|
|
|
|
reconnaissance, with emphasis on the shoot down of Air Force C-130 #60528 over Armenia in 1958, killing 17 Americans. It traces airborne COMINT reconnaissance from the heady days of Nisei Japanese linguists on RB-24 missions in the Pacific in 1945 to Cold War airborne COMINT reconnaissance —initially aboard RB-29 #44-62290 and Blue Sky RC-47s over Korea in 1952, and later in RB-50s
and C-130s in Europe from 1956. in April 2001, plus related Cold-War U.S.-Chinese air incidents. In addition, 98 American lives. over flight of enemy airspace; how the Soviets shot down the plane, yet denied complicity; how the lost crew's families were kept in the dark for four decades, and how the government tried to bring the families closure by finally honoring the crews after the Cold War. The authors—themselves former airborne intercept operators—describe for the first time how American recon crews
monitored enemy communications during the Cold War.
|
|
|
|