Belenko started a new life in the United States. In 1980, the
US Congress enacted S. 2961, authorizing
citizenship for him, which was signed into law by President
Jimmy Carter on 14 October 1980, as
Private Law 96-62. Eager to avoid attention, and reprisal from the Soviet Union, he took the surname Schmidt and moved around often, mostly living in small towns across the Midwest. He worked as a consultant to aerospace companies and government agencies, and married a music teacher from
North Dakota, Coral Garaas. They had two sons before divorcing. The
Soviet Union repeatedly spread false stories about Belenko being killed in a car accident, returning to
Russia, being arrested and executed, or otherwise brought to justice. Russian journalists claimed that Belenko allegedly also had a son from his first marriage, never divorced his first wife, and never provided child support to her after his defection, but Belenko denied this. The journalists also claimed that his Soviet wife appealed for his return after his defection. Belenko co-wrote a 1980 autobiography,
MiG Pilot: The Final Escape of Lieutenant Belenko with ''
Reader's Digest'' writer
John Barron, which confirmed that he had a wife and son in the USSR, although Belenko had previously told his son that this was Soviet propaganda. Belenko almost never appeared in interviews during his life in the
United States. He feared for his life until the day he died. However, in a brief and informal bar interview in 2000, he said that he was happy in the United States, remarking, "[Americans] have tolerance regarding other people's opinion. In certain cultures, if you do not accept the mainstream, you would be booted out or might disappear. Here we have people—you know, who hug trees, and people who want to cut them down—and they live side by side!" In this interview he also claimed that he visited Moscow but did not provide any evidence of his trip. Viktor Belenko died in a nursing home in the small town of
Red Bud, Illinois on September 24, 2023, at the age of 76. He is survived by two sons and four grandchildren, as well as a son from his previous marriage. However, journalists learned about his death only at the end of November. One of his sons told the newspaper that his father had died after a short illness. There was no memorial service. ==See also==