U.S.S.R. Shoots Down U.S. U-2 Spy Plane
Flown By Gary Powers
Did Lee Harvey Oswald tip off the Russians?
Video summary
On this day in 1960, the Soviet Union shot down a U.S. spy plane over Russia. The CIA told Republican President and former general Dwight Eisenhower that the Soviets did not possess anti-aircraft weapons sophisticated enough to reach the high-altitude plane but, if they did, the plane would self-destruct and the pilot would kill himself. As a result, the U.S. initially said the plane was a weather plane, had wandered off course, and crashed. Soviet leader Khrushchev responded by not only displaying the wreckage but also pilot Powers. At a later major summit of the super powers, Khrushchev blasted the U.S., prompting Eisenhower to walk out. Eisenhower privately called the “stupid U-2 mess” one of the worst episodes of his presidency. Powers spent about two years in a Soviet prison before being exchanged for a Soviet spy. Until the day he died, Powers believed Lee Harvey Oswald had tipped off the U.S.S.R. to the U-2 spy flights during the time Oswald was in Russia.
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