VIRGINIA: 1ST GLIMPSE OF U.S. FOR SOVIET PILOT WHO DEFECTED

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
05539033
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
March 8, 2023
Document Release Date: 
May 29, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
F-2016-00620
Publication Date: 
September 7, 1980
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon VIRGINIA 1ST GLIMPSE OF [15611235].pdf170.79 KB
Body: 
AFT I C LE APPEAAn ON Approved for Release: 2019/04/11 C05539033 THE WASHINGTON POST 7 September 1980 (b)(3) irginia: Sovie trnit0a PieAlilternational Heavy rainfall ,drenched Dulles ternational Airport as the CIAFleased . exec/itive jet rolled to a stop in the 4 , . _ , � '7" 127 , -SUrrients later, several men steoped, off ,the plane and jumped into nearby- carsL'.0ne of them, Viktor L. Belenko, waialdefector'from the Soviet Union.',. Belenko was the one with. the hOY-: isiljace, big blue eyes and blond .hair.: I-Ct',..stood a shade over 5-foot-8, and. h4Strong. shoulders 'developed-by"! -years of sports and-exercie.;' -4a, ;The men, CIA" agents,;�and Belenko traveled for-aboikanizhoili.,aiong back7 roads, then turned into a king driVe!: cars' 'headlights on a.,bribk; double-0hr mansion. Belenko spent his first night in the-.- United States. in that house Some--1 where in Northern Virginia. "It was just a property. the CIA had at the time," said John Barrtiti,' a., senior cdi tor in the Washington bureau .of Read- er's Digest. � _ ' :Barron. considered-an expert on So-. vfet intelligence and military affairs; has recently- published a-book, "Mi,g' Pilot." about Beienko, and gave United Press Internationa permission - to quote from it.,, � - Belenko saw .his. first , supermarket in ,Virginia, learned' to drive- here. ' lived near Falls 'Church :and tangled with a personal crisis at a truckstop a , few miles north. of Richmond�all as a, : guest of the CIA. ' " .,The CIA, headquartered in Fairfax. County's ,Langley ,'neighborhood-, an parently uses -Virginia to :.help duce Soviet defectors :to Americans and :their . There area other very significant people from the, SOviet Union, high-level types, who've' been, beguiled ,by --Virginia," Barron- said. "For most of them; its the first.; state they see.". Petersen;".a.cCIA'nress 'bffieer,, declined .to, .elablarate 'don't say much -about,.defectors;P:;-he said; `"�We have, a responsibility to set-', tle them _without'. fnuctilIttblicit' We.- 45: Can?t, really ga�c"allhether- We-use Vit.- .ginii-br:any-ofOrAtitt kr42, Belenko-. WaSz C:onsidered. one of. almost,: importala47Soviet defectors ever to reach -the United-States., He was-a I lieutenant in? the . SoViet^f air force ; when he l'ancied a 1�11Q25 at a. north-1 ern. Japanese,airport,1 Sept. 6, 1976, ; aneinnbitriced.' h6 "wanted asylum. in the-Unit:id' States., The'AIIG25 was belied at the time to. be the most adyanceckCombat air-_ c:raft in the world.' Sikry-seven days af- . ten Belenko landed CS. and Japanese officials had completed their examina- tion- Of the-plane;s- secrets:, and re- 1 _ _ _ turned it�in pieceSto the- Soviets. Belenko, stayed. Belenko no longer lives "But he's toured- it up and down- and forward and backward and- just loves; it," Barron said. Viktor .Belenko's love affair with Virginia began the day after he spent his first night in the U.S. in that southern mansion "safe �house" owned by the C/A. : He first was escorted on a tour of Northern Virginia's wooded, rolling horse country with the Blue Ridge Mountains in the distance. Belenko was. impressed. "It was the man-made order of the farmlands they passed that -most struck Belenko"�the symmetry of the fields, the well-mended fences, painted barns, fat. cattle, lush mead- �ows. . .He asked where the outhouses were. The CIA men laughed. -and said few -American houses had such' things any- more. . , Belenko's first enedimter with an .American . shopping_ center, and the 'lifestyle it represented," came on "the outskirts of a small 'Virginia town," Barron told UPI, "Viktor doesn't re- call exactly where."' But-Barron said he believes it may -have been Freder- ricksburg,' Culpeper or. Warrenton. Two CIA men and Belenko .started for. clothing store, ..but. Belenko wanted-to tour a supermarket. He "ex- plored and stared in, ever-widening. wonder" at all .the meats, vegetables,. beer, cans and, packages, cookies', the He never 'had seen such a market, one with so many products available. or one without- long lines of people. He'd always been told 'Americans liVe in the -shadow of hunger and that pockets of near starvation were,wide-, spread2'. . Belenko,,uncertain what to believe, decided the, store�the entire shop- ping ,center�was. a CIA. front, built and operated- especially to fool defec- tors. .-- � ' � "bolted'into a shop offering tele- visions,' stereos, radios and calcula- tors." Belenko still disbelieved. He questioned the CIA men: ,can an "av- erage American worker" buy a color television set? In Russia. such a set . . . would cost five months' wages-, ' Next door, Belenko bought his first suit�gray- flannel--and a buttondown shirt. He alsok saw his first gasoline station "ft which there were no "In Belenko's past life, gasoline out- lets were so scarce that a wait of four or five hours for fuel was ordinary." In coming sveeks, Belenko lived in an apartment near Falls, Church.' It had a small den, two bathrooms, wall- to-wall carpeting, dishwasher and dis- posal. CIA men assured him such I apartments were within themeans of 'moderate-income Americans: He and his ,CIA bodyguards toured, 'the King Dominion amusement park about 25 miles north of Richmond. Later, Betenko.7 ; considered ." of "working-class'!- origins -in-. Russia, wanted to see "a real workers' bar?! He found one near Falls Church, com- plete with a long,bar, stools,: wooden booths and men .in working clothes drinking beer or ,Natching Monday night football on a giant television. The menu was chalked on a black board_ Belenko'..ordered'a'- barbecue sandwich, French fries, coie slaw and 'beer. "Tt.; little 'green check-totaled $2.03. � -^-4A Belenka &lire, and he mastered -the basics in about- an hOur.'He had'-to- get' i.Virkinia learn- er's perinit. He was an' excellent Approved for Release: 2019/04/11 C05539033 Approved for Release: 2019/04/11 C05539033 driver, but with one had habit: ,he speeded.. 4 Soon after he won his license, a rr- ginia state trooper stopped him on-In- terstate 95. He asked Belenko if :he knew he was driving 85 miles per hour. Belenko smiled, handed over his driver's license�and two $20 bills. Be- lenko thought at the time he was do- ing what was expected of him., ' . The CIA man with Belenko quickly jumped out of the car and explained the situation to the trooper. He told Belenko he wanted to shake his hand. The CIA- man told Belenko that :at- tempted bribery was a serious crime , in the United States.. Weeks, then. months passed. Be- lenko .assumed- his new. . lifestyle. moved to a rnidwestern farm, and traveled to . other. . places. He searching, trying, to understand some, thing.. He was free. independent, some ,thing.he'd wanted. all his life. But he. missed his homeland_ And the Soviets. Avere exerting tremendous pressure to get him back. Belenko decided. The tug was too great.. He would go back to Russia. Somewhere between the North Car, Olina line and Richmond, Betenko bev. gan to-shake, sweat, turn pale. He pulled into a truck stop a feW: miles north of Richmond at about 1 a.m. , "A very lovely lady, a waitress, at. the truck stop just took a motherly in ,terest. in him," Barron told UPI. She insisted Belenko eat something. At 4 a.m., Belenko knocked on the door of a Washington mansion. It wal not the Soviet Embassy, but the home of a high-level CIA official. , Viktor I. Belenko had. made his peace with himself�and- his ney? ,country. , Approved for Release: 2019/04/11 C05539033