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Classification: UNCLASSIFIED Status: [STAT]
Document Date: 01 Aug 90 Category: [CAT]
Report Type: JPRS Report Report Date:
Report Number: JPRS-UAC-91-001 UDC Number:
Author(s): Major I. Kuznetsov under rubric "Our Interview Guest" :
'k%The Flight That Did Not Occur"; uncaptioned photograph
of Major General of Aviation Leonov included]
Headline: Maj Gen Avn Leonov on Soviet Lunar Program Details
Source Line: 91UM0064J Moscow AVIATSIYA I KOSMONAVTIKA in Russian No
8, Aug 90 (signed to press 18 Jul 90) pp 44-45
Subslug: [Interview of Major General of Aviation Aleksey Arkhipovich
Leonov, USSR Pilot-Cosmonaut, Twice-Honored HSU, by Major
I. Kuznetsov under rubric "Our Interview Guest": "The
Flight That Did Not Occur"; uncaptioned photograph of
Major General of Aviation Leonov included)
PULL TEXT OF ARTICLE:
1. [Interview of Major General of Aviation Aleksey Arkhipovich
Leonov, USSR Pilot-Cosmonaut, Twice-Honored HSU, by Major I.
Kuznetsov under rubric "Our Interview Guest": "The Flight That Did
Not Occur"; uncaptioned photograph of Major General of Aviation
Leonov included]
2. [Text] Major General of Aviation A. Leonov, USSR Pilot-Cosmonaut,
Twice-Honored HSU, tells about the Soviet lunar program and
contemporary problems of cosmonautics.
3. [Kuznetsov] Aleksey Arkhipovich, the journal's readers are
interested in "gaps" in the history of Soviet cosmonautics. One of
them is our manned lunar program, in which you had occasion to
participate. Share your recollections.
4. [Leonov] The Soviet manned lunar program envisaged two stages:
the first was a flyby of the Moon and the second was a manned landing
on the Moon, and its technical director was Hero of Socialist Labor
Vasiliy Pavlovich Mishin.
5. The first stage in the mid-1960's--that was when Center
specialists joined in fulfilling it--was viewed realistically: the
Proton booster rocket already was flying and the Soyuz craft, named
L-1 in the lunar version, was being materialized in metal. The second
was problematical, but we believed that it would be carried out. Back
before the decision was made on realizing the lunar program, Sergey
Pavlovich Korolev told us about the powerful N-i booster and L-3
UNCLASSIFIED Approved for Release
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craft which his collective was working to create. At that time we
thought that the lunar program was designed for many years. We argued
about projects for creating lunar settlements and flights to planets
of the solar system. All this was so, but life showed that our dreams
outstripped real events.
6. The booster intended for accomplishing the lunar flyby program
had been made and had given a good account of itself, but the first
launch of the Zond--that was the name of the L-1 craft in the
automatic version--was unsuccessful. Why? A booster module (the D
unit) was placed on the Proton to reach parabolic velocity, but the
switching of commands was confused in it and it decelerated instead
of accelerating. The craft had to be liquidated. This was the first
alarm signal. The next launch vent normally, but later there again
was a booster malfunction. After functioning for several seconds, it
fell not far from the launch site. It turned out that a rubber plug
had fallen into the manifold ahead of the turbopump assembly. Having
gotten stuck in the line, it cut off the fuel feed. Subsequently
serious troubles leading to flight disruptions were repeated every
other time.
7. It was learned in 1968 that we would not perform this mission
before the Americans. One reason was the absence of proper financing
and an incorrect distribution of assets.
8. [Kuznetsov] You said that main efforts were aimed at realizing
the L-1 program. How did the cosmonauts prepare for it?
9. [Leonov] A total of some 20 persons prepared for the lunar
program. The first crews consisting of Leonov and Makarov and of
Bykovskiy and Rukavishnikov were made up from them. Believing in the
feasibility of the set goals, the entire group began work actively,
since each one thought that with a successful flyby of the Moon he
automatically would go over to the next stage for the L-3. Therefore
training also proceeded with promise. We mastered many simulators,
including a dynamic simulator created on the basis of a helicopter,
and vent through test pilot school at the, Flying Research Institute.
Realizing that the lunar landing was the most difficult element, we
learned the ability to choose a site in a short time, land the craft
with limited fuel reserves, and instantaneously evaluate vertical
velocity.
10. The landing approach on the return from the Moon was to have
been from the direction of the Antarctic. We even flew in Somalia in
order to have a good knowledge of constellations near the Southern
Cross. The craft had a star-tracker and sextant for autonomous
navigation, and the cosmonauts devoted much time to studying these
instruments. In the final account everyone learned to work with full
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understanding of the dynamics of a lunar flyby.
11. To practice a landing on Earth at parabolic velocity,
specialists developed a precise, detailed methodology with two
entries. We had to learn to choose the angle of entry after the last
correction using the star-tracker and sextant. It depended on the
magnitude and direction of the deceleration pulse. It was possible to
"bury" oneself in the atmosphere with a large angle and to "slip
through" it with a small angle. The optimum version was an entry
with a "pop-up": enter, exit the atmosphere after extinguishing
great speed, and reenter, already knowing the angle of incidence at
which the craft had to be held in order to get to the calculated
landing point. The "manual pulse input" instrument highlighted the
number of pulses after passage of the first sector. From them we
figured the distance to the calculated landing point, then converted
distance into angle of incidence. All these operations were
rehearsed on the " Volchok" dynamic simulator. As a result we
learned to make a "landing" with an accuracy to on kilometer. After
taking tests on craft design and flight program, the cosmonauts were
ready to fly around the Moon.
12. The flight would be difficult even from a purely everyday
aspect, since the L-1 did not have an orbital module as did the
Soyuz, and two persons had to be in the descent module for a week. We
followed the last unmanned flight with hope, but when the frontal
shield was fired off, the command also was sent to fire the parachute
system. The craft was flattened after falling to Earth. It was
curious that part of the film which it delivered was preserved. This
allowed us to be first to obtain beautiful, exceptionally precise
photographs of Earth from the direction of the Moon.
13. The Americans flew around the Moon in Apollo 8 in December 1968
and our leaders shivered: "Do we have to do this now?" General
Designer Mishin nevertheless got to conduct one more test flight in
an automatic version, and again a failure: a disturbance of the
flight configuration led to depressurization of the body. We will add
to this that all three launches of the N-i booster rocket during
flight-design tests were unsuccessful. After soberly assessing the
situation, the government shut down the program connected with a
manned lunar landing.
14. [Kuznetsov] Aleksey Arkhipovich, did our plan differ from the
American plan?
15. [Leonov] Our lunar lander was similar to the American one, and
the flight schemes, as Kondratyuk had foreseen them, did not differ
at all. The craft had to enter a base circumlunar orbit, and a
capsule would separate from it which would make a soft landing on the
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Moon. True, in contrast to the American one, the capsule was to hold
one person, but actions on the Moon and the return to Earth coincided
fully.
16. I will remind you that the Soviet Union was performing parallel
research of the Moon with automatic satellites. They gave us
interesting data, even more complete than the Americans had at that
time, but there also was one other distinction.
17. The accident on Apollo 13 connected with the explosion of a fuel
cell demonstrated the very flexible thinking of U.S. leaders. By
telling about everything honestly, they were able to unite the entire
nation in those days. Literally all America followed this flight,
suffered it, and suggested and thought how to save the crew. But our
out-of-the-ordinary situations always were concealed in an attempt to
prove the superiority of Soviet equipment. As a matter of fact,
there were enormously more of them than the Americans had, but the
people were not told about this. Therefore many got the impression
that mastery of space was a rather simple matter and that upkeep of
cosmonauts was costing the state dearly and was economically
inexpedient.
18. [Kuznetsov] How did you follow the progress of the Americans'
fulfillment of the Apollo program?
19. [Leonov] The entire world observed man's first landing on the
Moon except for the Soviet Union and China. But with the exception of
a maximum of a hundred persons who viewed the reports in one of the
organizations, no one among Soviet citizens saw the launch of the
craft and its landing on the Moon or the crew's actions. History
appraised the merits of our ideologues Ponomarev and Suslov and the
course along which they led the country. But the Americans have no
false morality. In 1965 they gratefully received all our information
on extravehicular activity and coordinated their program. While at
first it was planned only to stick a hand out of the craft,
subsequently they repeated my spacewalk and also used a handheld
motor which permitted the astronaut somehow to control his body in
space. Returning to the U.S. lunar program, I will say that there are
no "gaps" in it for me. Moreover, I recorded the flights of Apollo
10 through 17 on video cassette.
20. [Kuznetsov] Did you see extraterrestrials on your films? UFO
specialists assert that the first people on the Moon saw them and
that extraterrestrials allegedly observed the astronauts. Is this
true?
21. [Leonov] People fond of any sensations wrested a phrase from the
astronauts' conversation and are building their fantasies on this.
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Clear communications were established with the Houston Flight Control
Center after the Moon landing. The picture was being transmitted
"there" and "back." On emerging from the craft, Neil Armstrong
stepped to the ground very cautiously, then became bolder; his steps
became more confident and he began to jump. I looked at these frames.
James [sic] Aldrin said to him; "Look out, they're watching us."
"They" in the sense of "Earth." He further advised not to violate
instructions and to be more cautious. And in fact, after this
Armstrong began to take normal steps. I told the ufologists this more
than once: "Why are you speculating? This is in fact not so."
22. [Kuznetsov] We created the Buran space shuttle, it went through
the first tests, but now some such as Academician Sagdeyev are saying
that it is not necessary. What is your opinion?
23. [Leonov] We have the Mir program. If we wish to seriously
receive dividends, it is necessary to return to Earth materials of
the studies that have been conducted. The Soyuz craft can return a
quantity of cargo that is small in volume and a maximum of 100-120 kg
in weight. We plan to return tons. This can be done only by the
Buran. In this connection it is impossible to agree with Academician
Sagdeyev's opinion that the Buran in general has nothing to do in
orbit. We need it as a component part of the Mir program's
transportation system. Sagdeyev is wrong here.
24. And further, previously he was silent, but now he objects. It
would be more ethical for his part to give an account for his subject
matter: Why did the Phoboses, which he launched and into which great
assets were placed, fail without having reached the target?
25. [Kuznetsov] Here we probably should touch on questions of
improving the profitability of space?
26. [Leonov] Being an embodiment of foremost scientific-technical
thinking, cosmonautics is really capable of enormously greater
economic return. Having spent $25 billion on the lunar program, the
Americans subsequently received a profit twice that by introducing
new technologies and developments. Our situation is somewhat
different, but through whose fault? Cosmonautics?
27. Back in the 1930's Academician Kapitsa posed a question before
the Economic Council of the Council of People's Commissars: "What
incentives for creative innovations are built into the Soviet
system?" And he answered himself: "I see none." The situation has
not changed since then. What projects didn't the economists
substantiate to please the politicians? "Emancipation of peasants,"
"destruction of unpromising villages," "transfer of northern
rivers" and others of sad memory. And to this day the economic
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mechanism has not been developed for stimulating enterprises'
introduction of new kinds of products and technologies which, for
example, now lie unclaimed in excess in the space sector. Hence the
conversations about low profitability of space. But this is not the
fault, but the misfortune of cosmonautics.
28. I remember how we were asked to monitor agricultural lands from
space. In a 24-hour period we gave out a pile of data, but it
differed from that which the State Committee for Statistics gives out
by 25-30 percent, and they turned down our services. But we learned
that many fields either were smaller than according to the data of
the Agro-Industrial Committee, or they were not being used, or they
were not taken into account at all. Results of mismanagement also are
easily seen from space: trampled-down pastures, ruined rivers and
reservoirs, and the polluted atmosphere of cities. We can tell, for
example, about all the outrages which the Ministry of Land
Reclamation and Water Resources committed on Soviet land. Much is
being said now about Aral and Balkhash, but the fact is that
cosmonauts were first to sound the alarm 15 years ago. I myself vent
to Pelshe, chairman of the Party Control Commission of the CPSU
Central Committee, and told him what was being done on the
Baykal-Amur Railroad and Sea of Aral. While they made certain other
decisions on the Baykal-Amur Railroad at that time, they did not for
Aral.
29. It seems our information is little needed by anyone. I
personally believe that reproaches on this matter should be addressed
to the economists above all, and the press must properly arrange the
emphasis here. Rigid communications, both direct and feedback, is
needed and then there also will be an economic effect.
30. [Kuznetsov] And the last question, which journal readers often
ask: Do you believe that our contemporaries will be eyewitnesses to
fulfillment of a Soviet lunar program?
31. [Leonov] Such a program is not envisaged before the year 2000.
But beyond that, we will see.
32. COPYRIGHT: " Aviatsiya i kosmonavtika", 1990.