Call the Americans
immediately."
As soon as the official translated, the other Japanese
started cheering, and some danced about the office. "All
right! All right!" the official shouted.
"Would you mind writing down in your own words again
just what you have told me?"
"I will do that gladly."
"Follow us," they said, and Belenko did so, pulling his
jacket over his head to avoid being photographed by the
newsmen who had flocked to the scene. Through a narrow
corridor they hurried outside to a waiting car, which sped
them along back streets to the rear entrance of a hotel.
An interpreter and two security men stayed with Belenko
inside the hotel room while two sentries stood guard outside
the door. They presented him with new underwear, a
kimono, and shoes, packed away all the clothes he wore,
and suggested he take a shower.
They must think I smell bad. That's right, everything
smells so clean here.
A dinner of eight different dishes — meat, fish, poultry,
vegetables, and rice — was served in the room. All the
tastes were new to Belenko, and all delicious. "I heard you
have very good beer in Japan," he said hopefully.
"Thank you, but in the present circumstances, we cannot
allow you any alcohol." Although the Japanese did not tell
him, the Russians were already accusing them of drugging
a lost Soviet pilot, and they were fearful of lending the
remotest substance to the allegations.
Another representative of the Japanese Foreign Office, a
poised, confident, and well-dressed man in his thirties,
visited the room about 9:00 P.M. In fluent Russian he
asked Belenko to repeat the details and purpose of his
flight. Having done so, Belenko instructed, "Take my parachute
and clothes, and drop them in the sea to make them
think there was a crash."
"I am sorry; that is quite impossible. The news is everywhere,
all over the world. Now the Russians are demanding
that we return you and your plane. But we will not return
you. You do not have to worry. You will be very safe, and
[113] we will do all you have asked. It will take a while became
of red tape. Have you heard this phrase 'red tape'? There
are bureaucrats everywhere."
"Yes, I know about bureaucrats."
"Tomorrow you will go to Tokyo. For your security we
will use a military plane."
"I am ready."
The Japanese shook hands and rose to leave. "You cannot
realize how great an incident you have created for
Japan, the Soviet Union, and the United States. We are
under the greatest pressure from the Russians. But we will
not deliver you to them because that would be contrary to
our law and our democracy. Do not worry."
He is sincere. That is what they mean now. But what if
they cannot stand the Soviet pressure? No, I believe him.
I must believe him.
He slept poorly and noticed that the security men sitting
on the other bed were replaced about 2:00 A.M. Early in
the morning they brought him a suit; the jacket fitted, but
the pants were too small. They sent out for another; the
pants fitted, but were too long, and the jacket was far too
large. There being no more time for fittings, the Japanese
fetched some scissors and shortened the pants by six
inches. Attired in pants that now extended barely to his
socks, a drooping coat, a funny hat that was too big, and
dark glasses, he looked very much like a clown.
They exited through the hotel kitchen into an alley, but
swarms of reporters and photographers had anticipated
them. The security men bulled through the journalists, hustled
him into a car, and raced away with the press in
pursuit. Approaching a large intersection, the official Japanese
cars maneuvered until they were five abreast, then at
the intersection dashed away in different directions, confusing
the press as to which should be followed. By a
circuitous route, Belenko arrived at a garbage dump outside
town, and a helicopter swooped down. In thirty seconds
he was flying away.
The helicopter set down at the Chitose base next to a
military transport whose engines were running, and as soon
as Belenko and his escorts boarded, it took off. Because of
[114] noise in the plane, designed to carry freight rather than
people, conversation was difficult, and during most of the
flight Belenko gazed in solitude and marveled at the Japanese
landscape. Every inch of arable land, even precipitous
slopes, appeared to be meticulously cultivated. Towns and
villages looked neat and orderly. Nowhere was waste or
spoliation visible. The whole countryside looked to him
like a beautiful and lovingly tended garden.
How paradoxical the world is. The Japanese have little
land, few resources. But look what they have done with
them. I can see for myself.
At the airport outside Tokyo another horde of aggressive
photographers and reporters blocked their way, and camera
flashes momentarily blinded Belenko. Again, security men
shoved through the mob, and they sped away in a convoy
of cars, pursued by the journalists on motorcycles. The
chase astounded Belenko. The security officers and police
were communicating with radios smaller than their hands,
activated, he guessed, by the same kinds of transistors the
Russians had to steal from the Japanese to equip MiGs.
The reporters also had the little radios and were tracking
the motorcade by monitoring the police frequencies.
How can this be? Why, if this happened in the Soviet
Union, the KGB would catch those journalists and send
them to the camps for espionage.
The official cars swerved to the curb, and a Japanese
jumped out and ran to a telephone booth to make a secure
call by landline. After he returned and they drove off, the
interpreter explained. "We are so sorry, but it has been
decided that we must take you to a prison. We have no
other place where we can guarantee your security. At the
moment the prison will be the safest place for you in
Tokyo."
By means similar to those employed in Hakodate, they
eluded the pursuit at a traffic circle, the cars peeling off
down different streets, and about ten minutes later they
entered a naval compound. "There is an American here
who wishes to speak with you."
The Dark Forces. I'm going to meet the Dark Forces.
What will they be like? What will they do with me?
The American, dressed in a three-piece gray suit, a white
[115] shirt with a button-down collar, a striped tie, and black
shoes, stood up and offered his hand when Belenko entered
the office of the base commandant. He was slender, had
sandy hair and a fair complexion, and wore glasses. "My
name is Jim, and I represent the United States government,"
he said in flawless Russian. "It is a pleasure to meet
you and an honor to inform you that the President of the
United States has granted your request for political asylum.
You have nothing to worry about. As soon as the necessary
bureaucratic procedures are completed, you will fly to the
States. It won't be long.
"Do you have any questions or requests? Is there anything
you would like to say?"
"No. I understand everything."
"All right. Take good care of yourself. I will see you
soon, and we will be able to talk more freely later."
Somehow Belenko had expected more, something dramatic,
even epic, and he was vaguely disappointed that his
first encounter with an American had been so simple, almost
casual.
The Dark Forces, they seem very peaceful. Maybe they
are just being clever in a way I don't know.
Repeatedly apologizing for the character of his lodging,
the Japanese exerted themselves to make Belenko feel comfortable
and welcome. They laid mattresses on the floor of
his cell, brought pillows, sheets, and blankets, wheeled in
a color television set, gave him a chess board, invited him
to work out in the gym or use the steam bath. They emphasized
over and over that the guards, who would stand by
him every minute of the day and night and even accompany
him to the bathroom, were his protectors, not his
captors. And that evening they served him a multicourse
dinner that was the best he ever had eaten.
Thinking that a banquet had been especially prepared
for him, he asked who the chef was. The Japanese said they
simply had ordered the food from a common cafe across
the street from the compound.
"Really!" Belenko blurted. "I heard you were all starving
over here."
After dinner he luxuriated in the steam bath and, for the
first time since strapping himself into the cockpit at
[116] Chuguyevka, he relaxed. His two guards were beaming
when he emerged, clad in a silk kimono and sandals. Exhausted
as he was, he craved exercise and started toward
the gym, but they tugged at his sleeve and pointed him
back toward the cell. Someone had procured for him a
half-liter bottle of cold Japanese beer. It was even better
than its reputation. He slept profoundly even though the
guards kept the cell and corridor fully illuminated throughout
the night.
The second morning in Tokyo the Japanese dumbfounded
him with an announcement that he would have to
stand trial for breaking their laws. He could not quite believe
what was happening as they led him into an office of
the prison, where a robed judge greeted him with a formal
statement, translated by an aged interpreter.
"You are accused of breaking the laws of Japan on four
counts. You illegally intruded on our airspace. You entered
our country without a visa. You carried a pistol. You fired
a pistol. How do you plead to these charges?"
"Well, I did all that."
"Why did you disturb our airspace?"
"I did not have a donkey to ride here. The aircraft was
the only means of transportation available to me. This
means of transportation will not permanently damage your
airspace. The aircraft moves through the air without harming
the air." The interpreter giggled during its translation.
"Why did you not have a visa?"
"If I had requested a visa, I would have been shot."
"Why did you bring with you a pistol?"
"The pistol was a required part of my equipment; without
it, I would not have been allowed to fly."
"Why did you fire the pistol?"
"To keep away people who I feared might damage something
of great value to the rest of the world."
"Are you prepared to sign a confession admitting your
guilt to these crimes?"
"If that is what you want."
"It is my judgment that this is a special case and no
punishment is warranted. Do not fear. This will not interfere
with your plans."
Having satisfied the requirements of the legal [117]
bureaucracy, the judge smiled, shook hands with Belenko, and
asked the interpreter to wish him well.
During the judicial proceedings, a package and note had
been delivered to his cell: "It was nice talking with you. I
will be pleased if these books help you pass the time. With
best regards, Jim."
The package contained two books: a collection of the
works of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and The Great Terror by
Robert Conquest, both in Russian. Anyone caught reading
either in the Soviet Union could expect a minimum prison
sentence of three years. Drawn by the lure of the forbidden,
Belenko read curiously at first, then passionately,
then as a man driven and possessed. He read through the
day and into the night, and he trembled often as he read.
The words of Solzhenitsyn reeked and shouted of the
truth, the truth he long had seen but the fundamental meaning
of which he never had fully comprehended. He had
seen the village Solzhenitsyn recreates in Matryona's
House, the mean, hungry, desolate, cockroached-infested,
manure-ridden, hopeless village. Although Solzhenitsyn was
describing a village of the 1950s, Belenko had seen the
same village in 1976; he had seen it at Chuguyevka; he had
seen it at the village beyond the fence of the training
center where he studied the MiG-25. He had seen the zek
in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. He had seen
him just last spring on the road from the freight terminal
to Chuguyevka. In fact, the dying Ukrainian exile he had
picked up had looked just like Ivan Denisovich.
The Great Terror unveiled for Belenko the full dimensions
in all their horror of the Stalin purges, wherein at
least 15 million people — children, women, men, Party
faithful and heroes, loyal generals and intelligence officers,
workers, peasants — were starved, shot, or tortured to death.
Never had he read a book which so meticulously documented
every stated fact by references to published
sources, mostly Soviet sources, brilliantly collated to convey
a message of overwhelming authenticity. All of Khrushchev's
calumnies about Stalin were true, just as the millions
or billions of deifying words previously uttered and printed
about him were lies. But Khrushchev, Belenko now realized,
had let loose only a little of the truth.
[118] Caring for neither food nor drink, he read and reread
well into the early morning of his third day until he was
sure, sure that one quest of his life had ended in fulfillment.
All his intellectual life he had detected symptoms of a
sickness in Soviet society, signs that something was fundamentally
wrong. They proliferated, overpowered, and ultimately
drove him away with the conclusion that the illness
was incurable. Yet he never understood the underlying
cause; he never discerned any logic or pattern in all the
failures, stupidities, cruelties, and injustices he observed.
Now Solzhenitsyn, a Russian studying Soviet society from
within, and Conquest, an Englishman, analyzing it from
without, independently and in separate ways gave him the
understanding for which he always had quested.
The perennial shortages of virtually everything the
people wanted and needed, the enduring backwardness and
chronic failures of agriculture, the inefficiencies of the factories
were not really the fault of individuals or local
bureaucrats or Khrushchev or Stalin, as the official explanations
variously claimed. Neither was the maintenance
of a rigidly stratified society under the name of a classless
society, tyranny under the banner of freedom, concentration
camps under the label of justice. Even the ghastly
pogroms ordered by Stalin and the ridiculous, ruinous economic
policies of Khrushchev were only superficially their
fault.
The cause of all lay within the Soviet system itself. Dependent
for survival on tyranny, it inevitably spawned tyrants,
gave them sway, and could tolerate within the body
politic no antidote to their excesses or errors. During his
twenty-nine years under the system, life always had been
essentially the same because the system was the same. And
whatever cosmetics might be applied to alter its appearance
before the world, however repression might ebb and rise in
intensity, the system always would yield essentially the
same results.
If everything they said about communism, about themselves
was a lie, then maybe what they said about the rest
of the world also was a lie. Maybe there is hope. Anyway,
I am free of it forever.
But by midmorning Belenko had cause to wonder
[119] whether he really was free of it. The bright young Foreign
Office official who accompanied him from Hakodate came
to the prison, and the concern manifested by his face and
words caused Belenko concern.
"The Soviet Union is exerting enormous pressure on us.
They do not believe that you are acting voluntarily. They
are accusing us of keeping you by use of force and narcotics,
and we have been put in a very difficult situation.
They are trying desperately to take you back.
"Now you do not have to do this. It is entirely your
choice. But it would be a great service to Japan if you
would meet with a Soviet representative and disprove their
accusations, prove that you are acting out of your own
desires."
"What will happen if I refuse?"
"We will advise the Russians that you have refused and
continue to protect you until you leave for the States."
"All right. I do not want to do it, but I will do it."
"Thank you very much for your courage. I know how
hard this will be for you. It also will be dangerous for you,
and I want to make you aware of the dangers.
"They will try immediately to establish ultimate psychological
contact with you, to make you feel that you are lost
and they have come to rescue you and take you home,
where you belong. They will exploit your relatives and
probably bring appealing letters and messages from them.
They will try to dominate and control the conversation and
confuse you.
"But you have the right to interrupt and say whatever
you want. The meeting will be brief, as brief as you desire.
You may leave whenever you wish. The main point is to
prove that you are acting voluntarily. Just tell the truth.
"If you weaken and say you want to go back, we cannot
help you. But if you adhere to your desires, we will stand
by you. So will the Americans."
The Japanese that afternoon further revealed the gravity
with which they anticipated the confrontation by taking
Belenko into a conference room for a detailed rehearsal.
They pointed to a table behind which the Soviet emissary
would sit and another fifteen yards away where Belenko
would sit. Three security guards would protect him, and
[120] one would stand on either side of the Russian. If he drew
any kind of weapon or attempted to move toward Belenko,
he would be struck down instantly. Again they stressed that
he could depart at any tune and pointed to the door
through which he should leave whenever he wanted.
A big redheaded American, with a commanding presence,
deep baritone voice, and a strong handshake, visited
Belenko the next day, a couple of hours before the confrontation.
Although he said nothing about the imminent
meeting, his purpose probably was to reassure Belenko,
and he succeeded.
"Tonight you fly to America. We have your tickets; all
arrangements are made. You, of course, will not fly alone.
Someone will be waiting for you at the plane. Is there anything
I can do for you? Do you have any questions?"
"No questions. I am ready."
The waning afternoon sun cast a dim light and shadows
from the trees rustling in the wind outside danced in the
conference as Belenko entered. A KGB officer, who posed
as a first secretary of the Soviet Embassy in Tokyo, behaved
just as the Japanese predicted, jumping up and starting
his spiel before Belenko sat down.
"I am an official of the Soviet Embassy, and I want to
tell you how much all your comrades sympathize with you.
The Soviet government as well as everyone else knows
that what happened was not your fault. We know that you
did not voluntarily land your plane in Japan, that you lost
your way and were forced down. We know that you are
being held in a Japanese prison against your will and that
the Japanese have drugged you with narcotics. But even if
there were a mistake on your part, and we know there was
not, but even if there were, I can assure you on the highest
authority that it is forgiven; it is as nothing. I have come
to help you home, back to your own people, to your loving
wife and son, to your relatives. They have been able to do
little but weep since your misfortune, and your adoring
wife, Ludmilla, is inconsolable. Even your beautiful little
son, Dmitri, young as he is, cries at life without his father.
"All your relatives, your wife, your father who served
our Mother Country so heroically, your mother, your aunt,
[121] who was so kind to you as a child, have joined in sending
a collective letter to you."
How could they get them together so quickly, from the
Donbas, Siberia, the Far East? It's preposterous. And I
don't care anyway.
As the KGB officer started to read the letter aloud,
Belenko stood and looked him in the eyes with unflinching
contempt. "Wait a minute," he interrupted. "I flew to Japan
voluntarily and on purpose. I am here voluntarily and because
of my own desires. Nobody has used force on me or
given me any kind of drugs. I on my own initiative have
requested political asylum in the United States. Excuse me.
Our conversation is ended. I must leave."
"Traitor!" shouted the KGB officer. "You know what
happens to traitors! One way or another we will get you
back! We will get you back."
The Japanese official presiding over the meeting switched
off the tape recorder and told the Russian, "You may
leave."
Belenko stepped into the anteroom and unrestrained
jubilation. The dozen or so Japanese gathered there cheered
him, hugged him, slapped his back, and bumped into each
other in eagerness to shake his hand. "You were magnificent;
we are proud of you," said the Foreign Office
official who had asked him to meet the Russian. "You will
have a wonderful life in America. It is a great country
made up of people from all over the world." Handing
Belenko a bottle of Stolichnaya vodka, he said, "We would
like you to take this with you to America as a present from
your Japanese friends."
When I first saw them, I thought they were funny. Their
talk sounded like the chirping of birds. In a way they are
like Chechens. If you understand them, you see they are a
remarkable people, very strong people. They have been so
sincere and kind to me.
"No, I want to drink it now with my Japanese friends."
Paper cups were brought, and the Japanese manfully
downed the vodka to which they were unaccustomed. Its
intoxicating effects soon changed their grimaces to laughter,
and they bade farewell to Belenko in high spirits.
[122] "Remember, you are always welcome back in Japan. And
next time we will show you Tokyo."
They left the prison in darkness and drove to the airport
in another heavily escorted motorcade; police swung open
a gate, and the car sped across the runway to a Northwest
Orient Airlines Boeing 747. Inside, Jim, the Embassy
officer, led Belenko into the coach section, and nobody paid
any particular attention to them. As they took off, Jim
patted him on the shoulder. "You're on your way."
As Belenko had never seen a wide-bodied jet, its quietness
and size amazed him, and he felt as if he were in an
opulent theater. The number of flight attendants and their
attentiveness to the passengers also surprised him.
After the 747 leveled off at 39,000 feet, Jim said, "Okay,
let's go to our room." The first-class lounge on the upper
deck was reserved exclusively for them and a huge, fierce-looking
man whom the U.S. embassy officer introduced as
a U.S. marine. The captain admitted Belenko to the flight
deck and for nearly an hour, with Jim interpreting, answered
his questions about the 747, its equipment and life
as a commercial pilot. Belenko simply did not believe that
only three men could manage an enormous plane, though
they carefully showed and explained how they could.
The rest of the crew is hidden somewhere. But if it's
their job to fool me and impress me, I'll let them think
they've succeeded.
Neither did he believe that the dinner — caviar, smoked
salmon, smoked trout, soup, salad, filet mignon, potato
balls, asparagus, fruit and cheese, strawberries and ice
cream, white wine, red wine, champagne — was normal
first-class fare on an international flight.
They are just putting on a show for me, no matter what
Jim says.
However, he did believe and was moved by the stewardesses
who after dinner came singly or in pairs to speak
briefly to him.
"We are proud to have you aboard Northwest and in our
country."
"I want to congratulate you. You have done a great
thing."
"You are very brave. I am proud to meet you."
[123] One stewardess, a pretty, freckle-faced pixie, had no
words. She only took off her stewardess' wings, pinned
them on him, and kissed him on the cheek.
Belenko kept wondering when the Dark Forces in the
person of Jim would begin his interrogation, until Jim made
clear there would be none. "You must be utterly exhausted,
so just relax and sleep as much as you can. You have
nothing to worry about. Your first problem will be to learn
English. But you'll master it quickly, and you'll have an
accent which all the girls will think is cute. You have a
great future ahead of you. You'll see."
After the lounge lights dimmed and Jim, though not the
marine, dozed off, Belenko thought not of the future but of
the past. Had he done right in fleeing? Had he done right
in refusing to go back? Would his relatives be better off if
he returned? Who would suffer? He tried, as was his wont,
to analyze and answer logically.
Even if they did not punish me, and they would punish
me, but even if they did not, what could I do back there to
change things? I could do nothing. Can I do anything in
the West? I don't know. Maybe. Could I help my relatives?
If I could not help them, if I could not have good relations
with them before, why now? Will they be hurt? Not my
father, my mother, my aunt. The KGB will find I have not
seen them for years. Ludmilla and Dmitri? No; her parents
have enough influence to protect them. Who then?
The Monster and his superiors; the political officers; the
KGB. Well, they deserve it. No. No matter what happens
I have done right. I do not want to live anymore unless
I am free.
Despite the certitude of his conclusion, an amorphous
malaise troubled him.
All right, what's your trouble now?
Reviewing and ordering his recollections, he isolated and
identified the cause. It was the echo of harshly shouted
words: "One way or another we will get you back."
CHAPTER V
"We Will
Get
You Back"
Viktor Ivanovich Belenko was one defector the Russians
were determined to get back. Embarrassing or damaging as
defections by artists, intellectuals, diplomats, or KGB officers
may be, all, after a fashion, can be explained away to
the world and the Soviet people. It is not too difficult for
Soviet propaganda organs and the KGB disinformation
department to portray an artist or intellectual as an egoistical
eccentric or a spoiled degenerate leaning toward
lunacy. It is not surprising if an occasional diplomat, having
lived and worked in the rottenness of the West, succumbs
to that rottenness and sinks into alcoholism, embezzlement,
or insanity. And KGB officers? Who gives a
damn about them anyway? They spend their lives selling
the Soviet people, and each other, and a few are bound
to wind up selling themselves.
But Belenko, symbolically and actually, was different — a
son of the working class; a toiler in the fields and factories;
an elite officer, whose record was strewn with commendations;
a pure product of the Party; the quintessence of the
New Communist Man. As a Soviet journalist said to Washington
Post correspondent Peter Osnos in Moscow, "This
was one of our very best people, a pilot in the air force
entrusted to fly a top secret plane." To admit that Belenko
[125] was less than the best would be to admit that the Party had
been terribly, ludicrously wrong, that the very concept of
the New Communist Man might be a myth. Thus, Belenko
became probably the only defector in Soviet history about
whom the Soviet Union had only good to say.
Were Belenko to remain alive and at liberty abroad,
dangerous thoughts and precedents would arise in the
minds of the people in general and other pilots in particular.
If you cannot trust someone so perfect as Belenko,
whom can you trust? Who is loyal? The question was reflected
in a joke that spread through Moscow immediately
after the British Broadcasting Corporation reported the
sensational news of the escape: "Did you hear? From now
on they are going to train only Politburo members to fly
those planes." And other pilots inevitably would ask themselves,
"If Belenko can do it, why can't I?" There were
additional perils. Belenko was probably the most knowledgeable
military man to flee since World War II, and the
secrets and insights he could impart to the Americans
would harm the Soviet Union. But worse, should he elect
to speak out publicly, especially to the Soviet people, his
words could be even more devastating than the loss of
secrets.
The whole situation could be retrieved if Belenko were
enticed back or if the Japanese or Americans were intimidated,
duped, or cajoled into delivering him. After appropriate
treatment and conditioning in a KGB psychiatric
ward, he could be paraded forth as proof of the perfidies of
the West, a true Soviet hero who had slipped out of the
snares of the Dark Forces and come home to the Mother
Country to attest to their perfidies. His staged appearances,
the lines he mouthed, would dramatize to all pilots and
everybody else the futility of trying to get away.
Thus, within an hour after Belenko and the MiG-25 had
plowed off the runway in Hakodate, the Soviet Union initiated
a massive, unprecedented campaign to recover him.
In the Crisis Rooms of Washington the men who watched
and participated in the intensifying international struggle
that followed appreciated how great the stakes were.
Steven Steiner, thirty-six, Yale '63, Columbia Graduate
School '66, slept from noon to eight on Sunday, September
[126] 5. He missed a balmy, sunny afternoon and upon awakening
regretted anew that he could not take his wife and
three children for an outing on that delightful Labor Day
weekend. But he had the duty as Senior Watch Officer at
the State Department Operations Center beginning at
12:01 A.M. Monday, and his family, having been with him
at diplomatic posts in Yugoslavia and Moscow, had adjusted
to the inconvenient hours he sometimes had to work.
Just the night before he had worked the same shift.
Dressed in blue jeans, a sports shirt, and loafers, Steiner
entered the Watch Center located in Room 7516 of the
State Department at 11:15 P.M. and put his yogurt and
diet cola in the refrigerator for later. He came early because
he was required to read all the recent cables and be
briefed about the world situation by the outgoing Senior
Watch Officer before assuming responsibility for the Watch.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was traveling to Europe,
and the Operations Center is the Secretary's twenty-four-hour
link to Washington. So he anticipated a heavy flow
of messages and a busy night.
Steiner noted in the log at 12:01 A.M. that he had taken
over the Watch and made his second entry at 12:47, recording
that the Watch team had obtained and cabled information
concerning Africa requested by Kissinger's
entourage in Zurich.
At 1:35 A.M. the special closed-circuit telephone rang in
the Watch Center — a "NOIWON" (National Operations
and Intelligence Watch Officers Network) alert signaling
the entire U.S. crisis-management community that something
extraordinary had occurred. As Steiner picked up his
phone, other Watch Officers lifted similar emergency
phones at the Situation Room in the White House, the
National Military Command Center at the Pentagon, the
Operations Centers at the Central Intelligence Agency in
Langley, Virginia, and the National Security Agency in
Fort Meade, Maryland. A male voice announced over the
circuit: "The Defense Intelligence Agency is convening a
NOIWON alert. On the basis of a preliminary report from
the U.S. Fifth Air Force, we understand that a Soviet
MiG-25 has landed at Hakodate in northern Japan...."
The MiG had touched down at 12:50 A.M. Washington
[127] time. The circumstances of the flight and intent of the
pilot had not yet been ascertained by American representatives
in Japan. Two more alerts from the DIA at 1:49 and
2:06 added a few sparse details but failed to clarify whether
the pilot had landed intentionally or of necessity. Meanwhile,
the news ticker in the Watch Center typed out an
Agence France-Presse dispatch reporting that the pilot had
jumped from the aircraft and commenced firing a pistol.
To Steiner, that sounded as though the Soviet pilot probably
had lost his way or been forced down by mechanical
trouble and was hostile to the West.
But at 4:30 A.M. the NOIWON bell rang a fourth time,
and the voice speaking from the Pentagon was excited. The
Soviet pilot, Viktor I. Belenko, had told representatives of
the Japanese Foreign Ministry that he had flown the MiG
purposely to Japan and desired political asylum in the
United States.
At the National Military Command Center someone
shouted, "Goddamn! We've got a Foxbat [NATO designation
of the MiG-25] and the pilot to boot. Goddamn!"
With this the situation became all the more serious and
urgent, especially so because of one of the most shameful
incidents of pusillanimity in American history. On November
23, 1970 Seaman Simas Kudirka jumped from a
Soviet fishing ship onto a U.S. Coast Guard cutter while
the two ships were tied up alongside one another in American
territorial waters off Martha's Vineyard. Ashore in
Boston, a Coast Guard rear admiral, acting in what he
presumed to be the spirit of detente, ordered officers on
the cutter to hand the defector back to the Russians. Contrary
to U.S. naval political traditions, the American officers
allowed six Russians to board the cutter, beat the
defector and drag him back to the Soviet ship.
As a consequence of this disgrace, the U.S. government
adopted measures to ensure that no bona fide Soviet defector
ever again would be turned away or that, if he were,
those responsible would have their professional heads
chopped off. Precise instructions were promulgated to be
followed from the moment it appeared that a foreign national
was seeking political asylum. These included a
stringent requirement that all American officials who might
[128] be concerned be swiftly notified and that a formal, permanent
record of everyone involved be maintained.
Accordingly, Steiner and his Watch team successively
and rapidly telephoned at their homes and awakened an
aide to State Department Counselor Helmut Sonnenfeldt,
Director of Press Relations Frederick Brown, and officials
in the Bureau of East Asian Affairs, the Soviet and Japanese
Desks, the Humanitarian Affairs Bureau, the Visa
Office, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service. A
full report was cabled to Kissinger. Then Steiner on his
own initiative telephoned the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo because
from his service in Moscow, he recognized the
gravity and potential danger involved. Please emphasize to
our Japanese friends, he said, that the physical safety of
the pilot is paramount. Probably they already realize that.
But it cannot be stressed too much. Protect the pilot. Be
sure he is free to make his own decision.
By 6:00 A.M. the Watch Center was crowded with men
and women called out of their sleep to study the messages
flooding in from the Embassy, the Pentagon, the CIA, the
Fifth Air Force in Japan, and the wire services. On a
typically active night, the Watch Officer's log entries noting
major events might fill one page; Steiner's had filled four.
Having had no time for his yogurt and cola, he drove home
through calm, treelined streets, tired and pleased: pleased
that he and the Watch team had done their duty, pleased
that people in other agencies had done their duty, that the
system had worked exactly as it was supposed to work.
In Paris, reporters accosted Kissinger and peppered him
with questions about the fate of Belenko. "The United
States will probably grant asylum," he said. "If we do not,
you may assume I have been overruled."
Actually, once Belenko put his request for asylum in
writing, there was no question about American willingness
to accept him. The Director of Central Intelligence in consultation
with the Attorney General and the Commissioner
of Immigration is empowered, without reference to immigration
laws or any other laws, to admit up to 100 aliens
to the United States annually. But in this case the decision
was made instantly by President Ford himself.
He learned of Belenko's flight before breakfast. His [129]
national security adviser, lieutenant General Brent Scowcroft,
recalls that the President at once comprehended the
import of Belenko's flight, and was extremely interested.
What did appear in question that Labor Day morning
was the outcome of the ferocious Soviet pressures to browbeat
and intimidate the Japanese into surrendering Belenko
and the MiG-25.
Promptly after Belenko landed, the Soviet Embassy in
Tokyo announced that the Soviet Union possessed "an inviolable
right to protect its military secrets." The MiG-25
was a secret military aircraft. Therefore, the Japanese must
return it immediately and permit no one to look at it. The
embassy further declared, as if addressing some Soviet
colony, that the granting of asylum to Belenko "could not
be tolerated." The Soviet government lodged repeated protests
demanding the immediate return of Belenko and the
plane. One was so brazenly and harshly worded that the
Japanese characterized it as unparalleled in the history of
diplomatic relations with the USSR.
Soviet aircraft swarmed around Japan in a deliberate
and insulting display of power. At sea, Soviet naval vessels
started seizing Japanese fishing craft and hauling their
crews off to Soviet prisons. These blatant piratical depredations
were meant to make the Japanese cower by
showing them bow the Russians could disrupt the fishing
industry on which their island economy heavily depends.
Meanwhile, the Russians tried to get at the plane directly.
Late in the afternoon of the sixth, a Russian using a
false name showed up at the Hakodate Airport administrator's
office, identifying himself as "a crewman of a Soviet
merchant ship being repaired at Hakodate harbor."
He said he had come to interview his compatriot Belenko.
A Japanese official stonily turned him away.
The next afternoon three more Russians knocked at the
airport administration office. Their spokesman introduced
himself as the "Tass bureau chief in Tokyo" and his two
companions as "Aeroflot engineers."
"It's our job to ship the airplane out, but we understand
that its landing gear is damaged," he said earnestly. "We
must have the parts to repair them and would like to ascertain
how badly the gear is smashed. So we would like to
[130] go on out to the plane, look around, and take some
photographs."
Airport administrator Masao Kageoka smiled politely.
"Well, the plane is now under control of the Japanese
police, and it is beyond my authority to grant you access.
By the way, I don't quite understand in which capacity you
are here."
"Oh," said the "Tass" man, "I'm here as a civilian."
This same indefatigable intelligence officer visited the
regional headquarters of the Hokkaido police the next
morning and announced that he was reporting for his
"briefing" on the plane and pilot. The police said, "We
can't give you any details. Get out!"
On Tuesday, September 7, the White House announced
that President Ford himself had decided to grant Belenko
asylum in the United States. "If he asks for asylum here,
he will be welcome," said Press Secretary Ron Nessen. Unfortunately,
some misconstrued the phrasing to mean that
Belenko had not yet asked for asylum.
But, as an official statement issued at the same time by
the State Department made clear, there was no doubt about
Belenko's desires: "The Japanese government notified us of
the pilot's request for asylum, and they did it yesterday. We
have informed the government of Japan that we are prepared
to allow the pilot to come to the United States. We
understand that is his desire. I believe the same comment
or a comment to that effect was made this morning at the
White House."
The announcements in Washington coupled with indications
emerging from a Japanese Cabinet meeting that
Belenko was about to be transferred to the Americans, incited
the Russians to new fury and desperation. Soviet
Ambassador Dmitri Polyansky read to the Japanese Deputy
Foreign Minister a statement, the crudity of which exceeded
all bounds of conventional diplomatic propriety.
The Russians declared that Belenko had made an emergency
landing and accused the Japanese of lying about it,
or "fabricating a story" to conceal the "physical violence
and other unforgivable means" employed to kidnap him.
After the confrontation between Belenko and the KGB
officer, Soviet Embassy spokesman Aleksandr Shishaev [131]
denounced the meeting as "a farce, a shame on the Japanese
government." He claimed that "it was impossible for him
[Belenko] to answer questions. He was under the influence
of narcotics. He sat there like a dummy."
With the departure of Belenko for the United States, the
Soviet pressures on Japan did not abate; they merely were
refocused on recovery of the MiG-25 before the Americans
could study it. Surveillance flights by Soviet fighters and
seizure of Japanese fishing craft and their crews at sea
continued. Moscow threatened economic retaliation and
hinted at all sorts of dire, though unspecified, consequences
unless the Japanese bowed at once.
A flurry of secret messages about the MiG-25 bounced
back and forth between Tokyo and Washington, many handled
through General Scowcroft, who coordinated and
mediated between the Defense and State departments. The
Pentagon wanted to bring the plane to the United States,
test it, fly it, keep it. "Absolutely," remembers Donald
Rumsfeld, then Secretary of Defense. "We wanted the
plane. We wanted metal samples; to fly it, take it apart,
then fly it again."
Some in the State Department, however, were skittish,
fearing that retention of the MiG would strain detente and
complicate other relations with the Russians. And the State
Department was reluctant to pressure the Japanese, who
initially were inclined to manage disposition of the plane in
a manner that would spare the Soviet Union as much embarrassment
as possible.
Out of all the bureaucratic wrangling, a compromise
emerged. How long would scientists, engineers, and technicians
require to extract all data desired by disassembling
and studying the plane on the ground? A minimum of
thirty days, the Pentagon said.
The Japanese promptly pledged to make the MiG-25
available at least that long, provided American specialists
wore civilian clothes and acted as consultants working under
their supervision.
In their threats, insolence, and condescension, the Russians
had gone too far and provoked the Japanese government,
with widespread support of the citizenry, into a
posture of defiance. The Japanese now started subtly taunting
[132] the Russians. Rejecting all Soviet protests and charges,
the government expressed surprise that the Soviet Union
had yet to apologize for violating Japanese airspace. Said
Foreign Minister Kiichi Miyazawa: "I realize the Soviet
Union is the kind of nation that gets bogged down in red
tape in making declarations, but at the very least, the Soviet
Union has a duty to control the actions of its uniformed
military men. It's like landing in a neighbor's garden and
not even bothering to say 'Boo.'"
As for all the strident Soviet demands that the MiG-25 be
given back, another Foreign Ministry official said, "The
Soviet Union should first explain what it thinks of the incident.
It is no way for anyone to try to take back something
he has thrown, even though inadvertently, into the yard of
his neighbor."
What then will happen to the plane? Well, the Japanese
solemnly explained, that is a complicated issue. There are
precedents for returning it and precedents for keeping it.
We will just have to see. But for the time being, we will
have to retain it as "evidence" while our investigation of
the whole matter continues.
The Los Angeles Times summed up the situation in a
brief editorial:
The trouble with the Soviet authorities is that they just won't listen. There they are, kicking, screaming and all but turning blue in the face while they demand the immediate return of their highly sophisticated and very secret MiG-25 jet fighter, flown to Japan by a defecting Russian pilot. And there's the Japanese foreign minister, trying calmly, and with impeccable legal logic, to explain that the plane can't be returned now because it's evidence in a crime, the crime being the violation of Japanese airspace by said Russian pilot, whose punishment — and let no one say he didn't ask for it — is likely to be a one-way ticket to the United States.
Material evidence in a crime such as this plainly deserves the most careful going-over, perhaps even by experts from several countries. After all, who knows what that pilot could have been surreptitiously carrying? [133] Perhaps a little caviar hidden among the plane's electronic countermeasures? Maybe a liter of vodka secreted somewhere in the airframe? A hot balalaika or two cached in the turbojet engines? The only way to find out is to take the plane apart piece by piece, as the cops did with the smuggler's car in "The French Connection."
The interests of the law must, of course, be served. It all seems very sensible and straightforward to us. Why the Russians can't understand is a puzzle.
With the revelation that American "consultants" were en
route to assist in the Japanese "investigation," the Russians
realized they had no chance now of preventing examination
and exploitation of the MiG-25. So they redirected their
propaganda toward the Soviet people and their pressures
toward the United States.
Tass on September 14 initiated the Soviet efforts to represent
Belenko as a hero and patriot abducted and spirited
away against his will by the Dark Forces with the connivance
of the devious and unscrupulous Japanese. According
to Tass, Belenko during a routine training flight strayed
off course, ran out of fuel, and made a forced landing at
Hakodate. (An unidentified Soviet source attempted to
lend credence to this version by telling Western newsmen
that Belenko maintained radio contact with his base up
until his landing.) Tass asserted that Japanese police
clamped a hood over Belenko's head, dragged him away by
his arms, shoved him into a car, and hid him in isolation,
refusing Soviet pleas to see him.
On the very day following the landing of the Soviet aircraft in Japan, an official representative of the White House announced that President Ford had decided to grant asylum to the Soviet pilot. The same White House representative was forced to acknowledge that the American authorities did not even know whether the pilot had sought asylum in the U.S.
It is difficult to label this announcement as anything but inflammatory. Even the sensation-oriented American press and television called this "unusual" for [134] the White House, apparently dictated by reason of the election campaign. It is evident that American "special services" were behind this "invitation" to the Soviet pilot. Subsequent events showed their participation in the removal of Belenko to the U.S....
Despite persistent demands on the part of the Soviets, Japanese authorities refused for several days to satisfy the appeal for a meeting between Soviet representatives and the pilot. When such a meeting finally took place, it was reduced to a worthless farce. At a distance of 25-30 meters, fenced off from the representatives of the Soviet Embassy in Japan by a barricade of office tables, sat Belenko, like a mannequin, surrounded by police and other representatives of the Japanese authorities. Not even a Soviet doctor, who would have been able to render a professional opinion as to the physical condition of the pilot, was allowed at the meeting.
This was in no way a meeting conducive to talking with Belenko. His two or three incoherent sentences were hardly confirmation of the Japanese representatives' assertions as to the pilot's intention "to receive political asylum" in the U.S. The entire course of the meeting, which lasted only seven minutes in all, including time to translate his sentences into Japanese, demonstrated that Belenko was in an abnormal condition, under the influence of drugs or something else. Immediately following this meeting, he was placed in an airplane owned by an American company and taken, under guard, to the U.S. This is how the Japanese authorities, in collaboration with American "special services," treated the Soviet pilot.
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko flew to New York on
September 20 and, when asked about the Belenko affair,
said, "This is a matter that will come up in discussions between
us and the United States." That evening during a
private dinner with Kissinger at the Waldorf-Astoria,
Gromyko emphasized that the return of Belenko was an
issue of such grave importance to the Soviet Union that
Brezhnev himself was personally concerned with it.
[135] The Russians, he said, were not at all sure that the man
presented to them in Tokyo was even Belenko. The belief
that Belenko had been abducted and was being held against
his will would continue to poison U.S.-Soviet relations
until it was eliminated, and it could be extirpated only if
the Russians, with one of their own physicians present,
were allowed to talk personally to Belenko at length.
In Washington the Soviets, who sometimes try to lobby
in Congress as assiduously as the AFL-CIO or American
Medical Association, sought to generate pressures in Congress
for the return of Belenko. An emissary from the
Soviet Embassy delivered a handwritten letter from Belenko's
wife, Ludmilla, and mother to the office of Representative
Dante Fascell, chairman of the U.S. commission
that monitors compliance with the Helsinki Accords, especially
the human rights provisions. The Russian handwriting
was that of Belenko's wife; the maudlin words almost
certainly were those of the KGB. They appealed to
the congressman to uphold his commitment to human
rights by helping to free this captured son and husband
and reunite him with his loving, grief-stricken family. And
repeatedly, the Embassy dispatched its second ranking
member, Yuly Vorontsov, one of the Soviet Union's three
or four most forceful diplomatic operatives, to demand
from the State Department an opportunity to confront, or
rather, to have a long, leisurely talk with Belenko.
In Moscow the Foreign Ministry staged a melodramatic
conference for the foreign and Soviet press corps, starring
Belenko's wife and his mother, whom he had last seen
twenty-seven years before, when he was two years old.
Foreign Ministry official Lev Krylov, who presided over
the show, declared at the outset that "Western propaganda"
stories that Belenko had voluntarily flown to Japan because
of dissatisfaction with life in the Soviet Union were malicious
fabrications. "All this is a lie from beginning to
end."
Ludmilla spoke emotionally and often wept before the
cameras. "We do not believe and will never believe that he
is voluntarily abroad. I do not doubt Viktor's love and
loyalty. And this gives me the absolute right to declare that
something terrible has happened to Viktor and that he
[136] needs assistance, which I request all of you present here
to give him.
"On Sunday, one day before the terrible event, Viktor
spent the entire day walking and playing with our son, as he
usually did on his free days. They worked figurines out of
plastic and read fairy stories. I baked pies, and Viktor
helped me do it. We had supper in the evening and went
to bed. Before going to sleep, Viktor reminded me that our
friend's birthday was several days away and proposed that
we give him several crystal glasses at his birthday party.
On the morning of September sixth, he told me he would
be back early from the flight and would take our son from
kindergarten. He kissed me and Dima and went off, as he
did every day.
"Nothing bode us ill. I am sure that something happened
during the flight, and he was forced to land the plane on
foreign territory. I firmly believe that Viktor was and will
continue to be a Soviet man. It was his dream to be a test
pilot. On September third, actually three days before the
incident he sent the necessary papers for appointment as
test pilot to the command.
"Western press reports that my husband requested political
asylum in the U.S.A. are a deliberate lie. I am absolutely
sure that such a statement was fabricated against his
will.
"Our family is well-off. We live in a good apartment
with every convenience. My husband is well paid. His
ability as a flier was highly appreciated by the commanding
officers. He is a patriot. He received only commendations
during his service. He had excellent marks in school. We
have no news from Viktor to this day. Is this not testimony
that he is under coercion?"
Pausing to sob now and then, Ludmilla read excerpts
from a letter she had sent to her beloved kidnapped husband.
"Darling, I am convinced that some incredible misfortune
happened to you.... My dear Viktor, we are
waiting for you at home; return soon. I was officially reassured
at the highest level here that you will be forgiven,
even if you have made a mistake.... Take all steps and
ensure your return to the homeland." Tearfully, Ludmilla
told the press that in the name of humanity she had
[137] addressed a personal appeal to President Ford and quoted
further from her letter to Belenko: "I rely on [Ford's] humaneness.
Though this is a personal matter for us, he is
also a father and must understand our sorrow; help me,
you, and our son to be together."
The performance of Belenko's mother, suddenly lifted
out of obscurity in the Caucasus, flown to Moscow, handsomely
dressed, coiffured, and drilled, was good, if brief,
considering that she personally knew nothing of the man
she had last seen as a child of two. She did not cry as well
as Ludmilla, but did produce some tears, which she dabbed
with a white handkerchief. Her few lines were aimed at
mothers everywhere, but most important, at Soviet mothers.
"My son, Viktor, has always been a patriot. In the family
and his service, he was single-minded and level-headed.
I am convinced that some misfortune happened to him.
And I, as mother, am deeply pained that someone wants
to take advantage of my son's trouble, to prevent him from
returning home. Who but a mother knows her child best?
That is why I say that my Viktor is honest before the
homeland and myself."
Krylov concluded the conference with another recitation
of the infamous "arbitrary actions and lawlessness" of the
devious Japanese and a denunciation of President Ford.
Belenko's behavior in Japan proved that his flight was not
intentional. "How else is one to explain his warning shots
when unauthorized persons tried to approach the plane
and his protests against the plane being photographed? The
Japanese authorities used force on Belenko. He was handcuffed
and had a bag over his head and was hidden on the
back seat of a car when he was moved...."
The combined American-Japanese abduction of Belenko,
Krylov charged, was the act of callous homewreckers and
flagrantly violated the Helsinki Accords on human rights
only recently signed by President Ford himself.
The authors of the script the two ladies acted out understandably
made a few factual errors, knowingly and unknowingly.
Ludmilla never baked pies. Belenko never
kissed his wife and son good-bye in the morning because
he had to leave for the base so early that they were still
asleep. He did not promise to pick up the child from
[138] kindergarten in midafternoon because, no matter when
flights were completed, Shevtsov or the Monster required all
officers to remain on the base until 6:00 P.M. Like many
fighter pilots, Belenko would have liked to become a test
pilot. But he and the rest knew that, the right connections
in Moscow being absent, such an aspiration was impossible
of fulfillment, and he had never applied to be a test pilot.
Yet the appearance of the women, highly publicized in
the Soviet Union, served the purpose of saving face for the
Party. The faith of the Party in Belenko was not misplaced;
the theories the Party followed in making of him a New
Communist Man, a "Soviet man," as Ludmilla put it were
not invalid; none of the causes of the whole tragic incident
were to be found within the Soviet system or the Mother
Country. The trouble, as so many other Soviet troubles,
grew out of the plotting of the Dark Forces.
However, the press conference did not produce the desired
effects abroad. A succinct editorial in the Baltimore
Sun typified much of the Western reaction:
Soviet officialdom is not noted for humor except, on occasion, for the crude and inadvertent kind. A classic example of the latter must be credited to one Lev V. Krylov, a Foreign Ministry official assigned to orchestrate a campaign for the repatriation of Senior Lieutenant Viktor Belenko. Lieutenant Belenko is the Soviet pilot who defected to Japan September 6 in a MiG-25 that has been fondly scrutinized by American intelligence. The Kremlin wants Lieutenant Belenko back — not to punish, heaven forbid, but to reunite him with a wife and mother who wept in front of Soviet cameras. Comrade Krylov apparently was so affected by this display of emotion that he accused Japan and the United States of acts "tantamount to splitting a family by force."
This would almost be funny if one could put out of mind, for a moment, the tens of thousands of German families divided by the Berlin Wall and the thousands of Russian Jews in exile who wait and wait and wait for the Soviet Union to grant exit permits to their relatives.
[139] The renewed slander of Japan disseminated at the press
conference, together with another incident, infuriated the
Japanese. In New York Gromyko summoned the new
Japanese Foreign Minister, Zentaro Kosaka, to a Soviet
UN office and, "offering not even a glass of water," spoke
to him with such condescension that Kosaka, a courtly
diplomat given to understatement, described the meeting
as "extremely severe."
The Japanese government in Tokyo made public a
specific rebuttal of the Soviet charges:
The Soviets claim that a bag had been thrown over Lieutenant Belenko's head, but the fact was that he had his jacket thrown over his face by his expressed wish because he didn't want to be exposed to cameras.
The Soviets claim that he was handcuffed because of the string seen in a picture of him, but the fact was that he held a paper bag containing his belongings, and the string of the bag appeared in the photo.
The Soviets claim that he was kept 25-30 meters away from a Soviet Embassy official who came to see him, and the Japanese police interfered with the conversation. The fact was that the distance was only eight meters, and there was no interference whatever.
The statement written and signed by Lieutenant Belenko was penned in a hotel in Hokkaido, where he landed the MiG-25 Foxbat. It was shown to Ambassador Dmitri Polyansky, but he refused to take it.
[The statement said] "I hereby state that I, Viktor Ivanovich Belenko, do not wish to return to the Soviet Union and hope to reside in the United States. This decision has been made autonomously and out of my own free will. Viktor I. Belenko."
Privately the Japanese now said in effect to the Americans:
Let's get started. We'll take it apart and ship it back
to them in pieces.
On October 1 at four in the afternoon, President Ford
received Gromyko and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin
in the Oval Office of the White House. The subject
of Belenko was not on the scheduled agenda of discussions,
[140] and Ford was surprised when Gromyko broached it — suddenly,
indignantly, belligerently.
"We were after that plane like a dog in heat," he announced
— not because the Russians cared about the loss of
secrets it embodied but because it was stolen. Gromyko declared
that Belenko was a thief, a common criminal whom
the United States was obligated to extradite in the interests
of simple justice. As a criminal, who had absconded with
something as valuable as an aircraft, he obviously did not
qualify for political asylum. Both international law and the
interests of Soviet-American relations required that he be
forcibly repatriated to face the prosecution his crime deserved.
President Ford made no attempt to disguise his astonishment
or anger. Having been continuously briefed all along
about Belenko and attendant developments, he was aware
of the press conference in Moscow three days before and
the consistent Soviet portrayal of Belenko as a "good man,"
a "Soviet man," a "patriot," "one of our best people," a
highly commended officer, who, after straying off course,
had been kidnapped and dragged away from country and
family against his will, an esteemed comrade, who, even
if he had made some unknown mistake, would be forgiven.
Now, with a straight face, the foreign minister of the
Soviet Union told him that this same man was a thief who
must be brought before the bar of justice.
Ford was blunt. He was thoroughly familiar with the
Belenko case. If ever there was an authentic Soviet defector,
if ever anyone merited political asylum, it was
Belenko. He was more than welcome in the United States
as long as he lived. So far as the United States government
was concerned, the issue was closed and not subject to
further discussion or negotiation.
Through the decades the Russians have perfected to an
art the practice of wresting concessions from other nations
by thrashing about, growling menacingly, and acting like a
great, frightening, unruly, and unpredictable bear. The reaction
of the world often has been akin to that of indulgent
parents undertaking to appease a spoiled child in the midst
of a temper tantrum.
[141] The Soviet temper tantrum had failed to wrest Belenko
from the Japanese or the Americans. Now the only possibility
lay in reaching him personally through words or other
means.
CHAPTER VI
With the
Dark
Forces
Flying toward what he envisioned as the very lair of the
Dark Forces, Belenko knew little of the international storm
he was precipitating and nothing about the intensity of
continuing Soviet efforts to snare him. In his psychological
approach to America, he was continuing the same intellectual
quest which had driven him much of his life. He
had to understand the underlying order, causes, purpose of
the world he was entering. His reasoning convinced him
that not all that the communists said about the United
States could be true; analysis of their own words suggested
the possibility that freedom of some land actually might
exist. But he was so inured to lies, deceit, hypocrisy, and
the devious that he was skeptical of everything. For him,
not even seeing was believing. Indeed, at times, the more
obvious something seemed, the greater the cause in his
mind to suspect the ulterior.
As the 747 descended toward Los Angeles, Jim handed
him a wig and dark glasses so that he could not be recognized
subsequently from pictures photographers might
snap at the airport. On the runway they jumped into one
of several waiting CIA cars and, escorted by police on
motorcycles, darted through night traffic to a private airport,
where a small passenger jet was ready to take off.
[143] Climbing into the plane, Belenko pulled off the wig, which
was insufferably hot, and put away the glasses, drastically
changing his appearance. One of the CIA men already in
the plane looked around and, not seeing the man who
came aboard as Belenko, panicked. "Jesus Christ! We've
lost him already! Where in the hell did he go?"
Once Jim translated the exclamations, Belenko laughed
along with the four CIA officers who were to accompany
them, and all welcomed him in Russian. Belenko asked if
they had any urgent questions, and the senior American
replied much as Jim had over the Pacific: Relax; don't
worry. There will be plenty of time to talk later. You're
too tired now.
He was right. Days of tension, drama, anxiety, and time
changes had drained him physically, intellectually, and
emotionally. His impressions, sensations, and thoughts were
blurred and imprecise, and he felt as if he were suspended
midway in half-light between dream and reality.
The executive jet was to him a masterpiece of design,
maneuvering as nimbly as a fighter while outfitted inside
like an elegant hotel suite. Well, I knew they were rich and
built good airplanes.
He sampled sandwiches set out on a table unfolded in
the middle of the cabin — thick layers of turkey, corned
beef, pastrami, cheese and lettuce and tomatoes, between
slices of white, brown, and rye bread. He unhesitatingly
requested instructions as to how to eat the sandwiches and
wanted to know the contents of each. They're delicious.
But they probably have good food in the KGB, too. And
so what? I didn't come here for food.
There was something wrong with the CIA officers; at
least something he expected was missing. In their late
thirties or early forties, they looked too trim, too healthy;
they were too neatly and, he thought, too expensively
dressed; more troublesome, they were too much at ease, too
casual, too friendly with each other and him, too, well,
too open, too guileless. They wouldn't frighten anybody.
But of course. They're not typical. They were picked for
this. We know the Dark Forces are clever. This is their
way of fooling me.
Over the western deserts and the Rockies, Belenko slept
[144] in what he was told, but did not believe, was the CIA director's
bunk. He was served tea upon awakening, and an
officer pointed to the lights of a sprawling city on the port
side of the plane. "That's Chicago. It's famous for stockyards
and gangsters."
"Yes, the gangsters of Chicago are very famous in my
country."
"Which country do you mean?"
Belenko grinned. "I understand your point."
They landed at Dulles Airport around 4:00 A.M. in darkness
and heavy rain and drove for about an hour along
back roads until the car turned into a long driveway. The
headlights illuminated an imposing southern mansion built
of red brick with tall windows, a double door, and a two-story
veranda buttressed by white porticoes. Jim pointed
to a bedroom and told him to sleep as long as he could.
On the ceiling above the large bed, he spotted a fixture,
either an airconditioning outlet or a smoke detector. He
was sure it was a concealed television camera continuously
focused upon him, but he was too exhausted to care.
Belenko awakened at midmorning startled. What's that
nigger doing in my room? Although he had never seen a
black person, the prejudices against blacks he had been
taught and absorbed throughout his life were thoroughly
ingrained. On a scale of ten, blacks ranked in bis eyes
tenth, below Asian minorities of the Soviet population,
below Jews. He warily eyed the middle-aged maid, who
smiled at him, said something in English he did not understand,
set down a tray bearing a pot of coffee and a pot of
tea and a note scribbled in Russian: "Breakfast is ready
whenever you are." While drinking tea, Belenko noticed
laid out on a chair a pair of slacks, a sports shirt, socks,
T-shirts, and boxer shorts, but not having been expressly
told they were his, he put on his hybrid Japanese suit and
went to the dining room.
There Jim introduced him to Peter, one of the three
Americans who were to affect his future most significantly.
Peter looked the way Belenko thought an artist or composer
should; in fact, his countenance, distinguished by a
handsome head of dark, curly hair, a delicate face, and
[145] black, meditative eyes, reminded Belenko of a portrait of
Beethoven he had seen as a boy.
Peter was a devout Catholic, the father of eight children,
an accomplished linguist, and one of the best clandestine
officers the United States had. Out of the Army and graduate
school, he had come to the CIA in 1950, two years
after its organization. For a quarter of a century he had
fought around the world on some of the fiercest and most
pitiless battlefields of the subterranean war that continued
to rage without pause between the Soviet Union and the
West. Through combat, he had acquired an intuitive feel,
an uncommon understanding of Soviet society, culture,
history, the language, mentality, and ethnic idiosyncrasies
of Russians.
Probably Peter still would have been somewhere abroad
had he not contracted on an Asian mission a rare disease
for which no cure was known. He was brought home in
hope that medical researchers might devise one. Unless
they succeeded, he did not have many years to live. Because
of disability provisions and tax benefits, he would
have profited financially by retiring. He had resolved, however,
to fight as long as his body allowed.
Peter amused and relaxed Belenko, bantering with him
as if they were meeting for nothing more serious than a
game of golf and telling Russian jokes.
"Did you hear about the very sincere Armenian students?
They went to a learned professor and asked, 'Is it
truly possible to build communism in Armenia?'
" 'Yes,' replied the professor, 'but why not do it to the
Georgians first?'"
"That's funny; and true, too."
Having changed into the slacks and shirt procurred for
him before he awoke, Belenko met his "baby-sitter," Nick,
who was his age. Born of Russian parents, Nick was a
Marine sergeant who had volunteered for two tours in
Vietnam and, Belenko surmised, at one time or another
had engaged in secret operations against the Russians. He,
crewcut, bulging biceps, quick reflexes, unquestioning
obedience, and all, was on loan to the CIA. Confident,
trained for trouble, Nick could relate to Belenko as a peer
[146] and somewhat as a Russian as well as an American. He
was to be in the next weeks companion, guide, friend, and,
although it was not put that way, bodyguard.
The countryside of northern Virginia, wooded, rolling,
and with the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains visible
from far away on a clear day, is beautiful in all seasons. But
it was the man-made order of the farmlands they passed
that most struck Belenko: the symmetry of the fields; the
perfection of their cultivation; the well-maintained fences;
the fatness of the cattle grazing in lush meadows; the
painted barns; the white farmhouses that to him seemed
huge; the cars, trucks, and machinery parked nearby; the
apparent paucity of people working the farms.
"Where are the outhouses?" he asked.
The Americans laughed, and Peter explained how septic
tanks and automatic water pumps made possible indoor
plumbing in virtually all American farmhouses. "Probably
there still are outhouses in some rural or mountainous regions.
I just don't know where."
They stopped at a shopping center on the outskirts of a
small Virginia town and headed toward a clothing store,
but Belenko insisted on inspecting a supermarket on the
way. He noticed first the smell or rather the absence of
smell; then he explored and stared in ever-widening wonder.
Mountains of fruit and fresh vegetables; a long bin of
sausages, frankfurters, wursts, salami, bologna, cold cuts;
an equally long shelf of cheeses, thirty or forty different
varieties; milk, butter, eggs, more than he had ever seen
in any one place; the meat counter, at least twenty meters
long, with virtually every land of meat in the world —
wrapped so you could take it in your hands, examine, and
choose or not; labeled and graded as to quality. A date
stamped on the package to warn when it would begin to
spoil! And hams and chickens and turkeys! Cans and packages
of almost everything edible with pictures showing
their contents and labels reciting their contents. Long
aisles of frozen foods, again with pictures on the packages.
And juices, every kind of juice. Soaps and paper products
and toiletries and much else that he did not recognize. Beer!
American, German, Dutch, Danish, Australian, Mexican,
Canadian beer; all cold. (How many times had he thought
[147] and even urged during seminars with the political officers
that people be offered low-alcohol beer instead of vodka?)
Nobody doled any of this out. You picked it out for yourself
and put it in fancy, clear little bags and then in a big,
expensive cart. It was all just there for anybody to take.
Turning into an aisle lined on one side with candies, confections,
and nuts and on the other with cookies, crackers,
and cakes, he saw another "nigger," who cheerfully bade
him "Good morning." (There was no gainsaying it; the
"nigger" was a handsome fellow except for his color, he
did not look like a slave, and he was dressed in the same
clean light-blue uniforms the other store workers wore.)
Never had Belenko been in a closed market selling meat
or produce that did not smell of spoilage, of unwashed bins
and counters, of decaying, unswept remnants of food.
Never had he been in a market offering anything desirable
that was not crowded inside, with lines waiting outside.
Always he had been told that the masses of exploited
Americans lived in the shadow of hunger and that pockets
of near starvation were widespread, and he had seen photographs
that seemed to demonstrate that.
If this were a real store, a woman in less than an hour
could buy enough food in just this one place to feed a
whole family for two weeks. But where are the people, the
crowds, the lines? Ah, that proves it. This is not a real
store. The people can't afford it. If they could, everybody
would be here. It's a showplace of the Dark Forces. But
I what do they do with all the meat, fruit and vegetables,
milk, and everything else that they can't keep here all the
time? They must take it away for themselves every few
nights and replace it.
As Peter and Nick steered him back toward the clothing
store, Belenko bolted into a shop offering televisions,
stereos, radios, and calculators. Several color television sets
were tuned to different channels, and the brilliance and
clarity of the hues as well as the diversity of the programs
amazed him. So did a hand-held calculator and the technology
it implied. But he was not fooled. A color television
set in the Soviet Union cost a worker approximately five
months' wages, and because of difficulties with transistors
and solid-state circuitry, the quality was poor. Obviously
[148] this was another showplace of the Dark Forces packed
with merchandise affordable only by the exceedingly rich.
He had to appraise the clothing store only a minute or so
to realize that it also was a fake. Here were perhaps 300
suits, along with sports jackets, overcoats, raincoats hanging
openly on racks, piles of trousers and shirts lying
openly on counters, ties within the reach of anybody
passing; even the shoes were out in the open — and all this
was guarded by only a few clerks. Peter found a section
containing perhaps twenty-five suits Belenko's size and
started taking them from the rack for him to examine.
They know him here, and that's why he can do that.
A toothy, glad-handing salesman approached and among
other banalities remarked, "It always makes me glad to see
a father buying suits for his sons." Belenko thought that
whether planned or spontaneous, the comment, which Nick
translated in a whisper, was hilarious, and thereafter Peter
was known as Father Peter.
The three-piece flannel suit he selected at the advice of
Peter required slight alterations, and the salesman suggested
they could be made within half an hour if they had other
shopping. More evidence. Who else but the Dark Forces
could command such service? They purchased shirts, ties,
underwear, socks, a warm-up suit and tennis shoes for
jogging, a blazer, a raincoat with zip-out lining, and the
finest pair of shoes Belenko had ever seen.
All of Belenko's suspicions about the true nature of the
shopping center were fully and finally validated when he
saw a service station on the corner. Three cars, all, as it
happened, driven by women, were being fueled at the
same time, a boy was cleaning the windshield of one car,
and there were no lines. In Belenko's past life, gasoline
outlets were so scarce that a wait of four or five hours for
fuel was ordinary.
"I congratulate you," Belenko said en route back to the
mansion. "That was a spectacular show you put on for me."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that place; it's like one of our show kolkhozes
where we take foreigners."
Nick laughed, but not Peter. "Viktor, I give you my
word that what you've just seen is a common, typical
[149] shopping center. There are tens of thousands of them all over
America. Anywhere you go in the United States, north,
south, east, west, you will see pretty much the same. Many
of the shopping centers in the suburbs of our cities are
bigger and fancier and nicer."
"Can the average American worker buy what we saw
there? Can he buy a color television set?"
"Yes; if he's willing to pay more than for a black-andwhite
set, he can. I don't know what the statistics are; I
would guess more families have color sets than not. It's
nothing to own a color television. But look, don't take my
word. Wait until you travel around and see for yourself."
Why argue with him? That's his job.
The CIA had sent some thirty books and magazines
in Russian to his room, and Peter urged him to read,
relax, and sleep as much as he could. He showed him a
well-stocked liquor cabinet, the kitchen and refrigerator
crammed with food, including smoked salmon, herring, and
cold borscht, and he pointed out the room where Nick
always could be reached. "I almost forgot. Come on."
From another bedroom Peter started pushing a portable
color television set toward Belenko's room, but after a few
paces he stopped. "Nick, would you mind?" For the first
tune Belenko discerned that there was something physically
wrong with Peter. If he exerted himself even slightly, he
could barely breathe.
That afternoon and evening Belenko experienced another
transcendent spiritual upheaval as he read The Gulag
Archipelago. In the blackness and iniquity of the concentration
camps Solzhenitsyn depicts he saw the light and
purity of truth, and he trembled again as he had in the
Japanese prison. He finished about 10:00 P.M., took a
beer from the refrigerator, and, attracted by the brightness
of the moonlight and fragrance of the country ah-, decided
to drink it on the veranda. As he opened the door, two
men sprang up simultaneously, one with a pistol in hand.
"Please excuse us," he said in poor Russian. "We did not
know it was you. Come out and make yourself at home."
The Dark Forces, they are not stupid. They would not
tell me I could see anywhere what I saw today unless that
is true — or unless they intend to imprison me or kill me.
[150] But if they're going to kill me or imprison me, what do
they care what I think? I don't know. It can't be true. But
if it is true, if what I saw is everywhere, then something is
very right here.
Jogging around the grounds early in the morning, Belenko
saw a little red convertible roar up the driveway at
an imprudent speed and screech to a stop. That's a crazy
car. Whoever heard of a car without a top? The driver
must be crazy, too. But what a girl!
Out stepped a voluptuous, lithe young woman, whose
beguiling brown eyes and windblown auburn hair made
her look wild and mischievous to him. Anna, as she called
herself, spoke Russian melodiously and with the fluency of
a native, but she was from the Midwest, having mastered
the language in school and during travels in the Soviet
Union. Her command of the contemporary vernacular,
her seemingly encyclopedic knowledge of his homeland,
and the skill with which she put him at ease, persuaded
Belenko that she worked closely with the important Russians
who had taken refuge in the United States.
Because she continuously studied the Soviet Union from
perspectives denied him, Anna was able to fascinate and
enlighten Belenko with facts and vistas he had not heard
or seen before. Her revelations concerning the dissident
movement and samizdat (underground) publishing in the
Soviet Union as well as the number, diversity, and influence
of Soviet nationals who had preceded him to the West
surprised and heartened him. I am not alone then. Others
have realized, too.
And her demonstrable understanding of the Soviet
Union persuaded him that she might also understand him.
She was the first person to whom he could release the
accumulated and repressed thoughts, anger, hatred that had
driven him away. Once the flow began, it swelled into a
torrent, and Anna, who had indicated she would leave at
noon, stayed the day to listen.
In listening to Belenko during these first days, the overriding
purpose of Peter, Anna and other CIA officers was
to assess bun as a human being and, accordingly, to propose
any modifications in standard resettlement procedures
likely to help him adjust and adapt Luckily for both
[151] Belenko and the United States, they did understand him well.
And their analysis and recommendations were to permanently
and felicitously shape the behavior of the government
toward him. Despite the simultaneous clamor from
various segments of the intelligence community for an
opportunity to question bun, the CIA restricted his debriefings
to an absolute limit of four hours a day. It allocated
his first two working hours, when he would be
freshest, to tutoring in English, the one tool most indispensable
to his new life. Afternoons and evenings were
reserved for reading, study, and excursions planned to show
him American life. Save for a few installations, he would
be shown anything in the country he asked to see, however
inconvenient the showing. And on weekends he would fly,
actually take the controls, soar, zoom, dive, roll.
The value of the MiG-25 alone was so immense as to
defy calculation in monetary terms, and the CIA fully intended
to guarantee Belenko a secure and affluent future.
But pending his final resettlement, there would be no mention
of money or compensation unless he broached the
subject.
These decisions reflected several basic conclusions about
Belenko. He craved freedom and independence, although
his concept of freedom was far from crystallized in his
mind. Presently, flying symbolized freedom to nun, and he
had to fly. Otherwise, he would feel himself imprisoned,
and the consequent frustrations might erupt in the form of
aberrant behavior. While he unavoidably would be dependent
during his work with the government and initial
orientation to the United States, his social integration must
begin at once so he could see that he was progressing toward
ultimate independence and self-reliance. His motivation
was purely ideological, and he would be affronted
unless his contributions were accepted in the same spirit
he offered them. Any suggestion that he had fled for materialistic
reasons, that he had come to sell the MiG-25
and his information, would cheapen Americans in his eyes
and confirm the worst the Party said about them. He must
be treated as neither merchant nor ward but as a teammate.
Finally, he would believe nothing which he could not see,
then comprehend through his own thought processes. One
[152] should and must tell him the truth, show him the truth. But
in the end, he would have to discover the truth for himself.
Belenko was incredulous when Peter and Anna generally
outlined the program charted for him without, of course,
explaining much of the rationale behind it The stated
willingness of the Americans to let him fly, much less so
soon, impressed and touched him. It all sounded so logical,
so sensible, so generous, so good. It is too good to be true.
They are just being clever in ways t do not know. They
will not let me see everything. I will test them and make
them reveal themselves.
Sure that he was asking the impossible, Belenko said he
most wanted to tour a U.S. Air Force fighter base and go
aboard an aircraft carrier. Peter acted as if the requests
were routine and reasonable. The visit to an air base posed
no problem; the Air Force should be able to arrange it
within a couple of weeks. As for the carrier, he would
have to ascertain from the Navy when one would be close
enough ashore for them to fly out. It would just be a question
of when. Father Peter, he's a good actor.
An emergency or problem of surpassing urgency delayed
the beginning of the announced regimen. In the note
Belenko drafted in English back in Chuguyevka after he
decided to flee, he intended to say, "Contact a representative
of the American intelligence service. Conceal and
guard the aircraft. Do not allow anyone near it" What he
actually wrote in the language he never had studied or
heard spoken was: "Quickly call representative American
intelligence service. Airplane camouflage. Nobody not allowed
to approach." When the Japanese translated the
message from English into their own language, the meaning
that emerged was: "...Aircraft booby-trapped. Do not
touch it"
Gingerly peering into the cockpit, the Japanese were
further alarmed by the red buttons labeled in Russian
"Danger." Apprehensions heightened when they and their
American collaborators surmised that the safety catches
which would prevent the buttons from doing whatever they
were supposed to do were missing. If someone accidentally
touched something, would the priceless MiG-25 blow up?
Until definitive answers were forthcoming, examination of
[153] the plane could not begin, and only Belenko could supply
the answers.
So on his third day in America, Air Force officers
brought to the mansion huge photographs of the MiG-25
cockpit blown up to its actual size, with resolution so fine
that you could see every instrument and inch of the cockpit
just as clearly as if you were sitting in it The leader of
the group was a tall, powerfully built colonel with searching
dark eyes and the weathered face of a lumberjack. The
colonel, introduced as Gregg, shocked Belenko when he
spoke. Peter spoke Russian well, Anna spoke it flawlessly,
but this colonel spoke Russian as if he had been born and
lived all his life in Russia. He is a Russian in disguise! No,
that cannot be; that is ridiculous. But what if it is true?
Call Nick. Don't make a fool of yourself. You have put
your life in their hands anyway. It's their responsibility.
Gregg welcomed Belenko, cordially but not extravagantly,
rather as if he were greeting a highly recommended
young officer reporting to his squadron. There was important
work to do, and he wanted to get on with it. They set
up the panels of photographs in the library, creating an
eerily accurate three-dimensional illusion of the cockpit,
and placed against the wall photographs displaying various
sections, actual size.
Belenko explained what he understood to be the purpose
of each button marked "Danger." He could not explain
why the safety pins had been removed; they were supposed
to be there. A drunken mistake? Malice by someone in the
regiment? Orders? He honestly did not know. But together,
he and Gregg figured out where to insert replacement pins,
which Japanese and American technicians would have to
fabricate.
"Okay, now show me how to start the engines."
"Why not wait until we have it over here? I can show
you everything then and teach your pilots how to fly it."
"I'm afraid we're not going to be able to fly it. It looks
as if we'll have to give it back in a month or so."
"What! Are you stupid?" Belenko was incredulous, enraged,
betrayed. "Give it backl Do you think that if an
F-14 or F-15 landed in Czechoslovakia or Poland, you
would ever get it back? It's your airplane now! I brought
[154] it to you! I risked my life, I gave up everything to give it
to you! Make the Japanese let you have it! If you give it
back, the Russians will laugh at you! They will think you
are fools!"
"Calm down!" Gregg commanded. "I'm as pissed off as
you are. I agree with you. But I don't make policy. We
figure with your help we can learn most of what we need
to know without flying it. So let's get started."
It's unbelievable. What can I do? I guess nothing except
help them as much as I can.
As they worked together, two professionals addressing a
common task, Belenko increasingly realized he was talking
with an authentic flier and a man who spoke his language
in every way. The more he learned of the colonel, the surer
he was of his initial impression. For Gregg was everything
that Belenko had aspired to be — fighter pilot, combat pilot,
test pilot, adventurer. In Vietnam he had flown 100 Wild
Weasel missions over Hanoi, Haiphong, and the nests of
SAMs protecting strategic bridges, and from his lessons in
American tactics, Belenko knew what these missions were.
Wild Weasel pilots, usually flying F-105s, were the first to
venture into a target area and the last to leave. They flew
about trying to provoke the SAM crews into turning on
the radar that guided the missiles and firing at them. Quite
simply, they dangled their lives before the North Vietnamese
and their Soviet advisers. If the SAM crews rose to
the bait, other American aircraft could lock onto the
ground radar and fire; Shrike missiles would follow the
radar beam down to its source, obliterating the SAM site,
crews and all. If the Wild Weasel pilots were lucky, they
would see or their instruments would detect the arrays
of SAMs rocketing toward them at three times the speed
of sound. Then they could flout death by diving at sharp
angles a SAM could not emulate. If they did not see the
SAM, which looked like a flying telephone pole, if they
did not dive quickly enough, if they were caught in the
inferno of ground fire that erupted as they pulled out of
the dive to go back up as live decoys, they would not know
what happened. A sympathetic telegram from the Defense
Department, however, would inform their wives and children
back in the States.
[155] Professors at Armavir explained that the Wild Weasel
pilots were willing to offer up their lives because (1) they
were highly paid mercenaries or (2) they were under the
influence of marijuana or stronger narcotics. Belenko believed
neither explanation and had asked himself, Would I
be so brave? Could I do that?
Gregg's parents, like Nick's, were Russian emigres, and
determined to impart some of their native culture to their
children, they insisted on speaking Russian in the home,
and he studied the language throughout his university
years. Because of his command of the language, as well as
the technical background acquired as a test pilot, Gregg
frequently had been diverted, against his will, from flying to
intelligence assignments. He had gamed the respect and
confidence of the CIA, not given lightly to outsiders, and
hence, it was decided that he should be primarily responsible
for the technical debriefing of Belenko. As it developed,
there could have been no better choice.
The personal rapport that evolved between Belenko and
his three principal American stewards failed, however, to
demolish the barricade of skepticism which guarded him
against the wiles of the Dark Forces. He did not blame
Peter, Anna, and Gregg or the Dark Forces for presenting
him with the most roseate picture of their country. That
was their duty; he understood. He merely remained disposed
to disbelieve much of what they said and to regard
what he saw as atypical.
Certainly, nothing could convince him that the garden
apartment in Falls Church, Virginia, where he and Nick
settled was approximately typical of those being constructed
in the Washington suburbs and within the means of young
couples with a moderate income. Whoever heard of a
worker's apartment with two bathrooms and carpets all
over the floors and machines that wash the dishes and do
away with the garbage? And a special room for reading
[a small den]. Of course not.
True to their word, the Dark Forces arranged for him to
fly from Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington to
visit a fighter base. He and Gregg were waiting in the departure
lounge when the wing commander at Andrews, a
general, strode in, recognized Gregg, and came over to
[156] shake hands. Belenko was incredulous because the general
was black. He's not a real nigger. No nigger could be a
general. They must have painted somebody and dressed
him in a generafs uniform. Sure, they painted him just
for me.
The fighter base, he judged, artfully combined the authentically
representative with the seductively phony embroidered
to impress selected visitors like him. He was
invited to inspect the fighters, F-4s, F-106s, and then one
of the two he had been taught most to dread, the F-15.
"Go ahead, sit in the cockpit," Gregg said. "But if you fly
away with one of these, they'll have my ass." No question:
the fighters were real enough, just as they had been described
in the Soviet Union. Some attributes did surprise
him. The electronic, fire control, armament, navigational,
and certain other systems were much more sophisticated
than he had been told, and the exterior surfaces of all the
U.S. planes were smoother than those of the MiG-25. Essentially,
though, they were what he expected: marvelous
machines, but known machines.
The clubs for enlisted personnel, noncommissioned officers,
and officers, with their various rooms for dining,
dancing, drinking, reading, pool, Ping-Pong, cards, and
chess; the athletic fields, gymnasiums, swimming pools,
tennis courts; the theater — they might be real.
"How can you afford to spend so much on people rather
than weapons?"
"How can we afford not to?" responded the fighter-base
commander, a colonel, who was escorting them. "The best
weapons in the world are no good unless you have people
willing and able to man them."
That's right, absolutely right. That's what I was trying
to tell the Party.
The base commander told Belenko that the Air Force
wished to give him an American flight suit as a memento
of the visit. Never had he admired any apparel so much.
Although made of synthetics, it was silken and flexible in
feel, light, yet warm. "You make a fine-looking American
pilot," Gregg said, as Belenko looked at himself in the dark
green suit before a mirror.
"Let me show you something," said an officer, who
[157] flicked a cigarette lighter and touched the flame to the
flight suit.
"Don't do that!" shouted Belenko, shoving the officer
away.
"No, just trust me. It's fireproof. If it burns, we'll give
you a new one." The officer held the flame to a sleeve, and
Belenko saw that the suit was, indeed, impervious to fire.
Belenko then asked to meet a typical sergeant, whom he
questioned about his work and standard of living. Believing
none of the straightforward answers, Belenko announced he
would like to visit the sergeant's quarters. Easy enough,
said the commander. He lives only a few blocks away.
Come on, we'll go in my car. Obviously, this was a put-on.
Can you imagine a colonel actually driving people around,
including one of his own sergeants, like a common
chauffeur?
The sergeant lived on base in a two-story stucco house
with a screened front porch, small yard, and attached garage.
Belenko asked how a sergeant could have such a
large house, and the commander told him the size of the
house allotted depended on the size of the family to occupy
it. Oh, that's absurd. And look at that car [a 1976 Impala}!
They want me to think a sergeant owns a car like that.
Why, it's better than the colonefs car.
Upon looking at a major's house, which was nicer but
not that much nicer, Belenko gave up. I've seen the show.
Why put them to more trouble?
That evening some officers took Belenko and Gregg to a
good dinner at a civilian restaurant near the base. Belenko
felt that the conversation, pilots talking to pilots, was genuine
and stimulating. But when the host attempted to pay
the check, the whole scheme was exposed to him. The
proprietor, a Greek immigrant, refused to take money, and
the meal cost well over $100. Gregg translated. "He says
he owes this country more than he can ever repay, but as a
token repayment he is giving us dinner. I think he's guessed
or someone has told him who you are."
Sometimes, though, Belenko saw significance in the
mundane, and some of his observations began to engender
doubts about his doubts. On successive Sundays, Peter took
him to the zoo in Washington's Rock Creek Park and the
[158] King's Dominion Amusement Park north of Richmond.
The zoo, situated in lovely woods, maintains a large collection
of exotic animals. The amusement park is a wholesome
place offering many ingenious rides and delights for children
and teenagers. Yet at both the zoo and park he was
most impressed by the people.
Most, in his opinion, were from the "working class." Try
as he would, he could not honestly discern in their appearance
or behavior any manifestations of the fear, anxiety,
or privation which he from childhood on had been assured
prevailed among the majority of Americans. Families and
couples strolled about as if, for the moment anyway, they
were carefree and having a good time. Among them were
many black people. They were dressed just as well as the
white people, were equally attentive to their children, and,
so far as he could tell, seemed to have no qualms about
mingling with the white people.
He momentarily froze, then pointed at a rather pretty
young blond girl holding hands with a young black man at
the amusement park. "Is that allowed in this country?"
"It's their business," Peter said. "Not ours, not the government's."
There was something else. According to the Party, zoos,
museums, and other public recreational facilities in the
United States cost so much that ordinary people could not
afford them. But as he verified for himself, admission to the
zoo was free, and while the rides at the park cost money,
the workers, including the blacks, obviously could afford
them.
He doubted that the zoo and park were Potemkin creations
of the Dark Forces, as he had thought the shopping
center, mansion, apartment, and air base were. His Sunday
observations did not convince him that the United States
was a land of universal contentment, justice, and racial
equality. But if what he saw was fairly representative, then
social and economic conditions were vastly different from
what the Party said. If this is true, they're bigger liars than
I ever dreamed. If this is true, then something is right here.
It took Peter and Nick a while to locate "a real workers'
bar, a cheap place, "where the lowly laborers might repair
[159] in the evening, but they found an approximation on a side
street in Falls Church. There was a long bar with stools on
one side and a row of wooden booths on the other. Men in
working clothes were drinking beer, talking, and laughing
or watching a savage game (Monday night football) on
color television. The menu of the establishment was chalked
on a blackboard, and although Belenko already had dined,
he insisted on sampling the food, which he ordered at
random. A black man served an extravagant portion of
barbecued beef sandwiched in a large bun, together with
french fried potatoes, coleslaw, and a beer. The little green
check totaled $2.08.
That was real meat, delicious, and so cheap. And I think
that black man made it himself and was proud of it. The
men's room was clean. Nobody was drunk or vomiting or
fighting. Come to think of it, I haven't seen drunks or fighting
on the streets here. But there are bars everywhere here.
You can buy vodka and beer and wine here a lot easier
than in the Soviet Union. And it's so cheap, people could
stay drunk all the time if they wanted. It's as if 1980 has
already cornel
When Belenko expressed some of these thoughts, Peter
remarked, "I'm sorry to say that alcoholism is a serious
problem in the United States. By our definition, between
nine and ten million Americans are alcoholics."
"What is your definition of an alcoholic?"
"Someone who is dependent on alcohol or whose consumption
of alcohol harmfully interferes with his or her
life."
"Well, by that definition, three-fourths of all the men in
the Soviet Union are alcoholics."
Peter agreed that alcoholism was a more acute problem
in the Soviet Union than in the United States but went on
to explain the American problem with drug addiction.
Referring to purveyors of illicit drugs, Belenko exclaimed,
"Why don't you arrest them? Shoot them! Or at
least put them in jail!"
"We try to arrest them. But, Viktor, as you will learn, it
is not so easy to put someone in jail in the United States."
Both Peter and Anna emphasized to Belenko the
[160] necessity of learning to drive, a task he relished. Upon being told
that prior to his lessons he would have to obtain a Virginia
learner's permit, he was incensed.
"Why cant you just give me a license?"
"We don't have the power to do that."
"That is ridiculous. In the Soviet Union you can buy a
license on the black market for a hundred rubles. If you
can't issue me a license, buy me one."
"Take my word, Viktor, you're going to have to pass a
test like everybody else. We can give you false identity
papers, but not a license."
Belenko learned to drive in less than an hour but tended
to maneuver a car as if it were a fighter plane and habitually
exceeded the speed limit. He was driving with Peter
along a four-lane divided highway, when a siren sounded
behind them.
"God dammit, Viktor, you're speeding. Now do as I tell
you. Slow down, pull off the highway, and stop and roll
down the window. The state trooper will come up and ask
for your driver's license. Just give it to him, and say nothing.
He will write a ticket. When he hands it to you, just
nod and say, Thank you, Officer.'"
Belenko was unconcerned; indeed, he welcomed the opportunity
to demonstrate to Peter his ability to cope with
the unexpected. He knew what to do. Every 100 kilometers
or so along Soviet roads, police maintain checkpoints and
routinely stop all vehicles. The driver routinely gives the
policeman two or three rubles; otherwise, he is accused
and convicted on the spot of a traffic violation, and his
license is punched and, with the third punch, revoked.
A tall state trooper wearing a broad-brimmed gray hat
bent down by the window. "Son, do you realize you were
going eighty-five miles an hour?"
Belenko grinned and tried to hand the trooper two
twenty-dollar bills.
"No! No!" Peter yelled in Russian. "Take that money
back, Viktor!" Then in English: "Officer, I am a representative
of the Central Intelligence Agency. May I speak
with you privately?" Peter got out of the car and talked
with the trooper.
[161] After a couple of minutes the trooper returned and said
to Belenko, "I would like to shake your hand."
With a seriousness that Belenko did not mistake, Peter
warned that bribery of a policeman or public official was a
major crime. "Some will take bribes, that's true. But ninetynine
point nine percent won't, and if you try it, you will be
arrested, and I may not always be around to rescue you.
I'm telling you for your own good."
Father Peter, he means what he says. But if officials
don't take bribes, maybe the law is the same for everybody.
Well, that's right, they put Nixon's men in jail.
The Party depicted America as awash in pornography, a
social pox communism spares the Soviet Union. Having
seen none in the Virginia suburbs, Belenko asked where all
the pornography was, so Peter took him to an X-rated
movie. "What did you think?" he asked as they left the
theater a few blocks from the White House.
"At first I was amazed. Then I felt as if I were watching
people go to the toilet. Nobody loved anybody in that
movie. What I don't understand is why, if pornography is
so popular, the theater was so empty."
"Obviously, there's a market for the stuff, or the theater
couldn't stay in business. But which would you rather do?
Watch some whores go through the motions of making
love or go out and find a girl and make love yourself?"
Anna invited Belenko to a Washington restaurant to
meet her husband, an urbane, older man who was highly
informed about the Soviet Union and spoke Russian confidently.
Because Belenko was conditioned to believe that
American presidential elections were meaningless, all candidates
being puppets of the Dark Forces, he listened with
surprise and interest as his host talked about the contest
under way between Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. Anna
favored Carter; her husband, Ford. They discussed, then
debated, then ardently and angrily argued about the qualifications
of the two candidates.
Wait a minute. Maybe elections here do make a difference.
At least they think they do, and they are not fools.
It was the carrier, or rather, what he deduced from the
carrier, that finally shattered the image of America instilled
[162] by the Party. He and Gregg landed on its deck in a small
plane about 100 miles off the Virginia capes. The captain
welcomed Belenko by saying that the United States Navy
was proud to have him as its guest. He could see anything
aboard the ship he desired; any question would be answered.
But the captain believed that first he should watch
the launching and recovery of aircraft, the essence of
carrier operations.
As Belenko stood by the landing control officer, the
fighters plummeted, thundered, roared down straight toward
him. Bam! Screechl They hit the steel deck and
crashed into the arresting gear. Then, with a tremendous
roar that vibrated his body, the afterburners of a fighter
ignited, and it shot off the deck, dipped toward the sea, and
rocketed out of sight This, every ten seconds!
No show could have been more spectacular to Belenko.
The technology of the ship, the planes, the diverse individual
skills of the crew were incredible. But that was not
what was most meaningful. Everybody of all ranks participating
in the operation relied, depended on, indeed, trusted
their lives to everybody else. Nobody abused anybody.
They all were one team, and it couldn't be any other way.
You couldn't terrify, intimidate, threaten, or coerce men
into doing what they were doing. They had to want to do
it, to believe in it. They couldn't do it under the influence
of drugs or alcohol. And this was real. The Dark Forces
did not not construct this carrier or recruit and tram men
just to put on a display for him. Now he was inclined to
believe what he saw and was told.
"Do you have a jail on this ship?"
They showed him the brig — five or six immaculate cells
with standard Navy bunks — which happened to be empty.
*
In answer to his questions, the captain enumerated some
of the offenses for which a sailor might be confined —
drinking alcohol, smoking marijuana, assault.
"Why is your jail empty?"
"Maybe we're lucky. We don't have much trouble aboard
this ship."
[163] "How many people do you have on this ship?"
"About five thousand officers and men."
It's a small city, and nobody is in jail!
Noticing the insignia of the cross on the shirt collar of
an officer, Belenko asked if the crew was required to profess
faith in God.
The captain replied that although Protestant, Catholic,
and Jewish chaplains regularly conducted services, crew
members were free to attend or not and that religious beliefs
or the lack of them was entirely a private matter of
individual conscience.
Belenko wanted to know if the chaplains additionally
functioned as political officers, and the captain did not at
first understand what he meant.
"Who tells your men how they must vote?" He realized
that the laughter the question caused was real and spontaneous.
If nobody can even tell the soldiers [enlisted men]
how to vote, then they do have some freedom here.
The carrier was the flagship of an admiral who presented
Belenko with a fleece-lined leather jacket worn by Navy
pilots. He said he hoped Belenko would wear and regard it
as a symbol of the appreciation and comradeship U.S.
Navy fliers felt toward him. The gift and words so affected
him that he spoke with difficulty. "I will be very proud of
this jacket"
He was so proud of the jacket that throughout the day he
carried it with him wherever he went. All life had taught
him that left unguarded, such valuable apparel certainly
would be stolen.
"Viktor, leave the damn jacket here," Gregg said as they
started from the cabin to see the evening movie.
"No, someone will steal it."
"Nobody will steal it. This is not a pirate ship."
"No, I know somebody will steal it."
After much argument, against all good judgment and
under vehement protest, Belenko reluctantly obeyed and
left the jacket on his bunk. During the movie he fidgeted
and worried. "I think I'll go back and see about my jacket"
"Sit still. Your jacket is all right." Later Gregg slipped
away to the cabin and hid the jacket in a closet
Returning from the movie, Belenko saw that the worst
[164] had happened. "You see! I told you! I told you! They
stole it!" Gregg opened the closet, and Belenko grabbed
the jacket, clutched, hugged it, and did not let it out of his
sight again.
The excellence, abundance, and variety of food in the
enlisted men's mess did not bespeak exploitation of a lower
class or reflect a national scarcity of food The provision
of such food — and nowhere except aboard the 747 had he
tasted better — was consistent with the Air Force officer's
remark at the Air Force base about the importance of
caring for people.
The admiral in his cabin opened a refrigerator and
apologized that he could offer only a soft drink or fruit
juice. Surely an admiral can have a drink in his own
quarters if he wants? "No, I'm afraid we all have to abide
by the rules." The reply was consistent with what Father
Peter had told him about the law.
Everything I've seen is consistent. Every time I have
been able to check what the Party said it has turned out
to be a lie. Every time I have been able to check what
Father Peter and Anna and Gregg say it has turned out
to be true. Something is very right in this country. I don't
understand what it is, how it works. But I think the Americans
are much farther along toward building True Communism
than the Soviet Union ever will be.
A couple of days after they flew back from the carrier,
Peter recounted to Belenko all the Soviet Union had been
saying about him and all it was doing to recapture him.
"They realize that we will not give you up and that their
only chance is to persuade you to return voluntarily. So,
almost daily, they demand from us another opportunity to
talk to you. They're being rather clever, if brutal, about it.
They know they can't do anything to us directly. Therefore,
they are trying to pressure us indirectly through the Japanese.
They're seizing Japanese fishing boats, threatening
and harassing the Japanese in every way they can. And
I'm afraid they won't stop until we let them see you once
more."
"What do they say?"
"Oh, it's all bullshit. They say they're not sure the man
they saw in Tokyo was you and that, in any case, they did
[165] not have long enough to determine whether you were
acting voluntarily or under duress."
"What do you want me to do?"
"Only you can decide. You do not have to meet them.
But the Japanese have been valiant and steadfast throughout,
and it would be a big service to them if you would."
"All right Let's get it over. But I tell you, and you can
tell them, this is the last time."
Peter and several other CIA officers, including a couple
of unfamiliar, tough-looking characters who comported
with his original concept of CIA men, led Belenko to the
anteroom of a conference hall at the State Department.
"We will be waiting right here and will come immediately
if there is trouble. We have made sure that they are in no
way armed. You will be safe. Just be yourself."
Waiting in the conference chamber were MinisterCounselor
Vorontsov, the chief Soviet representative at the
Belgrade conference on human rights, a Soviet physician,
and a KGB officer, who posed as a diplomat at the Soviet
Embassy in Washington.
As soon as Belenko entered, Vorontsov warmly clasped
his hand. "It always is good to meet a man from our
Mother Country." Immediately trying to establish psychological
control, he said, as if he, rather than the State
Department, were in charge of the meeting, "Please sit
down, and let's talk freely and openly. Now, we know that
something happened to your aircraft and that you did not
land in Japan voluntarily.
"We know that in Japan you tried to protect your aircraft
by firing your pistol," Vorontsov continued. "We
know that the Japanese employed force against you and
clamped a bag on your head. We know that the Japanese
put you in prison and drugged you with narcotics. We
know that your actions and movements have not been
voluntary.
"Your wife and son, all your relatives are grieving, crying,
longing for you. Here, they have sent letters and
photographs for you." Vorontsov laid them on the table
before Belenko, who ignored them. Vorontsov pushed them
closer. Belenko looked away from them and glowered directly
into Vorontsov's eyes, provoking, he thought, a
[166] flicker of anger. But Vorontsov, a forceful man, retained
his composure and went on, calmly, seductively.
"We want you to know that despite all that has happened
and even if you did make some mistake, you will be forgiven
completely if you return to your Mother Country, to
your family, your native land, the only land where you
ever can be happy. You need not be afraid. I reiterate and
promise on the highest possible authority that you will be
forgiven.
"Let me give you an example. A Soviet major defected
to the United States and, after meeting with us, chose to
return to our Mother Country. Later he went to the American
Embassy in Moscow and assured the Americans that
he was free and not being punished."
At this an American, a cool young State Department
official whom Belenko had not previously noticed, burst
into laughter. "That is not true, Mr. Vorontsov."
"That's the trouble with you Americans," Vorontsov
shouted. "You never believe us."
"Not when you lie like that"
Returning to Belenko, Vorontsov said, "My comrade, if
you wish, you may leave this room with us right now, and
tomorrow you will be in Moscow reunited with your family
in your Mother Country. And you can continue your career
as a pilot." Here Vorontsov beamed. "In fact, I am
authorized to assure you that you can become a test pilot"
Belenko stood up. "Let me speak clearly and finally. All
I did, before and after I landed in Japan, I did voluntarily.
The Japanese were kind to me and helped me very much,
although it was very difficult for them to do that. They
gave me no drags of any sort. They did not put a bag on
my head. They used no force against me. They protected
me. Everything I have done, I have done of my own free
will. In the United States nobody is keeping me by force or
against my will. It is my own wish to be in the United
States. I will not return."
Belenko turned to the presiding State Department official.
"Although I understand there is a rule that only one
Soviet representative may speak to me, I would like to
waive that rale and invite the doctor here to ask me any
questions he wants because I am absolutely healthy."
[167] That was obvious to the doctor, who seemed somewhat
embarrassed, but he had to go through the motions.
"Do you have a headache?"
"No."
"Have you been taking any medicine?"
"No."
"How do you feel?"
"Great."
The doctor looked for guidance from Vorontsov, who
now began speaking heatedly. "Our foreign minister is discussing
you with Secretary Kissinger and at the highest
levels of the American government because we know they
are using force and keeping you against your will."
"No, they are not using force or keeping me against my
will. I will not return to the Soviet Union."
"What did happen, then? Why did you do this?"
"You can investigate and find out for yourself why."
Vorontsov resumed his unctuous manner. "You will decide
to return. When you decide, just call the Soviet Embassy,
and you will be welcome back." The KGB officer
laid his card on the table.
"I have made my decision. I will not return. I will stay in
the United States. There is nothing more to discuss."
The State Department official rose. "All right, gentlemen.
It seems to me that our meeting is concluded."
As Belenko walked out, Vorontsov called to him, and
there was in his tone a confidence, a sureness that slightly
disquieted Belenko. "We know that you will return. We
will get you back. You will come someday."
The CIA officers waiting outside each solemnly shook
hands with Belenko. "I know that was very hard for you,"
Peter said. "You are a good and brave man, Viktor."
They drove across Memorial Bridge and into Arlington
National Cemetery, then slowly wended their way along
narrow lanes among the graves. "What are we doing in the
graveyard?" asked Belenko.
"We are making sure that the KGB cannot follow us."
"What! You mean you have those bastards in this country,
too!"
"Yes, and it is prudent always to bear that in mind. You
will have to bear it in mind for the rest of your life."
[168] From the cemetery, shrouded in beauteous autumn
leaves, they commanded a grand view of Washington,
which in the late afternoon sunshine looked resplendent.
Belenko thought of his new life and a little of his old.
Could they ever get me back? Would I ever go back?
No, of course not.
CHAPTER VII
Unwrapping
the Present
For a decade the mystery of the MiG-25 had kindled the
gravest of debates, doubts, and apprehensions in the West.
The existence of the plane, what was known and unknown
about it, had affected defense budgets, aircraft design and
production, strategic thinking, and high political decisions
of the United States.
On the basis of the best Western evaluations of Soviet
technology, the United States did not understand how the
Russians in the 1960s could produce a fighter capable of
flying at Mach 3.2 and carrying four heavy missiles to an
altitude of 80,000 feet — something not even the newest
U.S. fighters introduced in the 1970s could do.
Were the fundamental estimates of the level of Soviet
technology wrong? Had the Russians secretly achieved
momentous breakthroughs in metallurgy, engine, and airframe
design, perhaps even avionics, that endowed them
with a capacity to attain air superiority over the West? Was
the MiG-25 already the best interceptor in the world, as
Secretary Seamans said and doubtless believed? Did it already
give the Russians a measure of air superiority? If the
answers to such questions were affirmative, then the West
was in trouble from which it could extricate itself only
[170] through costly and urgent efforts, that large segments of
the public, disgusted by Vietnam and enamored with detente,
might not support. If the answers were negative or
largely so, then the United States could allocate resources
more efficiently and intelligently to counter real rather than
nonexistent threats. So one of the greatest gifts Belenko
brought was the opportunity to answer definitively these
long-standing questions.
To safeguard Belenko and talk to him securely, the CIA
established what appeared to be a medical laboratory in a
large office building. People could enter and leave the
building without arousing curiosity, no one from the general
public was likely to wander into the "laboratory," and
anyone approaching could be observed while walking down
a long corridor that led to the one entrance. There was,
however, a second, hidden exit. And in keeping with the
practice of compartmentation, very few people in the CIA
itself would know where he was working.
Belenko rose early and made breakfast in time to receive
his English tutor, Betsy, who came daily to the apartment
at seven. To him, she was a happy sight — stylishly dressed,
slender, bright, and eager to teach. They were the same
age, liked each other, and worked hard.
After traveling different routes from day to day and
periodically checking against surveillance, Belenko and his
escort, sometimes Nick, sometimes Gregg, arrived at the
office to begin interrogation and debriefings around nine-thirty.
No matter how lacking is the evidence to support
the conjecture, there always are those willing to speculate
that any Soviet defector is actually a controlled Soviet
agent dispatched to confuse and confound by purveying
false or deceptive information. In any case, prudence dictates
that counterintelligence specialists satisfy themselves
as to the authenticity and veracity of the defector. One
means of so doing is to ask a variety of questions, innocuous,
sensitive, arcane, to which the answers are already
known, and the initial interrogations of Belenko were
heavily laced with such test queries.
"By the way, how do the Russians remove snow from
the runways?"
"We use a kind of blower made from a discarded jet
[171] engine. If it doesn't succeed or if there is ice, the whole
regiment turns out with shovels and picks."
That was correct. So were all of Belenko's other answers,
and they corroborated the conclusions of Anna and Peter.
Not only was Belenko keenly intelligent, highly knowledgeable,
and ideologically motivated, but he was telling
the truth. And once the CIA certified him in its own
judgment as bona fide, the excitement of unraveling the
mystery of the dreaded MiG-25 began in earnest, in America
and Japan.
The Americans needed to ascertain first what the MiG-25
Belenko delivered represented. Was it an obsolescent
aircraft whose production had been discontinued? Were
more advanced models than he flew extant? Was the MiG-25
being superseded by a newer, higher-performance aircraft?
The Russians first flew a MiG-25 prototype in 1964 and
began assembly-line production in the late 1960s. After the
commanding general of the Soviet Air Defense Command
was killed in a MiG-25 crash in 1969, they halted production
for about a year but resumed it in 1970 or 1971.
Periodically they modified the aircraft, eliminated flaws,
and upgraded capabilities. Far from considering the plane
obsolete or relegating it to a reconnaissance role, the Russians
in 1976 regarded the MiG-25 as their best high-altitude
interceptor. And MiG-25s along with MiG-23s
were replacing all other aircraft assigned to the Air Defense
Command (MiG-17s, MiG-19s, SU-9s, SU-15s, and
YAK-28s).
The MiG-25 Belenko landed in Hakodate had rolled out
of the factory in February 1976, and the date of manufacture
could be deciphered from the serial number
stamped on the fuselage. The plane thus was one of the
latest models and embodied the highest technology then
in production. It was the plane on which the Russians intended
to rely as a mainstay of their air defenses for years
to come.
Meanwhile, dozens of American aeronautical, electronic,
and metallurgical experts from the United States and elsewhere
joined the Japanese in scientific exploration of the
plane itself. The initial, critical task was to ferret out the
[172] explosive charges planted to destroy sensitive parts of the
plane the Russians were determined no foreigner should
ever see — the radar, fire control system, electronic countermeasures,
computer, automatic pilot. With difficulty, the
Americans located and removed the explosives — "something
of a cross between a cherry bomb and a stick of
dynamite." Then the Japanese and Americans painstakingly
removed the wings, horizontal tail fins, afterburners, and
pylons and loaded them, together with the fuselage, into
a giant U.S. Air Force Galaxy C-5A cargo plane. Some of
the Japanese technicians lettered and strung on the fuselage
a large banner saying, "Sayonara, people of Hakodate.
Sorry for the trouble."
Soviet fighters still prowled the skies around Hakodate,
and fearful that they might interfere, the Japanese cloaked
the C-5A within a formation of missile-firing F-104s and
F-4s while it transported the MiG to Hyakuri Air Base
sixty miles north of Tokyo on September 25. There, in a
large hangar guarded by Japanese soldiers, the real unwrapping
of the "present for the Dark Forces" began.
Some of the Americans had devoted much of their careers
to dissecting captured or stolen Soviet equipment, and they,
along with their Japanese colleagues, approached the
hangar much in the spirit of eager archaeologists allowed
temporary entry into a forbidden tomb full of rare and
glittering riches which might be surveyed but not kept.
They had to analyze swiftly and urgently, yet carefully
and thoroughly, so the labor was divided among teams
which focused day and night upon separate sections or
components.
As the entire MiG was disassembled and the engines,
radar, computer, automatic pilot, fire control, electronic
countermeasure, hydraulic, communications, and other
systems were put on blocks and stands for mechanical,
electronic, metallurgical, and photographic analysis, the
specialists experienced a succession of surprises and shocks.
My God! Look what this thing is made of! Why, the
dumb bastards don't have transistors; they're still using
vacuum tubes! These engines are monsters! Maybe the
Sovs have a separate refinery for each plane! Jesus! See
these rivet heads sticking out, and look at that welding!
[173] They did it by hand! Hell, the pilot can't see a thing unless
it's practically in front of him! This contraption isn't an
airplane; it's a rocket! Hey, see what they've done here!
How clever! They were able to use aluminum! Why didn't
we ever think of that? How ingenious! It's brilliant!
The data Belenko supplied in response to the first quick
queries also seemed surprising and, at first, contradictory.
What is the maximum speed of the MiG-25?
You cannot safely exceed Mach 2.8, but actually we
were forbidden to exceed Mach 2.5. You see, at high
speeds the engines have a very strong tendency to accelerate
out of control, and if they go above Mach 2.8, they
will overheat and burn up.
But we have tracked the MiG-25 at Mach 3.2.
Yes, and every time it has flown that fast the engines
have been completely ruined and had to be replaced and
the pilot was lucky to land in one piece. (That fitted with
intelligence the Americans had. They knew that the MiG-25
clocked over Israel at Mach 3.2 in 1973 had landed
back in Egypt with its engines totally wrecked. They did
not understand that the wreckage was inevitable rather
than a freakish occurrence.)
What is your combat radius?
At best, 300 kilometers [186 miles].
You're joking!
I am not. If you use afterburners and maneuver for
intercept, you can stay up between twenty-two and twenty-seven
minutes at the most. Make one pass, and that's it.
We thought the range was 2,000 kilometers [1,240
miles].
Belenko laughed. That's ridiculous. Theoretically, if you
don't use afterburners, don't maneuver, and stay at the best
altitude, you can fly 1,200 kilometers [744 miles] in a
straight line. But in practice, when we were ferrying the
plane from base to base, we never tried to fly more than
900 kilometers [558 miles] without refueling. Check it out
for yourself. I took off from Chuguyevka with full tanks
and barely made it to Japan. You can calculate roughly
how far I flew and how much fuel was left when I landed.
(The point was convincing. Although Belenko expended
fuel excessively during the minutes while at sea level, he
[174] used afterburners only briefly and otherwise did everything
possible to conserve. Even so, of the 14 tons of fuel with
which he began, his flight of less than 500 miles consumed
all but 52.5 gallons.)
What is your maximum operational altitude?
That depends. If you carry only two missiles, you can
reach 24,000 meters [78,740 feet] for a minute or two.
With four missiles, 21,000 meters [68,900 feet] is the
maximum.
What is the maximum altitude of your missiles?
They will not work above 27,000 meters [88,580 feet].
Then you cannot intercept the SR-71 [the most modern
U.S. reconnaissance plane]!
True; for all sorts of reasons. First of all, the SR-71 flies
too high and too fast. The MiG-25 cannot reach it or catch
it. Secondly, as I told you, the missiles are useless above
27,000 meters, and as you know, the SR-71 cruises much
higher. But even if we could reach it, our missiles lack the
velocity to overtake the SR-71 if they are fired in a tail
chase. And if they are fired head-on, their guidance systems
cannot adjust quickly enough to the high closing
speed.
What about your radar?
It's a very good radar. Jam-proof. But it cannot distinguish
targets below 500 meters [1,640 feet] because of
ground clutter.
A MiG-25 cannot intercept a target approaching below
500 meters then?
It cannot.
Maneuvering. Tell us about maneuvering. How many Gs
can you take in a turn?
If the tanks are full, there is so much weight in the wings
that they will rip off if you try more than 2.2 Gs. Even if
you're almost out of fuel, anything above 5 Gs is dangerous.
The Americans were stunned. Why, you can't turn inside
even an F-4!
You can't turn inside anything. It's not designed to
dogfight.
Partially because the leaks to the press emanated from
sources that had concentrated on individual facets of the
aircraft rather than on the plane as a whole, published
[175] reports about what was being discovered in Japan were confusing
and also contradictory.
A Japanese investigator was quoted: "The comparison
of the fire control system of the F-4EJ and the MiG-25 is
like that of a miniaturized, modern, precision audio kit
and a large old-fashioned electric Gramophone."
Newsweek reported:
The Japanese experts who gave the plane a preliminary once-over were astonished to find the body and wings covered with spots of brownish rust. Clearly, the MiG wasn't made of the strong lightweight titanium used in U.S. interceptors. But what was it made of? The Japanese pulled out a magnet, and a loud "thunk" confirmed their suspicions: The Foxbat was plated with old-fashioned steel.
That was just the beginning.... The welding and riveting were sloppy. It appeared that the plane would be difficult to control in a tight turn, and that at top speed its missiles could be torn from the wings.
Representative Robert Carr wrote a lengthy article suggesting
that the Pentagon had deceived the American
people by purposely and grossly exaggerating the might
of the MiG-25:
In fact, as a fighter, the Foxbat is barely equal to our 15-year-old McDonnell F-4 Phantom and it is hopelessly outclassed by our new generation McDonnell F-15 and General Dynamics F-16. Either of our two newer Air Force fighters can outclimb, outaccelerate, out-turn, out-see, out-hide and out-shoot the Foxbat by margins so wide that our expected kill-ratio advantage is almost incalculable. No U.S. F-15 or F-16 pilot need fear the Foxbat unless he is asleep, out-numbered or an utter boob.
Yet some American experts examining the MiG-25 were
described as awed by what they saw. One said aspects of
the plane were "brilliantly engineered." Another commented,
"We thought it was a damned good plane, and
[176] that's what it turned out to be. We're belittling it because
it's unsophisticated or because it rusts. In fact, it can fly
higher, faster, and with a bigger payload than any plane
in the world." Another: "The MiG-25 does the job well,
at less than it would cost the U.S. to build an equivalent
plane." And another: "It is apparent that Soviet designers
are efficient cost managers who use only as much quality
as is needed to solve a problem. They seem to ask why go
to the expense of developing something new when we have
something proven and cheaper on the shelf. They could
come over here and teach us something in the way of cost-conscious
management and design."
What was the truth? Were all the furor and alarm over
the years wholly unjustified? Was the MiG-25 a "clinker,"
a "turkey," a flying "Potemkin village"? Had the Pentagon,
together with its allies in the aviation industry, conjured up
a phony threat to extract money from Congress, as Representative
Carr implied? Did not the gift from Belenko
reassuringly prove anew the superiority of the West? If so,
how had the Russians nonetheless produced an aircraft
whose recorded performance exceeded in several ways that
of our very best?
The data collected in Japan, then analyzed by the Foreign
Technology Division of the Air Force at Dayton,
Ohio, and the reports of the ongoing interrogation of Belenko
all were flowing into the office of Major General
George J. Keegan, Jr., then chief of Air Force Intelligence.
As the information was collated to form a single mosaic,
clear and definitive answers emerged.
They showed that the West had been badly mistaken in
its perceptions of the capability, purpose, menace, and implications
of the MiG-25. The misconceptions occurred because
the West evaluated the MiG in Western terms and
thereby adopted false premises, which only the arrival of
Belenko corrected.
Because the MiG-25 had been clocked and tracked flying
at Mach 3.2 at 80,000 feet, the West assumed that the recordings
reflected the plane's actual operational altitude
and speed. Because, employing Western methods, the design
and manufacture of an aircraft with the capabilities
imputed to the MiG-25 would require an extremely high
[177] level of technology, the West feared the Russians had attained
such a level. Because modern Western aircraft are
designed to perform multiple missions — to intercept, dogfight,
bomb — the West assumed that the MiG-25 functioned
as a fighter as well as an interceptor.
But Belenko explained and his plane proved that the
MiG-25 was not a fighter, not an air superiority aircraft
designed to duel with other fighters. Against Western fighters,
it would be, as Representative Carr claimed, virtually
helpless. But the Russians never intended it to tangle with
hostile fighters.
Once the false premises were rectified and the true origin
and mission of the MiG-25 understood, then scientific detective
work gradually unveiled a picture not so comforting
or reassuring.
By 1960 the Russians had seen coming at them over the
horizon a fearsome new threat in the B-70, which the
United States was planning as the world's fastest and highest
flying bomber. To counter the B-70, they had to build
rather quickly an interceptor of unprecedented capabilities,
one able to achieve Mach 3 at 80,000 feet. The problem
was formidable, and the Russians were too poor, materially
and technologically, to adopt an American approach in
trying to solve it.
They lagged in metallurgy and particularly the exploitation
of titanium, which although extremely expensive and
hard to work with, is very light, strong, and heat-resistant.
And the Americans deemed titanium or some more exotic
metal essential to a high-altitude supersonic aircraft. The
Russians lagged even more woefully in the technology of
transistors, semiconductors, and integrated circuitry, the
tininess, lightness, and reliability of which the Americans
also considered essential. The only air-to-air missiles the
Russians could count on in the foreseeable future would be
big, heavy, and short-range.
The Russians lacked the time and resources to develop
all the new technology Western designers and engineers
doubtless would have thought necessary for the type of
interceptor required. So, having no other choice, the Russians
elected to make do with what they had. They decided
to use, instead of titanium, heavy steel alloy; instead of
[178] transistors, vacuum tubes; instead of sophisticated new
missiles, those that were available.
This meant that their aircraft would be extraordinarily
heavy and could be propelled only by an engine of extraordinary
power. But again, they could not afford the many
years and billions that design and production of a new
engine would demand. So they looked around for something
already on hand.
Some years before, the gifted Soviet designer Sergei
Tumansky had perfected an engine to power an experimental
high-altitude drone or cruise missile. Because of
Soviet metallurgical difficulties, he had had to build a big,
rugged steel engine, which gulped fuel ravenously. Yet the
engine over the years had proved itself highly effective and
reliable at altitudes of up to 80,000 feet. Therefore, the
Russians decided to create their new interceptor by constructing
an airframe around two of these powerful Tumansky
engines.
They realized that weight and fuel consumption would
preclude the aircraft they were conceiving from maneuvering
agilely as a fighter and from staying up very long.
The plane could be expected only to climb at tremendous
speed, like a rocket, fire missiles during one pass at the
target, and then land. And that is all the Russians originally
expected and designed the MiG-25 to do.
For all their ingenuity in making use of old technology,
the Russians recognized they could not avoid innovating
some new technology. Old-fashioned vacuum tubes could
not accommodate to the sudden and extreme changes in
temperature occurring as the plane skyrocketed from the
ground to the subfreezing upper air. No pilot, however
able, could in the brief time allowed and at the speeds
entailed make an intercept without elaborate guidance from
the ground. The airborne radar needed to lock onto the
target in the final stage of intercept would have to be invulnerable
to jamming.
While the Russians urgently concentrated on creating the
new interceptor, American aerial strategy and planning
suddenly and radically changed. For four years U-2 reconnaissance
planes had flown over the Soviet Union with
impunity, collecting enormous masses of military, scientific
[179] and economic intelligence through photography and electronics,
and mapping the country so that it could be bombarded
precisely in the event of war. Soviet fighters strained
upward, vainly trying to shoot at the U-2 sailing above
60,000 feet, and each time fell back downward in futility.
The Russians also had begun to fire surface-to-air missiles,
but their guidance systems were not yet effective enough.
On May 1, 1960, the Russians fired a barrage of missiles
at a U-2 piloted by Francis Gary Powers. As Belenko was
told and as a reliable source affirmed to the United States,
some of the missiles hit and destroyed at least one MiG
pursuing Powers. But one also hit and downed the U-2.
This celebrated incident, coupled with estimates of the
future capabilities of surface-to-air missiles, forced a reappraisal
of American strategy. Ultimately the Americans
concluded that missiles eventually would be so lethal that
Soviet air defenses could not be penetrated by high-altitude
bombers. Penetration would have to be effected at very
low rather than very high altitudes. Therefore, the United
States canceled the B-70 bomber.
However, the Russians, whether because of simple bureaucratic
inertia, apprehensions that the Americans might
reverse themselves, or for occult reasons of their own, proceeded
to build the new interceptor. And their decision
compounded the mystery of the MiG-25. For to the West,
it did not seem logical that they would resort to enormous
cost and effort to solve complex technological problems
solely to guard against a threat that had been withdrawn.
Years later, in Japan, the more closely and analytically
the Americans and Japanese studied the MiG-25, the more
clearly they saw how the Russians had overcome the basic
and subsidiary problems at comparatively little cost. They,
of course, had saved billions in research and development
costs by duplicating the dependable old Tumansky engines
and relying on steel rather than on titanium. But on those
surfaces subject to intense friction and consequent heat,
they had affixed strips of titanium. In areas not subject to
friction or heat, they had saved more money and some
weight by using plain aluminum — something then unthinkable
in the West. The rivet heads, it turned out, protruded
only in sections where the airflow would not cause any
[180] parasitic drag. The rivets, which seemed to reflect crudity
of engineering, actually subtracted nothing from aerodynamic
performance while they strengthened the plane.
The Russians had brilliantly engineered new vacuum
tubes, elevated outmoded technology to a new apex of excellence.
They had integrated a superb automatic pilot and
a good on-board computer through digital communications
to a ground control system that guided the plane to the
exact point of intercept. The pilot had merely to take off,
turn on the automatic pilot, and await instructions to fire.
Belenko reported that the MiG-25 radar had been described
to him as jamproof, and examination confirmed the
report. The radar was the most powerful ever installed in
any interceptor or fighter, so powerful that it could "burn
through" distractive jamming signals transmitted by attacking
bombers. The limited range of the radar was irrelevant,
for it was needed only to present ground controllers with a
magnified image of the target during the last stages of
intercept. The search radars that detected and tracked the
target at long range were part of the ground control system.
Belenko also stated that despite the disarray, drunkenness,
and mutinous atmosphere rife in his regiment, the
MiG-25 had been remarkably free of maintenance problems.
The reason was that the plane had been designed with
the objective of ease and simplicity of maintenance. A
mechanic, with modest skills and training, could quickly
check critical systems by inserting plugs from test trucks
on the runway. All the components most likely to require
maintenance were contained in a huge rack situated behind
the cockpit. By turning a hydraulic valve, a mechanic could
cause the rack to rise out of the plane, and by turning
smaller valves, he could cause any separate component to
rise out of the box for repair or maintenance.
While the Americans and Japanese methodically denuded
the MiG-25 of its secrets, the Russians, posturing,
threatening, begging, kept screaming for return of their
precious plane. Finally, on November 12 — sixty-seven days
after its loss — they got it back — in pieces. A procession of
eight Japanese tractor-trailer trucks with solemn and ceremonious
insult delivered the crates to dockside at the port
of Hitachi, where the Soviet freighter Taigonos waited
[181] with a crew augmented by technicians and KGB officers.
The freighter tarried until the Russians inventoried all the
parts, making sure that the Dark Forces and their unscrupulous
Japanese confederates had kept none. Some
2,000 Japanese police patrolled the dock and many merrily
waved as the freighter sailed on November 15.
The Japanese subsequently billed the Soviet Union
$40,000 for "damage to ground facilities and transportation
charges." The Russians retaliated with a $10 million bill
for "unfriendly handling." Neither bill, it is believed, was
ever paid.
But the Americans and Japanese gladly would have paid
many times $10 million for the aircraft Belenko delivered
gratis. General Keegan concluded:
The MiG-25 had been perceived as an aircraft of awesome potential calling for rapid development on the most urgent national basis of a true air-superiority fighter by the United States.
Belenko has settled, once and for all, the debate about the MiG-25. He has shown us, much to our surprise, that it was not a fighter, that we have nothing to fear from it as a fighter. But at the same time, the aircraft carries with it many sobering lessons for us.
It reflects genius in resources management and magnificent usage of existing resources and primitive ingenuity. By brilliant marriage of ancient and new technology, the Russians developed in a relatively short time and at relatively little cost an aircraft satisfying performance requirements that could not have been achieved in the West except at exorbitant cost.
The fact that the threat the MiG-25 was designed to meet — a high-altitude bomber — never materialized does not mean that their efforts were wasted. The existence of the MiG-25 and our presumptions about it strongly influenced a national political decision not to overfly the Soviet Union with the SR-71 or with reconnaissance drones. Through the MiG-25, the Russians caused us to deny ourselves for years vast amounts of intelligence which could be gathered by no means other than overflights.
[182] The MiG-25 today remains the best tactical reconnaissance aircraft in the world. It can overfly most areas on the periphery of the Soviet bloc with impunity because we have not in most areas deployed the weapons capable of hitting a plane traveling at its speed and altitude. Sure, the SR-71 would be a better tactical reconnaissance plane if modified for tactical reconnaissance. But to my latest and best knowledge, we have not done that.
In sum, the MiG-25 reminded us that the Russians will go to any ends to meet their military requirements and that despite technological deficiencies they usually do meet them. Were we to apply the lessons apparent in the MiG-25, we could save untold billions of dollars in the development of future weapons systems and develop them far faster than we customarily have.
But Belenko had much more to give than just the MiG-25
and his knowledge of it. Through his eyes the Americans
were able to look deeply and searchingly inside the Soviet
Air Force and see its strengths and vulnerabilities as never
before. In Belenko himself they were able to study the
mentality, capacity, and outlook of a Soviet pilot. During
the interrogations he increasingly impressed all who worked
with him, whether from the military or CIA, by the honesty
and the accuracy with which he recounted what he
had seen and heard. All that he reported which could be
subjected to independent verification proved to be true.
And the Americans came to trust him so much that they
allowed him to enter and experiment in a combat simulator
unknown to most of their own pilots.
It was a space-age creation born of incredible U.S. advances
in computer and microcircuitry technology. Three
fighter cockpits each were encased in a huge sphere onto
whose interior cameras projected startlingly realistic images
of sky, earth, horizon, and moving clouds. The images
combined with a pressure suit to duplicate the sensations
and stresses of flight with such verisimilitude that on occasion
experienced pilots had become airsick. Each cockpit
could be programmed to emulate the characteristics and
performance of a given plane in a given situation.
[183] Accompanied by Gregg, Belenko was told that first he
would "fly" a MiG-17. He put on the G-suit, strapped
himself into the cockpit, and the sphere closed. Suddenly
he was transported not only into the skies but back to the
Soviet Union. The stick and controls moved; the whole
cockpit seemed to tilt and turn just as the MiG-17s he had
long flown in the Caucasus had. Now he saw two other
MiG-17s, "flown" by American pilots in the other cockpits,
joining him in formation. I cannot believe it! It is as
if I have just taken off from Armavir!
Successively the simulator was reprogrammed so that
Belenko experienced flight in a MiG-21, a MiG-23, and
finally his own MiG-25. He had astonished the Americans
by the exactitude of Soviet knowledge of the F-4, F-14,
F-15, and F-16. Now he realized that they already possessed
equal knowledge of all the Soviet aircraft — except
the MiG-25. The feel and performance of the MiG-25
they simulated were remarkably close to reality, but they
had programmed it as if it could fly at Mach 3.2.
After a day of orienting himself to both American fighters
and the MiGs, Belenko "flew" in combat agaist U.S.
pilots and planes. In a MiG-17 and a MiG-21, he shot
down F-4s at lower altitudes but was bested by them at
higher altitudes. Another exercise pitted Belenko and an
American in two MiG-23s, the best Soviet fighter, against
an American in the F-15, the best U.S. fighter. At the outset
the MiG-23s were given the advantage of higher altitude
behind the F-15. At the signal "Go!" they dived
toward it at Mach 2.3 to fire their missiles. Suddenly the
F-15 disappeared, and Belenko yelled into the microphone
to his wingman. "Hey, where is he?" Then a flash in the
cockpit signaled that he had been blown up by a missile.
Within forty seconds the F-15 had climbed, circled, and
destroyed both MiG-23s.
In a MiG-25 Belenko took off against an F-15. Before
they reached 50,000 feet, the F-15 shot him down four
times, but at about 60,000 feet the MiG-25 accelerated
upward and out of range of the F-15.
The combat exercises, each one of which cost $10,000,
according to information given Belenko, spanned three
days. The results were complex, required lengthy computer
[184] analysis, and remain highly classified. But this much can
be said: While the F-15 demonstrated its clear superiority
over the MiGs, Belenko as a pilot demonstrated himself to
be fully the equal of the American fliers against whom he
competed.
In time, Belenko visited dozens of U.S. air bases and
talked with hundreds of American pilots. As an instructor,
a MiG-17, SU-15, and MiG-25 pilot, he had seen dozens
of Soviet air bases and spoken with hundreds of Russian
fliers. In light of this unique background, he was asked to
attempt a comparative appraisal of American and Soviet
personnel and aircraft.
He judged that in terms of natural, individual ability the
fliers of both nations are about the same. The Russians have
tried to adopt American methods of selecting air cadets
through psychomotor testing, and a young Russian has an
enormous incentive to retain flight proficiency and thereby
the enormous privileges which set him apart and far above
the citizenry. In contrast with an American pilot, who may
begin flight training after studying literature or sociology
in a university, Soviet pilots spend years studying aviation
and thus have much more theoretical knowledge. They also
are generally in better physical condition because they must
continuously exercise to pass a rigorous calisthenics test
each year. The professional readiness of Soviet pilots probably
is deleteriously affected by inordinate amounts of time
wasted in political indoctrination, diversion of energies to
essentially political duties in overseeing subordinates, and
periodic assignments to nonmilitary tasks, such as harvesting
or, as at Chuguyevka, road building.
However, Belenko believes that the main reasons the
Americans may enjoy an advantage in pilot performance is
that they fly more, both during and after training, and they
have inherited a wealth of combat experience unavailable
to their Soviet counterparts.
There are other Soviet pilots who, presented with the
opportunity, would flee with their aircraft, and the Soviet
armed forces in general are quite vulnerable to subversion
by Western intelligence services. But were the Soviet Union
attacked, most Russian pilots would fight ardently and to
the best of their ability to defend not communism [185]
necessarily but their Mother Country, to which they are spiritually
bound, however ill it may have served them. In his
opinion, the large majority of Soviet pilots, if ordered,
actually would ram hostile aircraft. With luck they might
eject and survive as heroes; without it they would die as
heroes, and their families would not suffer. Should they
disobey an order to ram, they would be imprisoned and
their families would suffer grievously.
Among enlisted personnel supporting flight operations,
Belenko considers the American advantage overwhelming.
The conditions of life and servitude of Soviet enlisted men
are so brutal that they can barely be compelled to perform
adequately in peacetime. He questions whether they could
be coerced to perform adequately in the chaos and adversity
of wartime. In his estimation, American enlisted
personnel are incomparably better treated, trained, and
motivated and probably would discharge their duties even
more zealously and efficiently in wartime than in peacetime.
Finally, Belenko observes that the American air forces
benefit from rapid dissemination and adaptation of new
technological and tactical data. In the Soviet Union, because
of a tradition of secrecy and the effects of the political
bureaucracy within the military, communication of
new information, much less its exploitation, is slow and
difficult.
As for aircraft, Belenko's wide exposure to fighters in
the United States has only confirmed what he was told in
the Soviet Union. The F-14, F-15, and F-16, along with
their missile, radar, and fire-control systems, are appreciably
better than their Soviet counterparts, although the
United States has not of its own choice developed an interceptor
that can match the MiG-25 at the highest altitude.
Before his flight, Belenko was told, accurately, it would
seem, that the Soviet Union planned a new version of the
MiG-25 with two seats, a look-down radar, more effective
missiles, and improved engines that would not accelerate
out of control. He doubts, though, that any modifications
can overcome the congenital limitations of weight, fuel
consumption, range, and maneuverability that doom the
MiG-25 to inferiority at heights below 60,000 feet.
Some of the most significant revelations from Belenko
[186] have been and probably will be kept secret indefinitely, for
to disclose them would only assist the Russians in repairing
the cracks and crevices he pointed out. And while telling
the United States much that it did not know, he was able
sometimes to show how it had seriously misinterpreted
what it did know. "We asked him to look at an elaborate
analysis of something our cameras detected by chance
when there was an abnormal opening in clouds that normally
covered a particular region. Learned men had spent
vast amounts of time trying to figure out what it was and
concluded that it was something quite sinister," an Air
Force officer said. "Viktor took one look at it and convincingly
explained why what we thought was so ominous
was in fact comically innocuous."
Upon completion of the formal debriefings of Belenko,
which lasted roughly five months, General Keegan commented:
"The value of what he gave us, what he showed
us is so great that it can never be measured in dollars. The
people of the United States and the West owe him an everlasting
debt. He grew up in a brutal, bestial society. In the
military, he lived, despite his elite status, in a moral junkyard.
Yet he came out of it as one of the most outstanding
young studs, one of the most honest, courageous, selfreliant
young men I have ever known of. I would love to
have him as a pilot in the U.S. Air Force or Navy."
Other Americans who came to know Belenko felt much
the same way. But his future was far from secure. He had
yet to confront the greatest crisis of his life.
CHAPTER VIII
The
Final
Escape
The CIA and Air Force did their best to steel Belenko
against one danger that was foreseeable.
No matter how knowledgeable, perspicacious, intelligent,
and helpful an escapee from the Soviet Union may
be, there inevitably arrives a time when his special knowledge
is exhausted. The initial, intense drama that binds
interrogated and interrogators together personally and intellectually
in a common cause sooner or later must end.
The Americans who have been daily or frequent companions,
who have formed for the Russian a kind of
spiritual lifeline in a bewilderingly strange society must
disperse and depart for other duties. And the Russian
must begin a new life which only he can finally forge.
The KGB habitually warns military officers, Soviet civilians
allowed abroad, and its own personnel that should
they defect, "The Americans will squeeze you like a lemon,
and once they have squeezed you dry, they will throw you
into the garbage like a peel." Unless the transition from
dependence to independence is accomplished adroitly, the
Russian may feel that he is being thrown away. The consequent
sense of abandonment, betrayal, aimlessness, and
[188] loneliness can cause disabling depression or destructive
paranoid behavior.
Throughout the months of interrogation, Gregg, Anna,
Peter, and others strove to gird Belenko for the transition
by frankly explaining what it eventually would entail, exposing
him to differing facets of American society, and
giving him practical knowledge. Anna stimulated him to
think about making the kind of choices, large and small,
which are mostly unnecessary in the Soviet Union. To illustrate,
she asked: Do most Soviet citizens have to decide
which apartment or house they will rent or buy, where
they will shop, which type of clothes to wear, which television
station to watch, which newspapers to read, which
brands of products they prefer, where they will vacation,
which route to take when traveling, in which motel or
hotel they will stay, which theater to attend, which make
of car they will drive and where they will buy it, which
physician will treat them?
No, of course not. In that country you take whatever
they will give you, whatever you can find. You don't
choose. They choose. Or luck chooses.
The CIA deliberately waited until the end of the interrogations
to prepare Belenko financially. He never asked
for or about money; he worked and gave sedulously of his
own free will. By waiting until all had been given, the CIA
tried to connote to him its appreciation that neither he nor
all he brought was for sale. Nevertheless, both fairness and
U.S. national interests required handsome recompense. The
value of Belenko's contributions, as everyone who knew of
them agreed, was inestimable, and however indifferent he
was to money, he deserved reward. Successfully and
healthily integrated as an American, he would remain an
asset to the military and intelligence establishment for
many years. His success in the United States would tend to
invite future defections; his failure, to deter them.
Hence, the CIA told Belenko that the United States felt
it owed him a debt. Considering the sacrifices of status and
career he had made to give so much to the United States,
it would be unfair to ask him to start in a foreign country
with nothing. Accordingly the CIA had established an
[189] irrevocable trust, to be managed by competent financial
experts, that would yield him a generous income for the
rest of his life.
With this guaranteed income, Belenko could live anywhere
he wished, do virtually anything he wanted without
having to earn a living. He could enroll in a university and
take a degree in any of the subjects that had engrossed him
as an adolescent — medicine, biology, psychology, physics.
He could open some kind of shop to exercise his mechanical
aptitudes and interests. He could make his way into
commercial aviation. Or he could do nothing except fish,
hunt, read, and fly his own private plane.
Belenko was grateful for the offer and the way it was
made, but it did not overjoy him or resolve any of the issues
that most concerned him. Although he came from a
society where scarcity obsesses most people with materialism,
he was one of the least materialistic of men. He did
not have a pair of shoes until he was six, wore the same
shirt and trousers for five years as a teenager, and, aside
from his uniforms, never owned a suit until the Japanese
gave him one. After marriage, he purchased a television,
refrigerator and furniture, not for himself but in hope of
pleasing and making a home for his bride. He felt no impulse
now to compensate or overcompensate for past deprivations;
he still aspired to live by the code of Spartacus.
He did cherish the Air Force flight suit and the Navy
flight jacket; he did want a car because in America it was a
necessity and an instrument of freedom. Otherwise, he did
not covet material possessions.
The superabundance he saw in the United States intrigued
and excited him because of what it signified — a
system that had already produced what the Soviet system
all his life had promised but was light-years away from delivering.
Before attempting to create a place, a purpose,
and freedom for himself within the American system, he
needed to discover and understand how and why the system
worked.
They are not throwing me away like a lemon. They
mean to be fair, to be kind to me. But I must find my own
way. I must prove I can make my own way. I will accept
[190] their offer, and it can be my parachute if I fail. But until I
see whether I can survive myself, I will take only enough
money to start.
Partly consciously, partly unconsciously, Belenko determined
to explore the United States through Soviet eyes, to
assess it according to all he had been taught in the Soviet
Union. Though already persuaded that much of what he
had been told was false, he thought that the Dark Forces
had exposed him only to the best and that he should first
examine the worst. The worst in the Soviet Union, outside
a concentration camp, was a farm, so he announced that
he wished to work for a while on a farm.
Fine, said the CIA. It would try to help him obtain a
job as a farmhand. First, though, he must undergo a complete
physical examination; then he should spend a month
or so in a quiet university environment improving his English
and learning more about how to navigate socially on
his own.
For the physical, Belenko flew with Gregg to Brooks
Air Force Base in San Antonio. Having been looked at by
a physician almost every day of his life as a Soviet pilot
and thoroughly examined every six months, he considered
the venture pointless and boring.
He was shocked when an Air Force dentist informed
him that five teeth recessed in his gums would have to be
extracted and seven others filled or capped. Remembering
the agony of having had a tooth pulled in Rubtsovsk, he
argued vehemently that no such necessity could exist; else
the many dentists who had inspected his mouth over the
years would have recognized it. The dentist displayed
X rays, pointed out the troublesome teeth, and projected
the decay and infection that would ensue unless they were
removed. An anesthetic induced euphoria, then unconsciousness,
and Belenko was bothered for only a couple of
days of tolerable soreness.
The painlessness of the procedure, the detection of his
atrocious dental condition, the thoroughness with which he
was examined, and the immaculate hospital impressed him.
Here is a big chance. It's obvious they're good doctors.
[191] They should know. Probably they're good men and will
tell the truth. Go ahead. Ask them.
No Party defamation of the United States had affected
Belenko more than the Soviet descriptions of American
medical care. He still believed that medical treatment in the
United States was so expensive that unless one was rich or
privileged, serious illness or accident meant financial ruin,
irreversible impoverishment. The specter of untold numbers
of American workers and their families suffering,
maybe even dying, because they feared the catastrophic
costs of visiting a physician or hospital proved in his mind
that at least in one important respect capitalism was inferior
to communism, which provided free medical care.
He knew, of course, that Soviet medical care often was
inadequate and distributed unequally. How else to account
for the flourishing medical black market? If one wanted to
ensure oneself or a loved one a first-class appendectomy
performed under sanitary conditions by a skilled surgeon
at night in his office, one made a deal with the doctor. (In
1976 the going rate for a black market appendectomy was
100 rubles.) Still, if one waited and took his chances, medical
care was free, just as his dental care had been.
So Belenko put the military doctors through a polite inquisition.
Is this a typical American hospital? How much
does it cost to stay in a hospital? To pay a doctor? How
can a worker afford it? How can someone very old or poor
afford it? How much does a doctor earn? A nurse? How
long do you have to wait to see a doctor? To get into a
hospital?
The physicians enhanced their credibility to Belenko by
prefacing their answers with some qualifications. Medical
care in the United States way expensive and becoming more
so. The rising costs, the causes of which were many, concerned
everybody. A disadvantaged minority of Americans
probably did not receive care that was adequate by American
standards, but the reasons often were sociological and
cultural rather than medical or economic. And there were
exceptions to the best generalizations they could offer.
Then they answered his questions, and their answers
flabbergasted him.
[192] What! You mean they pay a doctor twice as much as a
fighter pilot? You mean you pick your own doctor, and if
he makes you wait too long or you don't like the way he
treats you, you go to another doctor? That means he has to
try to treat all his patients well, or they'll go somewhere
else. And you can sue a doctor or the hospital if they do
something wrong.
Wait a minute. Nobody ever told me the government
pays for the old and the poor. And nobody ever told me
about this insurance. Nobody ever said anything about insurance
paying most of the bills. They lied. All these years,
they lied, and they knew they were lying!
By some artifice, the CIA arranged for Belenko to audit
courses temporarily at a medium-sized southern university,
and he, together with a young CIA officer, rented an apartment
near the campus. Representing himself as a visiting
Norwegian eager to learn about the United States, he
mingled among students, inquiring about their backgrounds,
how they qualified for the university and supported
themselves. He reconnoitered the medical school
and noted all he would have to do to become a physician.
One weekend he went from service station to service station
asking for a job as a mechanic, and two stations offered
him part-time jobs. He reckoned that he could earn at
least $120 a week while attending school, and it would
be much easier to work while attending an American university
because no time was wasted on political indoctrination.
In this country, unless you are very stupid, you can go
to a university of some kind no matter whether you are
rich or poor, male or female, black or white, young or old.
If I passed the entrance examination, I could do it. I could
be a doctor. Even if I did not receive a scholarship, I could
borrow money from the government. Even if I could not
borrow money, I could earn enough as a mechanic. I would
have to work hard at night and on the weekend and in the
summer. So what? I could do it without anybody's help.
Someone in the CIA, through a friend, steered him to a
family farm more than half a continent away from Washington.
Yes, they needed a farmhand, and they would be
[193] pleased to take a young Russian and tell nobody he was
Russian, provided he was able and willing to work just
like anybody else at standard wages. Belenko was drilled
in methods of secretly communicating with the CIA, given
emergency numbers, and assured that a call day or night
would bring him instant help. Gregg and Peter also gave
him their home numbers and urged him to call whenever
he felt like talking. And the CIA emphasized that all the
money and support he might need were cached in Washington.
Before he left, Anna gave a party for him, serving
deviled eggs with caviar, herring, smoked salmon, borscht,
onion and tomato salad, piroshki, Georgian wine, and
Russian vodka. She played the guitar and sang Russian
folk songs, and some of the Americans, all of whom spoke
Russian, joined her. They told Russian jokes and stories
and danced as in Russia.
Their efforts, however, affected Belenko differently from
the way they had intended. What is the matter with you?
I'm homesick. I miss my rotten country. Idiot! Don't think
like that. That is dangerous.
Belenko arrived by bus at the farm in the late afternoon,
and the owner, Fred, his wife, Melissa, and partner, Jake,
greeted him on the front porch of the large frame farmhouse
painted white with green shutters. Supper, as they
called it, was waiting, and after washing, he joined them
and their three children around a long oak dining table
laden with country food — pickled ham, relish, veal cutlets,
corn on the cob, fresh green beans with onions and new
potatoes, hot biscuits, iced tea, and peach cobbler with
whipped cream. Always, in a new social situation, Belenko
watched what the Americans did and tried to emulate
them, so when they bowed their heads, he did the same.
Fred said a brief prayer, and Belenko did not understand
it all; but one sentence touched him: "Bless this home,
our family, and he who joins us." He thought far back
through the years to the cold, barren day when his father
had left him on another farm, the kolkhoz in Siberia. The
squalid Siberian hut where he had been given milk and
bread and the spacious farmhouse with all its largesse were
[194] as different as the moon and earth. But the spirit in which
he was welcomed at each farm was the same.
Heretofore Belenko had thought that corn on the cob
was fed only to livestock, and he tasted it with reservation.
This is good! I wish I could send some to hell for Khrushchev.
All the food was good. His conspicuous enjoyment of
it pleased Melissa, and the knowledge he exhibited during
talk about farming pleased the men.
He had heard about it; he had read about it; he had
glimpsed signs of it from roads and the sky. But Belenko
had to experience the efficiency of an American farm to
comprehend. His understanding began in the morning as
Fred showed him the equipment — a tractor, combine,
harvester, machinery for seeding, irrigating, fertilizing, an
electronically controlled lighting system that caused hens
to lay eggs on schedule, automatic milking devices, two
cars, a large pickup truck — and then Belenko saw, of all
things, an airplane.
"Why do you have an airplane?"
"Oh, I was in the Air Force; gunner, not a pilot. But I
still got the bug, and it's stayed with me. The plane comes
in handy. We can get anything we need in a hurry and
look over the whole place in fifteen to twenty minutes.
Mostly, though, I keep it because for some reason I just
like to fly."
"I understand your feelings."
"You ever fly?"
"Yes."
"Good! Would you like to go up with me on Sunday?"
"Very much."
In a few days Belenko deduced that beyond mechanization,
there were two other reasons that enabled Fred, his
wife, their children, Jake, and one laborer — himself — to
work the farm embracing several hundred acres of cultivated
land plus pasture and woodland. Fred and Jake knew
about every scientific aspect of farming — veterinary medicine,
fertilization, use of pesticides, crop rotation, irrigation.
For almost twenty years they had kept meteorological
records so they could make their own weather forecasts.
They could service and repair all the machinery [195]
themselves. Along with Melissa, they were accountants and
salesmen. And they worked, hard, carefully, enthusiastically,
from sunrise to sunset, taking off only Sunday and
sometimes Saturday afternoon. They treat this whole farm
as if it were their private plot. Well, of course. That's right.
It is.
On Sunday afternoon they took off in a Beechcraft
from a grassy landing strip, climbed about 1,000 feet into
cloudless sky, and flew in a rectangle, roughly tracing the
farm boundaries. Fred ascended to 8,000 feet, described
neighboring farms and their history, and then flew over
the two nearest small towns. "Would you like to try the
controls?"
Belenko nodded. Having flown a Beechcraft in Virginia,
he knew its capabilities and limitations, and he banked
easily 180 degrees to the left, then 180 degrees to the right,
looking to ensure no other planes were in the vicinity.
"You really are a flier."
"Do you like aerobatics?"
"Okay. Go ahead. But remember, we don't have chutes."
The urge was childish but overpowering. Quickly he
looped the plane, started another loop, and at the top
flipped over, executing an Immelmann with which he had
impressed Nadezhda. He rolled, stalled, spun, did every
maneuver the plane could safely withstand. At first, Fred
laughed and shouted, like a boy on a roller coaster. Suddenly
he fell silent, and seeing him paling, Belenko leveled
off. "I am sorry. I am acting like a fool."
"No, that's all right. Take her down."
Fred said nothing during descent, landing, or while they
lashed the wings and tail to mooring rings, and Belenko
was sure he had angered him.
"I'm afraid you have told me something you didn't mean
to. You're the MiG-25 pilot, aren't you?"
You are a fool, Belenko! A snotty-nosed fool!
"Don't worry. I won't tell anyone. We thought we'd
found ourselves a real good farmhand. I realize now that
you'll be moving on. So I'll say only this. As long as I live,
you'll have a home on this farm, and you can come and go
as you please."
[196] Fred kept the secret, and Belenko continued to labor as
an ordinary farmhand, driving the tractor, plowing, seeding,
digging irrigation ditches, feeding cows and pigs, helping
build a new barn and maintain the machinery. In
return, he received $400 a month, free medical insurance,
a cottage with a living room, bedroom, kitchen and bath,
free meals with the family or all the food he wanted to
cook himself, and use of one of the family cars in the
evening and on weekends. These all were perquisites promised
at the time he was hired.
Having recognized his identity, Fred additionally allowed
Belenko to fly with him on weekends and, if he
could be spared from work, on cross-country trips. Studying
private and commercial aviation in the United States,
Belenko concluded that even were he to start as a penniless
farmhand, he eventually could become a ranking airline
pilot. In Russian he drafted a program entitled "How
to Be 747 Pilot — My Plan."
He calculated that in three years he could easily save
from his wages $12,000 which would more than pay for
the 40 hours of flight time necessary for a private license
and the additional 160 hours requisite to a commercial
license. Once licensed, he would take any job as a commercial
pilot, gain the reputation of a skilled, reliable flier,
and prepare himself for airline examinations. Then he
would work his way upward from copilot on small jets to
the 747.
It will take maybe twenty years. But it can be done. Also,
private pilots here are very friendly. They will let you fly
with them for nothing. So I could get a lot of free flight
time.
At harvesttime they employed temporary workers, combines
came from nearby farms, and in three days 400 acres
of tall green corn were transformed into what looked like
a pretty meadow. That was a miracle. No, it was not. Anybody
could do it — if he had the machines, and the machines
worked, and he knew how and was free to do it.
The night harvesting ended, they sat on the front porch
and drank cold hard cider. It reminded Belenko of the
homemade wine the farmers had given the air cadets and
[197] students summoned into the orchards outside Armavir.
The mechanism of the mind which often and mercifully
deadens memories of the bad blocked out the sight of tens
of thousands of apples rotting, of the system that made
every harvest a national crisis.
That was a good time. The girls were pretty, the fruit
sweet, the farmers friendly. We had fun. I wish I could see
Armavir just for one day, hear nothing but Russian just
for a day.
In his sleep a terrible vision visited him. Vorontsov was
smiling, beckoning, calling, and pulling him from the State
Department conference room with an invisible chain
wrapped around his waist. "It is time, Viktor Ivanovich.
You are coming home. Come with me, Viktor Ivanovich."
He awakened shouting, "Nyet, nyet!"
That was a ridiculous dream. You drank too much of
that cider. Take some aspirin, and go to sleep.
Reflecting on the nightmare in the morning and vaguely
sensing its portent, Belenko undertook to exorcise the
causes by assaying his experiences in rural America. You
came out here looking for the worst, and what did you
find? These farmers, they live better than almost anybody
in Moscow or Leningrad. I'm not even sure that Politburo
members can buy in Moscow everything you can buy out
here in Sticksville. Why, a common laborer on this farm
is better off than a Soviet fighter pilot. And you don't have
to put up with all that shit, from the first day of school
until the last day you breathe. These farmers, they don't
listen to anything they don't want to. They just show the
government or anybody else the big finger. They are not
afraid. They are free people. They say all their guns are
for hunting. But they would shoot anybody who tried to
deport them or take away their freedom.
And the way they do things works. Look at the harvest!
Did they bring in the Air Force and the Army and students
and workers from two hundred fifty kilometers away
and screw around for weeks and let a third of the crop rot
because the machinery broke down and nobody knew or
cared what he was doing?
[198] Lied! It's worse than lying. The Party turned the truth
upside down. It's the kolkhozniks who are the serfs. No
wonder a farmer here produces ten times as much as a
kolkhoznik! No wonder they have to buy from the Americans!
Don't forget that. Don't forget what you've seen
with your own eyes, here and there.
After this analysis and introspection Belenko concluded
there was no more to learn on the farm, and he had already
recognized an insuperable defect in his plan to obtain
pilot's licenses while working on the farm. To fly commercially
or even alone and to investigate the United States
as thoroughly as he wished, he would have to improve his
mastery of English markedly. So when the CIA summoned
him to Washington to confer about some sensitive new
matters, he decided to leave permanently and immerse himself
wholly in language study.
Fred flew Belenko to the airport of a city some 150 miles
distant. "Remember, you always have a home."
From a list compiled by Peter, Belenko chose a commercial
institute specializing in teaching foreigners seeking
high proficiency in English. Peter suggested that before
departing, he ought to buy a car, gave him some automotive
magazines, and took him to several dealers. You can
buy a car in this country as easily as a loaf of bread! Everybody
wants to sell me a car! They don't care whether I
can pay for it now or not. Just give them a few hundred
dollars, and they give you a car. How can they trust people
like that?
Driving alone in his new medium-sized sedan, Belenko
experienced both another form of freedom and bewilderment
as he headed into the South on multilane interstate
highways. It's just as Father Peter and Anna said. You
don't have to ask anybody permission to go anywhere. With
a car and a map, you can drive anywhere day or night,
and always you can find fuel and food. How can they
afford to let everybody just get up and go anywhere he
pleases whenever he wants? What keeps order in this
country?
Sunday at the institute was intellectual fun. Most of the
students, drawn from all parts of the Middle East, Asia,
[199] and South America, were as serious as the demanding instructors
who proceeded on the thesis that the secret of
mastering a foreign language is sheer hard work. The students
had to listen, drill, recite, and converse eight hours
daily, take exams after regular classes, and do homework
at night. As his command of English grew under this regimen
so did his power to indulge his fondness of reading.
Periodically he brought home from the public library armloads
of books, particularly the works of George Orwell,
Arthur Koestler, and Milovan Djilas, which refined his
understanding and hardened his hatred of Soviet communism.
But the more he delved into daily American life, the
further the fundamental understanding he sought seemed
to recede from his reach. Looking for the cheapest apartment
available, he rented one in what he was told was a
working-class neighborhood. Although not as commodious
as that in Virginia, the apartment was by the standards he
knew luxurious, and everything functioned: the air conditioning,
stove, plumbing, garbage disposal. Talking and
sometimes drinking beer with the neighbors, he learned
that they indeed were what he would term workers, and not
only could they afford to rent apartments like his for $200
monthly, but some actually planned to buy their own
houses. From them he also began to learn about labor
unions, collective bargaining, and strikes, all of which
utterly mystified him.
The Party described American labor unions as subterfuges
by which the Dark Forces more handily controlled
and manipulated workers. The few strikes reported were
represented as impulses of revolution, which, of course,
the police lackeys of the Dark Forces would quickly crush,
rather than as a form of normal labor relations. When
Belenko saw his first picket line, he saw another great lie.
They turned the truth upside down again! What they
said American labor unions are is just what Soviet labor
unions are. Why, these workers and their unions can shut
down a whole factory by just walking out and demonstrating.
What would have happened if we had done that
at the tank factory? But how can you allow that? How can
[200] you allow workers to stop production if they don't think
they're paid enough? That doesn't make any sense. It's
chaos.
Although he got along amicably with his fellow students,
Belenko had no close friends among them because he preferred
to associate outside the institute with Americans who
could educate him about the United States. There was one
student, however, whom he delighted in seeing. Maria was
an exquisite young woman, an arresting figure in yellow
or brightly printed dresses or white lace blouses, a classic
Latin beauty with flowing black hair, dark eyes, full lips,
and a soft olive complexion. Beyond the beauty he could
see, Belenko sensed in her presence the grace and confidence
of a lady whose inner security enabled her to laugh,
tease, and be at ease with anyone. She brightened his
thoughts as a fresh flower might, and sometimes he wondered
if the librarian who had benefited him when he was
a boy in Siberia might not many decades before have been
like her.
In one of the group discussions a young Iranian, who
sported a $20,000 Mercedes, orated about the "plastic
society" and materialism of the United States, citing Coca-Cola,
fast-food chains, neon signs, and trash along the
highways as examples. As if challenged to a fight, Belenko
instinctively stood up. "Which society led man into the
nuclear age? Which society led man into space and the
moon? If we were in your country, what would happen to
us if we openly said what we thought was bad about it? If
this society is so terrible, why have we all come from our
own countries to learn here? Why here instead of some
other society?"
As he was walking toward his car after class, Maria
called to him to wait for her. "I agree with what you said,
and I am proud of you for saying it." They began discussing
their reactions to the United States, comments from
one excited comments from the other, and they stood, each
holding three or four books, talking for nearly an hour
before Belenko proposed dinner.
Maria ordered rum and Coca-Cola, which Belenko
thought a comical concoction. "No, it is not. If that Iranian
[201] knew you are supposed to put rum in Coca-Cola, he would
not denounce it."
Answering his questions, Maria told him of her background.
Her parents owned a plantation in South America,
but she had attended a university and resolved to do something
worthwhile. The only practical choices that seemed to
be available to her as a woman were teaching or nursing, so
she had chosen to be a teacher in rural areas, where teachers
were most needed. There she had become interested in
helping the mentally handicapped and retarded children
for whom no organized, scientific programs were offered.
Because so much of the research concerning birth defects
and retardation was conducted in the United States, she
desired to broaden her knowledge of English, and when
her parents, anxious to get her out of the countryside,
offered her a trip to the United States, she decided to study
at the institute.
According to the custom of her class and culture, her
parents virtually had arranged for her to marry the scion
of a neighboring plantation family. Although she scarcely
knew the man and had not yet consented, her sense of
duty and devotion to her aging parents made refusal
difficult.
She found the United States largely a classless society; at
least she had been able to meet and relate to people irrespective
of their social origins or economic status. In her
opinion, the opportunities in America were limitless, and
personally she would have liked to stay. But she knew that
all her life she would feel guilty if she did not return to her
own land and do whatever she could to help her people.
He asked her to dance, and on the small floor she gently
pulled him close to her. "You dance as if you were a prize
fighter and I your opponent. Hold me lightly. Or tightly, if
you want."
He drove her home and bade her good-night with a
handshake. Lying awake, he visualized her dancing and
felt her again in his arms. She is as beautiful inside as she
is outside. She knows something about life, what is real,
what is useless. We think the same. I speak only a few
words, and she understands all I mean to say. She is all I
[202] ever wanted. But she is going back to her country in a
couple of months. I cannot follow her. I cannot ask her to
give up her country and stay with me. I do not know
what will happen to me. I cannot even tell her who I really
am. I care too much for her. I must not see her anymore.
To go further will only hurt us both.
Aside from exchanging greetings at the institute, he did
not talk with her again until the night of a party at the
home of an instructor. Having asked each student to prepare
a dish typifying the cuisine of his or her country, the
instructor put Maria and Belenko in charge of the kitchen,
perhaps because they, along with a young French businessman,
were the quickest pupils. The kitchen was hot and
crowded, and they were kept busy washing pots, pans, and
dishes, but they performed these pedestrian chores as a
natural team, each eager to help the other. She reached
up with a damp towel and wiped perspiration from his
forehead. Once their eyes met, and neither could deny nor
disguise the magic between them. Anything with her is joy.
The class collected money to buy the instructor a gift in
appreciation of the party and appointed Maria and Belenko
to pick out the present. After they went shopping on a
Saturday morning, his desire to be with her longer prevailed
over his judgment, and he invited her to lunch. It
was so easy to talk with her that he found himself expressing
thoughts he had never articulated to anyone. "I
believe there is a higher purpose in life than just surviving,
just having all the possessions and money you need. I don't
know what the purpose is. But I think each person has to
be free to the purpose."
"Do you believe in God?"
"I don't know. I think there must be something higher
than man. But I don't understand what it is. Do you?"
"I want to. All my life I have gone to church. Sometimes
the music and quiet are very beautiful to me, and I
feel as you, that there is something higher. Then I see
things that the church does, and I am not sure. It is said
in church that God is love. Maybe that is the purpose. To
love someone and be loved by someone."
[203] The drift seemed dangerous to Belenko, and he suggested
they go.
"Only if you will make me a promise."
"What is that?"
"The week from tomorrow I am invited to the home of
some friends of my parents. They live about forty miles
away. Promise that you will take me."
Belenko, blond, fair, blue-eyed, with the athletic bearing
of an officer, and Maria, her dark beauty adorned in
lace and long white skirt, formed a striking couple, and
the Spanish family welcomed them graciously to their
American replica of a small hacienda. The host and hostess
were especially interested in meeting a Russian. In accordance
with the story prepared by the CIA for his use at the
institute, he explained that he had fled while serving as a
junior official on a Soviet trade mission to Scandinavia.
His fresh perspectives of the Soviet Union, which conformed
to the antipathies of the host, made him all the
more popular.
Belenko had thought they were to stay all day, but after
a lavish luncheon Maria eloquently thanked the family, in
English for his benefit, and announced that they must depart
to prepare for examinations the next day; that was
not true.
"Why did you do that?"
"I wanted to be with you."
"We won't be able to be with each other much more.
You leave next week, don't you?"
"That is why I want to be with you now. May I tell you
something?"
"Of course."
"You will not make fun of me?"
"Certainly not."
"I love you."
"But why?"
"It is the way I feel. I have never had such a feeling.
When I am with you or see you or think of you, I am
happy. I do not know where you have been or who you
were. But I know you, Viktor."
[204] "We will only hurt each other. After a few more days
we can never see each other again."
"Do you like me?"
"I love you."
On a Friday afternoon he drove her across the state to
the airport from which she would fly out of his life in the
morning. Throughout their discussions they spoke rationally,
responsibly, bravely.
They realized that genuine love does not spring up suddenly,
spontaneously, magically, that it evolves gradually
through shared experiences, interests, adversities. They
recognized that they had known each other far too briefly
to be sure that they were not just ephemerally and romantically
attracted. And their backgrounds, their cultures were
so different that these differences were bound to assert
themselves in the future, no matter how harmoniously they
got along now. Of course, Maria could not repudiate her
obligations to her parents, her customs, her people and
country. She never could be at ease with her conscience or
happy outside her own country. No (for reasons he could
not explain), he could not live in South America. Should
they keep in touch? No, that would only torment them
both. Why pursue what never can be? They should be
grateful for the lovely friendship they had shared.
After Belenko carried her luggage into the airport motel
room where she would sleep until the morning flight, the
front collapsed. She sobbed hopelessly, forlornly, as if all
her life were ending. "Oh, Viktor, spend the night with me."
By dawn he knew that in her and their love he had
found a fulfilling purpose of life. What can I do? I must
do what is best for her. She will have a good life without
me. I cannot take her away from her family, her people.
What can I give to her? I'd better go while I can.
He dressed quickly, quietly, as he had on the last morning
in Chuguyevka. "Darling Maria, it is best I just go
now. Wherever you are, I love you."
Through the closed door, he heard her crying hysterically.
"Solo tu! Siempre, solo tu!"
Shock anesthetized him for a while. Then, on the third
or fourth day, the pain struck: ceaseless, incapacitating
[205] pain. You found the greatest beauty and purpose life can
hold. And you threw it away. And you can never find it
again. You will never see her again.
At the institute he ceased to function; he could not concentrate
or learn. The instructors concluded that the intensity
of study had made him stale and that he had
reached a plateau which temporarily bogs down the best
of language students, and they recommended he take a
couple of months off. If he could afford it, they suggested,
he should tramp around the country, practicing English.
Wearing his Navy flight jacket, he drove recklessly toward
Washington, receiving three speeding tickets on the
way, and pulled up, unannounced, at Peter's house. That
house, he previously had noted, because of the necessities
enforced by eight children, always was run with the same
precision as life on an aircraft carrier.
"Father Peter, I have a plan. You send me back to Soviet
Union as agent. Drop me in the Far East; I will show
you just where to go through the radar. You think it is so
difficult to spy in that country. But I know that country,
and I can do it so easily. What you Americans never have
understood is that you can buy anything in that country,
very cheaply too.
"A judge, only two hundred rubles. Plant manager, five
hundred. Militiaman, fifty. What we really want we don't
have to buy. I can get you a MiG-23 and a Backfire [a
Soviet bomber] for nothing. My friends will fly them
wherever I say.
"I know that place; I feel it the way nobody who is not
Russian can. I can smell; I can move in it. You give me the
documents and a little radio the size of my hand — I know
from the Air Force you have them; the ones that squeeze
and squirt transmissions into seconds — and we can talk
every day. Let's go! Let's fight! Let's show them the big
finger!"
"Are you all right?"
"What do you mean, all right?"
"The idea is preposterous. Even if it weren't you're
smart enough to know you're much more valuable here
than you could ever be there. It seems to me you are [206]
under some emotional duress. I'm your friend. What's the
trouble?"
The code of Spartacus, which bound a man to solve his
own problems, to rely on himself, to whimper to no one for
help, clashed with his honesty, and uncharacteristically he
compromised. He accurately reported the institute's advice
that he travel for a while, briefly mentioned his relationship
with Maria, and confessed to some sadness at her loss.
"Do you love this girl?'
"Yes, I do."
"Do you want us to find her for you?"
"No. It makes no sense. I do not belong in her life."
"Would you like one of us to go along on your trip?"
"I must go by myself."
"All right, but I want the doctors to see you." Physicians,
to whom he confided nothing of bis psychological
trauma, pronounced him totally fit, and he drove off to
explore, discover, forget, and mend by himself.
He first wanted to tour the small towns, backwashes, and
heartland cities because they were the milieu he knew best
in the Soviet Union. Conditioned to husband every kopeck,
he searched out the cheapest lodging and cafes, although
large, unspent sums and the interest on them were piling
up monthly for him in Washington. He learned that in
almost every small town there is a motel or hotel cheaper
than the Holiday or Ramada inns, which he deemed
luxurious hostelries. These lesser-known family establishments
invariably were clean, and you could get an inexpensive
meal providing all the protein you wanted.
In a little Appalachian town he took a room in such a
motel and asked the woman at the desk where he could
obtain ice. "If n you wahnt ais, go dowen the hall and torn
laift."
"I don't want ass. I want ice."
"Jes go lik'n I saed."
After a drink he returned to the desk and inquired if the
town had a hospital. "Ain't no cause to go to the hospital.
Doc will come righ heah."
"I'm not sick. I just want to see the hospital."
Probably persuaded she was dealing with an authentic
[207] nut, the woman gave directions, to be rid of him, and at
the hospital an intern, upon hearing that he was a visiting
Norwegian, volunteered to show him around. It was a
small hospital with only thirty rooms, but they were even
nicer than those at the Air Force hospital in San Antonio,
and the intern's answers were consistent with explanations
of American medicine he had received in Texas.
"What are you building out there?" The intern described
the functions of a mental health clinic, which in this case
would include treatment of mentally handicapped children.
Belenko saw a dirty, feebleminded boy of twelve or thirteen
wandering the muddy streets of Chuguyevka, a child destined
to live his blurred, uncomprehending life unhelped,
the butt of jokes and pranks, the village idiot whose purpose
was to amuse by his idiocy and make his superiors
glad of their superiority. He saw her, too.
Only you. Always, only you, Viktor. Oh, Maria, where
are you?
On the road again, he stopped and talked casually with
strangers in small Kentucky and Missouri towns; some
revelations congealed in his thoughts. Many Americans
would rather live in small towns or the country. Why?
Because in many ways life is easier and better for them.
They don't have to go to the city to buy food and clothes.
The government doesn't allocate supplies first to some
cities, second to others, third to the small towns, and fourth
to the sticks.
And where are all the criminals? Where are the fences?
Why, in Rubtsovsk or Omsk or Salsk, if you didn't have
high fences around houses like the ones everyone lives in
here, and dogs, too, the criminals would loot everything!
The Americans, they complain about crime. They don't
know what crime really is. Let someone strip the clothes
and underwear off their wives or daughters at knifepoint
in broad daylight on a street corner just so they can sell
those clothes and underwear, and they will begin to understand
crime.
In Kansas City, Belenko visited the farmers' market, the
greatest, most dazzling assemblage of food and produce he
had ever seen, and all so cheap. No residual doubts or
[208] reservations could withstand the sight. Before his eyes
stretched the final, conclusive proof.
No, this system works. They can produce enough food
for ten countries, for twenty countries if they want. If anybody
goes hungry in this country, he's just stupid.
From the market he wandered into a seedy section of
the inner city and there at last found it — something just
like in the Soviet Union: a stinking, dark bar crowded
with bleary-eyed, unshaved, unkempt drunks growing
drunker on beer and cheap rye whiskey. Ah, he knew
them well; he had seen them all his life. What he had seen
in America usually seemed initially like a mirage; this was
real, and he was quite at home.
Sipping a beer, he questioned the bartender. Where do
these men work? How do they get off from their jobs in
the day? How much do they earn? The bartender, after a
fashion, explained the unemployment compensation, welfare,
and food stamp programs.
What! You mean in this country you don't have to work
even if there is a job for you! You mean the government
pays you and gives you food so you can be a deadbeat and
sit around and drink all day! Why, the Americans have
done it! They have built True Communism! It's just like
1980!
Walking from the bar along a deserted street at dusk,
Belenko recognized trouble ahead. Two thugs were eyeing
him, wavering in their judgment as to whether they could
take him. He knew them well, too. Rather than wait for
them, he ran at them and belligerently demanded directions
to his motel, which in their surprise they gave.
"How about giving us a quarter?" one said.
"My pockets are full of quarters. But not one quarter I
have says deadbeat on it." They turned away, maybe
sensing they were confronted by someone who hungered to
hit them.
The pristine mountains and cool, pure air of Colorado
made him think of parts of the Caucasus, and an indoor
skating rink recalled good times skating in Rubtsovsk and
Omsk, and he saw Nadezhda gliding toward him, waving.
[209] I would like to see her and my friends just for a day. Skate
in the park; go back to the forests; stop by the factory.
Las Vegas, in consequence of Party conjurations, always
had been the supreme symbol of the iniquities and depravities
of capitalism, surpassing even the famous decadence
of Hollywood. He fully expected to see couples
copulating and gangsters shooting it out on the streets,
while the bloated rich played cards amid sniffs of cocaine
in opulently upholstered and cushioned casinos. So what
he saw disappointed, then surprised, then beguiled, and
ultimately entranced.
He marveled that a city so clean, neat, and spacious
could rise in the midst of desert. His motel in the center of
the city was inexpensive; but the rooms were elegant in
size and appointments, and the swimming pool was splendid.
The shows at the casinos were excellent, yet also inexpensive,
as were the drinks.
I will just drink this cheap whiskey and watch all the
people. Look at them. They are all kinds of people, and
they are enjoying themselves. It's like a carnival, not a
brothel. Of course, they are foolish to gamble. The chances
are they will lose their money. But it's their choice. If
that's the way they want to have a good time, it's their
business. They lied about this city. They lied about everything.
In the awesome grandeur of Wyoming, Montana, and
Washington and the national parks, he saw more lies, for
the Party said greedy capitalism had raped, robbed, and
emaciated all the land. He stayed a night in a logging town
set in a valley by a clear river surrounded by mountains.
The climate and the expanses were like Siberia, and he
longed for Siberia.
About forty miles outside San Francisco, he started noticing
signs advertising all sorts of lodging, restaurants, and
nightclubs in the city. That's right. There are no signs outside
Rubtsovsk or Omsk or Moscow because there are no
places to stay or eat. You stay in the railway station if
there's room. Sure, we have signs. They tell how great the
Party is, how much the Party is achieving. No signs tell
you where to buy sausage.
[210] He stayed in another downtown motel owned by immigrants
from India. His room was dean, cheap, and had a
big color television. At his request a taxi driver dropped
him off in the "worst area" of downtown San Francisco.
It was a cesspool of garish nightclubs, pornographic shops,
prostitutes, homosexuals, transvestites, junkies, pimps,
filthy, unhealthy-looking dropouts, and rebels against society.
He ate in a hole in the wall and felt as if he were
in a human zoo, yet the fried fish, fried potatoes, and
coleslaw, for which he paid $1.50, were good.
Two prostitutes, one black, one white, tried to lure him
into a brothel, "For thirty dollars, we'll give you a real
good tune."
"What do you mean?"
"Don't be stupid. You know. For thirty dollars you can
have both of us."
Here the Party was right. The dregs accumulated here
were to him as disgusting as anything the Party ever
claimed, and such human waste, insofar as it was visible,
would be flushed out of Soviet society.
As it was early when he went back to his room, he
switched on the television and turned the knob from channel
to channel until he saw something very familiar. How
wonderful! In progress on the screen was a superb public
television performance of Anna Karenina.
There were so many choices. Before, the discovery and
contemplation of them had invigorated and stimulated, as
did the contemplation of a daring and original move in
chess. Now he didn't care. All visions of what could be
were clouded, dulled, marred by yearning for what might
have been with her.
At a roadside cafe near Odessa, Texas, a Latin girl
served him. She was not so pretty as Maria, but she smiled
and carried herself like Maria. He bolted his meal and
raced the breadth of Texas in fewer than twenty-four hours
and sped foolishly, suicidally toward the institute.
Everywhere they had been together he revisited. He
drove to the hacienda and en route back pulled off the road
and stopped about where she had spoken to him. And now
a delirium of irrationality afflicted him. It was illogical,
[211] senseless, but in its effects on him, it was as real as a typhoid
delirium. He wanted to flee from himself, from her,
from America, the extravagant successes of which made it
seem now like an alien planet where he never could be a
normal inhabitant.
Primordial impulses seized and held and pushed him,
and he could not resist them. He wanted to feel the mud of
the streets, smell the stink in which he had grown up, be
among the desolate, cold huts, hear Russian, be in the land
of his birth, his people, his ancestors. He was hearing and
being drawn by not only the call of the Mother Country,
but the Call of the Wild.
Did they not say all I have to do is telephone and in
twenty-four hours I will be in Moscow? Did not Brezhnev
himself promise they would not punish me? Can I not
fight for my people better by being among them? Is not my
duty to be with my people as Maria is with hers? I will do
it. I will go home.
He left his flight jacket, his flight suit, and everything
else in the apartment and started north toward Washington
— and the Soviet Embassy.
Great stakes rode with him. His voluntary return would
prove to millions upon millions within and without the
Soviet Union that the Party was right, that Soviet society
was superior to American society, that it was the beacon
lighting the way to the future of man. A New Communist
Man who had seen and judged, who had been captured
and escaped would attest dramatically and convincingly to
these truths before all the world.
Crossing the North Carolina border into Virginia, he
still was pointed toward the Embassy. But as in all other
crises, he tried to be Spartacus, to summon forth the best
within himself, to think logically. Why did you leave? Has
anything that made you leave changed? Are there purposes
in life higher than yourself? Where could you hurt that
system most? What could you do back there even if they
didn't punish you? Do you really think they would just
say, "Welcome home, Comrade!" Who has lied to you?
The Americans or the Party? Would Spartacus surrender?
About 2:00 A.M. north of Richmond, the fever broke,
[212] and Belenko first knew it when his hands began to shake
on the steering wheel. He was so physically weak that he
had to rest, and he pulled in at a truck stop.
An elderly waitress with faded blond hair and a face
worn by many years gave him coffee and studied him.
"Honey, you been smoking?"
"What?"
"If you're on pot, you ought to let it wear off before you
drive anymore. How about some breakfast?"
"Just leave me alone."
"No, honey, I'm going to get you some breakfast. You
need something to eat. It's on the house."
Around 4:00 A.M. he leaned on the doorbell at Peter's
house, ringing it continuously until Peter, in pajamas,
opened the door. Trained to be most poised in the presence
of danger, Peter was calm. "I see you're in trouble. Come
in."
Slowly, with shame, Belenko told him, taking almost
two hours.
"Viktor, I wish you had called me. But I can't criticize
you. This is not uncommon. I should have recognized the
signs when you were here last month. Now it's over; you
are immunized. It would have been a great tragedy, most
of all for you. Someday you will see that because you are
the way you are and because there is freedom here, the
United States is more your homeland than the Soviet Union
ever could be."
"I must go tell Gregg."
"Don't worry about that. Get some sleep. We'll let him
know."
"No. I must do it myself."
Harassed by early calls from his Pentagon office, behind
schedule, and half-dressed, Gregg was irritated by the unexpected
appearance of Belenko.
"I have to talk to you."
"Make it quick; I'm late."
After Belenko had spoken for a couple of minutes or so,
Gregg picked up the phone and dialed his office. "I won't
be in this morning. Call me here if you need me." He
[213] listened without comment or interruption until Belenko
concluded his recitation of the crisis he had just survived.
"Viktor, I think you're finally free. Let's take the day
off and go fly."
As Belenko climbed up over the Potomac estuary and
soared above the Chesapeake Bay, he felt, he knew Gregg
was right.
Index
Agriculture, in USSR, 26-
27
harvest, 51-52,72, 87-
88
Khrushchev's plan, 37-
38
Air Force, U.S.: fighter
base, 156
Aircraft carrier: U.S. Navy,
161-164
Alcohol consumption, 12,
35-36,95
aircraft alcohol, 82-83,
98
United States, 159
workers, 46, 54
Alekseyevna, Nadezhda,
48^19, 50,51, 53,
59
Armament production:
Omsk, USSR, 44,
53
Armavir, USSR, 61-63,
65-66,72
B-l (aircraft), 74
B-70 (aircraft), plans for,
177,179
Baltimore Sun: editorial
quoted, 138
Bandera, Stepan, 99n
Belenko, Viktor Ivanovich:
DOSAAF training:
flight, 49-50
pre-flight, 47-48
father, 23, 25, 26-27, 29,
30,64
flight-instructor duty,
81-85
Japan, stay in, 109-122
lifestyle, 22
alcohol use, 36
217
Belenko, Viktor Ivanovich:
(continued)
medical-school career,
51,52
mother: press-conference
appearance, 137
physical appearance, 8-9
recovery by Russians,
importance of, 124 —
125
Soviet Army cadet
training, 62-63, 65-
75
stepmother, 29-30, 33,
64
United States, 142-213
wife, 8
(See also Petrovna,
Ludmilla)
worker, 44-^7, 53-57,
58
youth, 23-44
boxing mastery, 33,35
pranks, 32-33
reading habits, 31, 32,
33,41
schooling, 27, 28, 30-
31, 40-41, 42-44
Brezhnev, Leonid I., 40, 88
Brown, Frederick, 128
Galley, William, 69n
Carr, M. Robert: article by,
quoted, 175
Chechens (people), 70
Chitose, Japan: military
base, 19, 20, 107
Cholera, 65-66
Chuguyevka, USSR, 8, 95
base near, 9-12,96-98,
100-106
218
Cockroaches, Belenko's
fascination with, 26
Collective farms, 25, 26
27,
51-52, 72, 87-
88
Combat simulator: United
States, 182-183
Communist Party:
teachings of, 28, 56
United States, 66
Communist Weekend, 10,
13
Concentration camps: near
Rubtsovsk, USSR,
28
ex-inmates, 38
Conquest, Robert: book by,
117
Corn growing: Khru
shchev's
plan, 37-38
Dark Forces: defined, 43
Davis, Angela, 66-67
Dobrynin, Anatoly, 139
Donbas (region), USSR:
Belenko's childhood
in, 23-25
DOSAAF (Voluntary
Society for Assis
tance
to the Army,
Air Forces and
Navy), 44
classes, 47-51
F-14 (aircraft), 73-74
F-15 (aircraft), 74
simulation, 183
Falls Church, Va.:
apartment, 155
bar, 158-159
Fascell, Dante, 135
Ford, Gerald:
appeal to, by Belenko's
wife, 137
asylum granted to
Belenko, 128-129,
130, 133
meeting with Gromyko,
139-140
Galich, Aleksandr, 88
Golodnikov, Dmitri Vasil-
yevich, 89-92
Gromyko, Andrei, 134,
139,140
Grozny, USSR, 69-71
Hakodate, Japan: Belenko's
landing site, 109-
113,129
Helsinki Accords, 135,137
Hokkaido (island), Japan:
Belenko's arrival:
airspace, 18-21
landing site (Hakodate),
109-113, 130
Hyakuri Ah- Base, Japan,
172
Ivanovna, Serafima, 29-30,
33,64
Japan:
airspace, Belenko in, 18-
21
Belenko's stay in, 109-
122
government response to
Russians, 131-132,
139
harassment by Russians,
129-130,131,164
Kageoka, Masao, 130
Keegan, George J., Jr., 176
quoted, 181-182,186
Khrushchev, Nikita Serge-
yevich, 37,38,40,
59, 70, 117
Kissinger, Henry, 126,128
Kolkhozes (collective
farms), 25,26-27,
51-52,72, 87-88
Kosaka, Zentaro, 139
Kremlin, Moscow, USSR,
41
Krotkov, Nikolai Ivanovich,
88,94
Krylov, Lev, 135,137,138
Kudirka, Simas, 127
Las Vegas, Nev., 209
Lenin, Vladimir Ilyich:
tomb, 41
Lermontov, Mikhail Yure-
vich, 32
Litvinov, Grigori Petrovich,
71
Los Angeles Times: editorial
quoted, 132-133
Malenkov, Colonel, 92-93
Marxism-Leninism: teach
ings,
28
219
MiG-17s (aircraft), 73
MiG-25s (aircraft):
accidents, 106
design, 14,173,177,
178,179,180
explosive charges, 14-15,
172
fuel for, 98,107
history, 171, 177-178
radar, 174,178,180
radio, frequency of, 19,
108
range, 173
Russian claims for, 77,
171
secrecy surrounding, 14,
169,179
speed and altitude, 14,
169,173,174
support personnel, 96
U.S. perceptions of, 14 —
15,169-170, 175
176,
176-177,181
Miyazawa, Kiichi, 132
Moscow, USSR, 41
Muslims: Chechens, 70
My Lai massacre: Vietnam,
69
National Operations and
Intelligence Watch
Officers Network
(NOIWON):
United States, 126,
127
Navy, U.S.: aircraft carrier,
161-164
Nessen, Ron, 130
New Communist Man, 56-
57
220
Belenko's attitude to
ward,
32,43
Newsweek: quoted, 175
NOIWON (National
Operations and Intelli
gence
Watch Officers
Network): United
States, 126,127
Omsk, USSR, 44
Belenko's jobs in, 44-47,
53-56,58-59
Belenko's return to, 64-
65
medical school: Belenko's
application to, 51
Osnos, Peter, 124
Pankovsky, Yevgenny
Petrovich, 9
Parachute jumping, 47-48
Petrovna, Ludmilla, 77, 80,
97,104
dissatisfaction, sources
of, 85-86,95
press-conference appear
ance,
135-137
Phantom fighters:
American, 14,73
Japanese, 18,19
Polyansky, Dmitri, 130
Powers, Francis Gary, 179
Ruble, value of, 55n
Rubtsovsk, USSR:
Belenko's childhood in,
27-44
Belenko's return to, 64
crime, 39
industrialization, 28
pollution from, 34
Rumsfeld, Donald, 131
SR-71s (aircraft), 174, 177
Saint-Exupery, Antoine de,
32
Sakharovka Air Base,
USSR: Belenko's
preparation for de
parture,
12-17
Salsk, USSR, 78, 85, 87
SAMs (surface-to-air mis
siles),
17, 18, 154, 179
San Francisco, Calif., 209
Schlesinger, James R., 14
Scowcroft, Brent, 129,131
Seamans, Robert C., 14,
169
Shevsov, Yevgenny Ivan
ovich,
9-11, 96,
100,103,105
Shishaev, Aleksandr, 130-
131
Shvartzov, Nikolai Igorye-
vich, 73
Siberia (region), USSR:
collective farm, 25-27
(See also Omsk; Rubt-
sovsk)
Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr:
works, 117-118,
149
Soviet Air Defense Com-
mand:
benefits and perquisites,
75-76
meals, 9,12
enlisted men's, 97
physical examinations,
12-13
provisions issued, 11
Stalin, Joseph, 25, 37,70,
117
tomb, 41
Steiner, Steven, 125-126,
128
Sukhanov, Yuri Nikolaye
vich,
65
Tank manufacture, 53-54,
55
Tass (Soviet news agency):
quoted, 133-134
Tikhoretsk, USSR, 72
Tokyo, Japan: Belenko's
stay in, 114-122
True Communism, advent
of, 29, 56
Tumansky, Sergei, 178
U-2s (aircraft), 178-179
Ukrainians (people), 99n
United States:
aircraft, 14,73,100,156,
174, 175,178-179,
185
Belenko in, 142-213
combat simulator, 182-
183
medical care, 190-192
Soviet Army teachings
about, 67-69
Soviet lobbying in, 134-
135
227
United States: (continued)
State Department, 126
128,
130, 131, 165-
167
Watergate scandal, 86-87
U.S. Air Force: fighter
base, 155-156
U.S. Navy: aircraft carrier,
161-164
Voluntary Society for
Assistance to the
Army, Air Force
and Navy (DOS-
AAF),44
classes, 47-51
Vorontsov, Yuli, 135,165,
166-167
Vietnam:
My Lai massacre, 69
Wild Weasel pilots, 154-
155
Virginia:
apartment, 155
bar, 158-159
countryside, 146
shopping center, 146-
149
Volodin, Vladimir Stepano
vich,
13
Watergate scandal: United
States, 86-87
Wild Weasel pilots, 154-
155
Yakov, Igor Andronovich,
45, 46, 47
Zeks (prisoners), 28-29,
95
222