That should've been the other way around as it was Glushko who denounced Korolev to the NKVD where he was tortured then sent to a gulag.Glushko hated Korolev
That should've been the other way around as it was Glushko who denounced Korolev to the NKVD where he was tortured then sent to a gulag.Glushko hated Korolev
That should've been the other way around as it was Glushko who denounced Korolev to the NKVD where he was tortured then sent to a gulag.Glushko hated Korolev
I don’t think the Soviets got their hands on the first AIM-7-E Sparrow in the 70s. If they did and they thought that was the latest in US AAM design, they were off a bitYes I remember reading somewhere that the Soviet designers viewed the Sidewinder as a Graduate course in missile assembly.
I‘m supposed to buy that the Sparrow was old news? Pass.
By that time, 70s, Sparrow was old news.
The Soviets would've got there hands on plenty of AIM-7Es and AIM-9D/Gs in the late 60s from many A-4s, F-8s and F-4s shot down over North Vietnam.I don’t think the Soviets got their hands on the first AIM-7-E Sparrow in the 70s.
I thought the AIM-7E entered service in 1963.AIM-7E entered service in 1964.
Unfortunately for fighter combat it was the then current missIe.I've seen both - most likely 1963 initial deliveries. Regardless, in 1966 it wasn't some antiquated relic.