American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – More than half a century after his plane was
shot down over the Soviet Union, the heroism Air Force Capt. Francis Gary
Powers displayed while piloting his U-2 aircraft was finally recognized during
a Pentagon ceremony today.
Powers, who died in a helicopter crash
in 1977, was posthumously awarded the Silver Star -- the nation’s third-highest
award for combat valor. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton A. Schwartz
presented the medal to Powers’ grandson, Francis Gary “Trey” Powers and
granddaughter Lindsey Berry.
The downing of his plane on May 1, 1960
was one of the most famous incidents of the Cold War. Powers was flying a
clandestine mission in a U-2 over the former Soviet Union. The program, a Joint
Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency mission, was a top-secret effort to
monitor Soviet nuclear and missile programs.
Powers took off from Peshawar, Pakistan,
and headed over the Central Asian Soviet republics. The U-2 cameras gathered
invaluable information for the United States and its allies at a time when the
Soviet Bear seemed to be on the ascent.
The Soviets had launched Sputnik -- the
world’s first satellite -- in 1957. John F. Kennedy -- then running for
president -- deplored the “missile gap” between the United States and Soviet
Union. It was the height of the Cold War with schoolchildren conducting “duck
and cover” drills in case of nuclear attack. Most buildings had signs
indicating the location of fallout shelters, rooms designed to protect against
radiation contamination.
Powers’ mission was to overfly Soviet
missile sites, nuclear plants and rocket-launching facilities. Over Sverdlovsk
his plane -- flying at more than 70,000 feet -- was hit by a SA-2 missile and
brought down. Soviet forces captured Powers and he was held by the Soviet
secret police, the KGB, in Lubyanka Prison in Moscow.
The shoot down sharply increased
tensions between Washington and Moscow. President Dwight D. Eisenhower had to
admit that the United States was flying over another sovereign nation. Protests
over this broke out in Japan and Europe. Relations with Pakistan deteriorated.
A Big-4 Summit -- leaders of the Soviet Union, Great Britain, France and the
United States -- scheduled for Paris was canceled. The Soviet Union made
propaganda of the incident at the United Nations.
And the Soviets wanted more. Teams of
KGB interrogators worked on Powers to get him to give up information or turn
against his country. While they never beat him, they constantly threatened him
with death, said his son Gary Francis Powers Jr.
Powers spent 21 months in a Moscow
prison, Schwartz said. “For nearly 107 days, Captain Powers was interrogated
and harassed by numerous Soviet secret police interrogation teams,” the chief
said. Powers also was held in solitary confinement.
“Although weakened by lack of food and
denial of sleep and mental anguish of constant interrogation, Captain Powers
refused all attempts to glean from him sensitive information that would have
proved harmful to the defense and security of the United States,” Schwartz
said.
In February 1962, the Soviets exchanged
Powers for Soviet spy KGB Col. Rudolph Abel. The handover was conducted on “The
Bridge of Spies” in Berlin.
It was a sign of the times that Powers’
return home was fraught with uncertainty and questions. A teacher told Dee
Powers, the captain’s daughter, that her father should have killed himself
rather than getting captured. The program was still top secret and what Powers
went through was classified. The captain received the CIA Intelligence Star for
Valor in 1965 and the Senate Armed Services Committee declared that Powers had
conducted himself, “as a fine man under dangerous circumstances.”
The younger Powers started researching
his father’s case in the late 1980s. Much of it was classified. “I would speak
about the U-2 incident at classes and people would think I was talking about
the rock group,” he said.
It wasn’t until 1998, seven years after
the dissolution of the Soviet Union, that the CIA declassified records of the
program and Powers’ full heroism became known, said young Gary. At that point,
the captain posthumously received the CIA Director’s Award for Extreme Fidelity
and Courage, the Air Force Distinguished Flying Cross and the Prisoner of War
Medal.
Today’s award of the Silver Star puts to
rest the idea that somehow the captain behaved poorly in captivity, his son
said.
“He loved his family, he loved flying
and he loved his country,” he said.
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