Home EurAsian Region

Stealing “World’s Fastest” Fighter Jet — How Russian Pilot Outfoxed Top Brass To Land His Foxbat In Japan

The Federal Security Service (FSB), Russia’s main security agency, recently claimed to have thwarted an attempt by Ukrainian special services to attack its non-operational aircraft carrier, Admiral Kuznetsov. Earlier, there were reports that Kyiv attempted to steal a Russian Tu-22M3 nuclear-capable strategic bomber.

Exclusive! How India Used World’s ‘Fastest’ Fighter, MiG-25 Foxbat, To Outfox Pakistan During The Kargil War

Air Marshal Anil Chopra (Retd) noted, “Such scenarios are always possible.” “During the Soviet era, there were disgruntled pilots who flew operational aircraft to enemy bases, providing substantial intelligence. Similar events occurred during World War II when German pilots ordered Western pilots to defect and provide critical information,” he explained.

Espionage & Defections In Ukraine-Russia War

Since 2022, both Russia and Ukraine have reported multiple incidents involving aircraft hijacking attempts, defections, and smuggling of aircraft parts:

US Bets On Its “Deadliest Eagle” To Fight China In Indo-Pacific; Replaces F-15 With F-15EX Eagle II In Japan

Terror Attack’ On Admiral Kuznetsov Aircraft Carrier: The FSB reportedly foiled an attempt by Ukrainian military intelligence to attack Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier in March this year, but was reported on 10th July. Fully story can be read here.

BVR Combat: F-15 Eagles ‘Battle’ IAF Rafales During Red Flag 2024 Drills; Revenges 2004 Drubbing By Su-30?

The recurring nature of these incidents suggests an ongoing cat-and-mouse game between the two nations’ intelligence services, with each side trying to undermine the other’s military while protecting its assets.

When Russian Pilot Defected With World’s Fastest Fighter Aircraft

Lieutenant Viktor Ivanovich Belenko was a Russian pilot with the Soviet Air Defense Forces who defected to the West on September 6, 1976, by flying the “world’s fastest” MiG-25 Foxbat to Hakodate Airport in Japan.

File Image: MiG-25

The Soviet Air Defense Force was an aerial branch but a little different from the Soviet Air Force. The members of this unit were elite and entrusted bunch, which meant that the defecting pilot also enjoyed significant trust with the government. He was so trusted that when Belenko’s blood pressure spiked on the morning he intended to flee, the flight surgeon believed Belenko when he insisted he was not anxious.

Lieutenant Viktor Ivanovich Belenko was training on the brand-new MiG-25 supersonic interceptor jet. While Western analysts had not yet had a chance to examine a real “Foxbat,” they believed it to be a massive challenger to NATO fighter jets.

Robert Seamans, the Secretary of the Air Force, had referred to the MiG-25 as “probably the best interceptor in production in the world.”

The 29-year-old Belenko played a gamble and predicted that the US would seek to acquire a Foxbat. He intended to deliver one in exchange for refuge in the US.

However, because the plane used fuel at an alarming rate, it could not travel from Chuguyevka to an air base in the US or Canada. That’s how Japan became the chosen destination.

On September 6, 1976, Belenko and his squadron snuck into position. He performed a standard circuit but didn’t turn around as per the flight plan at the far end of the journey. Instead, he carried on. He gradually dropped altitude to 19,000 feet. He abruptly launched the Foxbat into a steep dive.

Meet One Of World’s ‘Weakest Air Forces’ That Boasts Rafale, Typhoon, F-15EX Jets & Now Eyes F-35s

He sped along at that altitude where he couldn’t be seen on radar. The other pilots followed Belenko in his squadron, but Belenko had a good lead. As he was about to enter Japanese airspace, Belenko started making himself known to Japanese radar with a series of pop-ups and descents to avoid being shot down.

The Foxbat guzzled fuel at an astonishing rate. The fighter’s fuel supply was critically deficient. Miraculously, Belenko spotted an airfield—with a civilian 727 jetliner heading directly toward him.

Viktor Belenko’s stolen secret Soviet aircraft.

“He jerked the MiG into the tightest turn of which it was capable, allowed the 727 to clear, dived at a dangerously sharp angle, and touched the runway at 220 knots. As he deployed the drag chute and repeatedly slammed down the brake pedal, the MiG bucked, bridled, and vibrated as if it were going to come apart. Tires burning, it screeched and skidded down the runway, slowing but not stopping.

“It ran off the north end of the field, knocked down a pole, plowed over a second, and finally stopped a few feet from a large antenna 800 feet off the runway. The front tire had blown, but that was all,” according to an excerpt from a biography of the pilot written by John Barron MiG Pilot, The Final Escape of Lieutenant Belenko, published in 1980.

Before the aircraft was disassembled and shipped back to the USSR in 30 crates, the Japanese government restricted US access out of concern for its relations with the Soviet Union. But Belenko remained in the West and was eventually granted asylum after months of debriefing organized by the CIA.

Belenko was not the first pilot to flee the Soviet bloc or even the only one to do so from the Soviet Union. However, it is believed that he might have been aware of the US government’s practice of rewarding communist pilots who defect with significant monetary awards.

With Belenko’s defection, many mysteries were unraveled to the West because this was the first opportunity for Western military intelligence to analyze the aircraft and its specifications closely.

President Gerald Ford of the United States granted Belenko asylum, and a trust fund was established for him, ensuring him a very comfortable lifestyle in his final years. After his defection, the US government briefed him for five months before hiring him as a consultant. Belenko carried the MiG-25 pilot’s manual with him because he planned to help US pilots evaluate and test the aircraft.

Exit mobile version