The 1 December 1958 issue of
Aviation Week included an article
Soviets Flight Testing Nuclear Bomber claiming that the Soviets had made great progress in their own nuclear aircraft program. This was accompanied by an editorial on the topic as well. The magazine claimed that the aircraft was real beyond a doubt, stating that "A nuclear-powered bomber is being flight tested in the Soviet Union. It has been observed both in flight and on the ground by a wide variety of foreign observers from Communist and non-Communist countries." The aircraft in the photographs was later revealed to be the jet propelled M-50, not a nuclear-powered plane. In reality, in the early 1960s Soviet Union did test a
technology demonstrator for a nuclear-powered strategic bomber,
Tupolev Tu-95LAL, similar to the somewhat earlier American
Convair NB-36H project, but, being based on the
turboprop Tu-95, it was never supersonic, it never flew under nuclear power (its main goal was to test the nuclear reactor shielding efficiency), and, moreover, it was developed by the
Tupolev Design Bureau, as Myasischev company had lost the competition to develop the prototype. It was deemed successful, but further development dragged because of environmental concerns. When the functional
ICBMs appeared, the majority of funding and development effort was shifted into that field, and in the early 1960s the project was stopped. On 9 July 1961, the M-50A made its 19th and last flight, participating at a flypast over the annual Tushino air show. This was the one and only public appearance of the giant, currently displayed at the
Monino Museum outside Moscow. ==Specifications (M-50A)==