Viktor Belenko Viktor Belenko moved to the US, was debriefed extensively by the CIA and US military, learned English, and gradually adapted to life in the US. The story of his life in the Soviet Union, his defection and his early time in the US was written by
John Barron in the book
MiG Pilot: The Final Escape of Lieutenant Belenko, published in 1980. Belenko later became a consultant to the US military and aerospace industry, a public speaker and businessman. He also married an American woman and had two children.
Japan The Soviet government was extremely displeased with the situation and sent Japan a demand for $10 million for the damage to the plane. Japan charged the Soviets $40,000 for the damage to Hakodate Airport and shipping costs. Neither bill is known to have been paid. Belenko's flight had been a defection and not an attack but had highlighted shortcomings in Japan's air defense system. The inability of Japanese radar to track him and of Japanese fighters to intercept him led to changes in the Japanese defense system. The JASDF purchased
Grumman E-2 Hawkeye airborne warning aircraft and several years later purchased
McDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagles with better look-down radar capacities. The F-15's development had been spurred on by US fears about the MiG-25's capabilities. Japan also later updated the systems of its F-4s to have improved look-down capacities.
Soviet Union Belenko's defection also exposed Soviet officials to the living conditions of pilots stationed at remote airbases. A committee later visited Chuguyevka Air Base, where Belenko had been stationed, and was reportedly shocked by what they found. They promptly decided to improve conditions and amenities for pilots, constructing a five-story government building, a school, a kindergarten, and other recreational facilities. As a result, the treatment of pilots in the
Russian Far East region improved. Before Belenko's defection, the MiG-25 was largely unknown outside the Soviet Union. The breach of secrecy allowed the aircraft to be exported abroad, and it was subsequently operated by
Algeria,
Bulgaria,
India,
Iraq,
Libya, and
Syria. Following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, the MiG-25 was also operated by its successor states of
Armenia,
Belarus,
Georgia,
Kazakhstan,
Russia,
Turkmenistan, and
Ukraine. The
MiG-31 Foxhound was already in development at the time of Belenko's defection and had first flown in September 1975. Belenko was aware of the "Super Foxbat" and informed the US after his defection. The MiG-31 was to gradually replace the MiG-25 in Soviet and later in Russian service.
United States MiG-25 captured in 2003 The US was relieved to discover that the MiG-25 was less advanced but still continued with development of the F-15, which was partly designed to counter the MiG-25. The MiG-25 was found to use
nuvistors, presumably to provide its avionics with
radiation hardening. The US was unable to keep Belenko's MiG-25P in 1976, but they eventually obtained an Iraqi MiG-25 after the
2003 invasion of Iraq. ==See also==