Cosmonaut Crashed Into Earth 'Crying In Rage' NSFW

techs

Lifer
Sep 26, 2000
28,561
4
0
http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/03/21/134597833/cosmonaut-crashed-into-earth-crying-in-rage
nsfw because of pic of dead cosmonaut looking like spam in a can.

Cosmonaut Crashed Into Earth 'Crying In Rage'

So there's a cosmonaut up in space, circling the globe, convinced he will never make it back to Earth; he's on the phone with Alexei Kosygin — then a high official of the Soviet Union — who is crying because he, too, thinks the cosmonaut will die.

The space vehicle is shoddily constructed, running dangerously low on fuel; its parachutes — though no one knows this — won't work and the cosmonaut, Vladimir Komarov, is about to, literally, crash full speed into Earth, his body turning molten on impact. As he heads to his doom, U.S. listening posts in Turkey hear him crying in rage, "cursing the people who had put him inside a botched spaceship."

This extraordinarily intimate account of the 1967 death of a Russian cosmonaut appears in a new book, Starman, by Jamie Doran and Piers Bizony, to be published next month. The authors base their narrative principally on revelations from a KGB officer, Venymin Ivanovich Russayev, and previous reporting by Yaroslav Golovanov in Pravda. This version — if it's true — is beyond shocking.

Starman tells the story of a friendship between two cosmonauts, Vladimir Kamarov and Soviet hero Yuri Gagarin, the first human to reach outer space. The two men were close; they socialized, hunted and drank together.

In 1967, both men were assigned to the same Earth-orbiting mission, and both knew the space capsule was not safe to fly. Komarov told friends he knew he would probably die. But he wouldn't back out because he didn't want Gagarin to die. Gagarin would have been his replacement.

The story begins around 1967, when Leonid Brezhnev, leader of the Soviet Union, decided to stage a spectacular midspace rendezvous between two Soviet spaceships.

The plan was to launch a capsule, the Soyuz 1, with Komarov inside. The next day, a second vehicle would take off, with two additional cosmonauts; the two vehicles would meet, dock, Komarov would crawl from one vehicle to the other, exchanging places with a colleague, and come home in the second ship. It would be, Brezhnev hoped, a Soviet triumph on the 50th anniversary of the Communist revolution. Brezhnev made it very clear he wanted this to happen.

The problem was Gagarin. Already a Soviet hero, the first man ever in space, he and some senior technicians had inspected the Soyuz 1 and had found 203 structural problems — serious problems that would make this machine dangerous to navigate in space. The mission, Gagarin suggested, should be postponed.

The question was: Who would tell Brezhnev? Gagarin wrote a 10-page memo and gave it to his best friend in the KGB, Venyamin Russayev, but nobody dared send it up the chain of command. Everyone who saw that memo, including Russayev, was demoted, fired or sent to diplomatic Siberia. With less than a month to go before the launch, Komarov realized postponement was not an option. He met with Russayev, the now-demoted KGB agent, and said, "I'm not going to make it back from this flight."

Russayev asked, Why not refuse? According to the authors, Komarov answered: "If I don't make this flight, they'll send the backup pilot instead." That was Yuri Gagarin. Vladimir Komarov couldn't do that to his friend. "That's Yura," the book quotes him saying, "and he'll die instead of me. We've got to take care of him." Komarov then burst into tears.

On launch day, April 23, 1967, a Russian journalist, Yaroslav Golovanov, reported that Gagarin showed up at the launch site and demanded to be put into a spacesuit, though no one was expecting him to fly. Golovanov called this behavior "a sudden caprice," though afterward some observers thought Gagarin was trying to muscle onto the flight to save his friend. The Soyuz left Earth with Komarov on board.

Once the Soyuz began to orbit the Earth, the failures began. Antennas didn't open properly. Power was compromised. Navigation proved difficult. The next day's launch had to be canceled. And worse, Komarov's chances for a safe return to Earth were dwindling fast.

All the while, U.S. intelligence was listening in. The National Security Agency had a facility at an Air Force base near Istanbul. Previous reports said that U.S. listeners knew something was wrong but couldn't make out the words. In this account, an NSA analyst, identified in the book as Perry Fellwock, described overhearing Komarov tell ground control officials he knew he was about to die. Fellwock described how Soviet premier Alexei Kosygin called on a video phone to tell him he was a hero. Komarov's wife was also on the call to talk about what to say to their children. Kosygin was crying.

When the capsule began its descent and the parachutes failed to open, the book describes how American intelligence "picked up [Komarov's] cries of rage as he plunged to his death."

Some translators hear him say, "Heat is rising in the capsule." He also uses the word "killed" — presumably to describe what the engineers had done to him.
 

JS80

Lifer
Oct 24, 2005
26,271
7
81
i kind of lol'ed because of "cursing the people who had put him inside a botched spaceship."
 

Meghan54

Lifer
Oct 18, 2009
11,573
5,096
136
We'll never know how many perished in the old USSR space program. I'd almost hazard a guess and state there were more fatalities in the Soviet Union vs. the U.S. during the "space race" era.

Sad about that incident, though.
 

AyashiKaibutsu

Diamond Member
Jan 24, 2004
9,306
3
81
It's sad overall, but I imagine a cosmonaut saying his goodbyes to his family vs cursing at the assholes that put him there.

Reading the article it sounded like he already said his goodbyes before the descent.
 
Mar 10, 2005
14,647
2
0
We'll never know how many perished in the old USSR space program. I'd almost hazard a guess and state there were more fatalities in the Soviet Union vs. the U.S. during the "space race" era.

Sad about that incident, though.

ussr: 100's of deaths
usa: 3 that we know of
 

coloumb

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
4,096
0
81
Russians are notorious for building crappy products. I'm really surprised they actually made it up into space.
 

ed21x

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 2001
5,410
6
81
Russians are notorious for building crappy products. I'm really surprised they actually made it up into space.

they built an autonomous space shuttle that went up, circled around, and landed by itself on the ground. Funding was cut, and the project was cancelled before anyone was sent up in it.
 

techs

Lifer
Sep 26, 2000
28,561
4
0
they built an autonomous space shuttle that went up, circled around, and landed by itself on the ground. Funding was cut, and the project was cancelled before anyone was sent up in it.

In Russia shuttle land YOU.
 

WT

Diamond Member
Sep 21, 2000
4,818
59
91
Russians are notorious for building crappy products. I'm really surprised they actually made it up into space.

My guess is that somewhere on that craft the following sticker could be found:

'Made in China'


Ohh, and good story. Sad ending, but sacrificing one Russian to advance the space race was an easy decision for them. Hell, Stalin would've killed off thousands to get the job done !
 
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