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Two days before Gagarin's launch on April 12, 1961, Dennis Ogden wrote in the Western Communist newspaper the ''[[Daily Worker]]'' that the Soviet Union's announcement that Ilyushin had been involved in a serious car crash was really a cover story for an April 7, 1961 orbital spaceflight gone wrong.<ref name=hall/> A similarly spurious story was told by French broadcaster [[Eduard Bobrovsky]], but his version had the launch occurring in March, resulting in Ilyushin slipping into a coma.<ref name=hall/> [[NORAD]] tracking stations, however, had no record of any such launch.<ref name=hall/> Later that year, ''[[U.S. News & World Report]]'' transmitted the rumor by claiming that Gagarin had never flown and was merely a stand-in for the sickened Ilyushin.{{Fact|date=February 2009}} The 1999 film ''The Cosmonaut Cover-Up'' takes the position that Ilyushin was the first man in space and discusses the alleged cover-up in detail.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1186999/ |title=The Cosmonaut Cover-Up}}</ref>
Two days before Gagarin's launch on April 12, 1961, Dennis Ogden wrote in the Western Communist newspaper the ''[[Daily Worker]]'' that the Soviet Union's announcement that Ilyushin had been involved in a serious car crash was really a cover story for an April 7, 1961 orbital spaceflight gone wrong.<ref name=hall/> A similarly spurious story was told by French broadcaster [[Eduard Bobrovsky]], but his version had the launch occurring in March, resulting in Ilyushin slipping into a coma.<ref name=hall/> [[NORAD]] tracking stations, however, had no record of any such launch.<ref name=hall/> Later that year, ''[[U.S. News & World Report]]'' transmitted the rumor by claiming that Gagarin had never flown and was merely a stand-in for the sickened Ilyushin.{{Fact|date=February 2009}} The 1999 film ''The Cosmonaut Cover-Up'' takes the position that Ilyushin was the first man in space and discusses the alleged cover-up in detail.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1186999/ |title=The Cosmonaut Cover-Up}}</ref>


According to Mark Wade, editor of the well known Web site [[Encyclopedia Astronautica]], "The entire early history of the Soviet manned space program has been declassified and we have piles of memoirs of cosmonauts, engineers, etc., who participated. We know who was in the original cosmonaut team, who never flew, was dismissed, or was killed in ground tests. Ilyushin is not one of them."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.myhero.com/explorers/feedback.asp |title=Ilyushin Feedback |publisher=The My Hero Project}}</ref>{{Verify credibility|date=March 2009}}
According to Mark Wade, editor of the space history Web site [[Encyclopedia Astronautica]], "The entire early history of the Soviet manned space program has been declassified and we have piles of memoirs of cosmonauts, engineers, etc., who participated. We know who was in the original cosmonaut team, who never flew, was dismissed, or was killed in ground tests. Ilyushin is not one of them."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.myhero.com/explorers/feedback.asp |title=Ilyushin Feedback |publisher=The My Hero Project}}</ref>


==Career as test pilot==
==Career as test pilot==

Revision as of 20:29, 17 July 2010

Major General Vladimir Sergeyevich Ilyushin (Russian: Владимир Сергеевич Ильюшин) (March 31, 1927 – March 1, 2010) was a son of aircraft designer Sergei Ilyushin and a noted test pilot in the Soviet Union.[1] He spent most of his career as a test pilot for the Sukhoi OKB. In 1961, Ilyushin was the subject of spurious rumors that he, rather than Yuri Gagarin, was the first cosmonaut in space; according to the conspiracy theory, his mission had gone badly, and the Soviet Union had covered it up.[2]

Spaceflight rumor

Two days before Gagarin's launch on April 12, 1961, Dennis Ogden wrote in the Western Communist newspaper the Daily Worker that the Soviet Union's announcement that Ilyushin had been involved in a serious car crash was really a cover story for an April 7, 1961 orbital spaceflight gone wrong.[2] A similarly spurious story was told by French broadcaster Eduard Bobrovsky, but his version had the launch occurring in March, resulting in Ilyushin slipping into a coma.[2] NORAD tracking stations, however, had no record of any such launch.[2] Later that year, U.S. News & World Report transmitted the rumor by claiming that Gagarin had never flown and was merely a stand-in for the sickened Ilyushin.[citation needed] The 1999 film The Cosmonaut Cover-Up takes the position that Ilyushin was the first man in space and discusses the alleged cover-up in detail.[3]

According to Mark Wade, editor of the space history Web site Encyclopedia Astronautica, "The entire early history of the Soviet manned space program has been declassified and we have piles of memoirs of cosmonauts, engineers, etc., who participated. We know who was in the original cosmonaut team, who never flew, was dismissed, or was killed in ground tests. Ilyushin is not one of them."[4]

Career as test pilot

Ilyushin had a prominent career as a test pilot and lieutenant general in the Soviet Air Force.

See also

References

  1. ^ Wade, Mark. "Ilyushin".
  2. ^ a b c d Hall, Rex (2001). The Rocket Men: Vostok & Voskhod, the First Soviet Manned Spaceflights (illustrated ed.). Springer. p. 145. ISBN 185233391X. Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  3. ^ "The Cosmonaut Cover-Up".
  4. ^ "Ilyushin Feedback". The My Hero Project.