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Son of U.S. spy marks 50 years since Soviet capture
Francis Gary Powers Jr. examines the wreckage of his father's U-2 spyplane at the Central Armed Forces Museum in Moscow on April 30, 2010. Historians on May 1 will mark the 50th anniversary of the so-called "U-2 incident" in which US pilot Francis Gary Powers flying on a CIA mission was shot down in Soviet Union air space near the town Sverdlovsk.
Photograph by: ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty Images, ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty Images
MOSCOW - Fifty years after his father was shot down by the Soviets in an incident that marked a turning point in the Cold War, Francis Gary Powers Jr on Friday visited the wreckage of his dad's U-2 spy plane.
"It's a wonderful display," Powers Jr said while standing in the hall of the Central Armed Forces Museum in Moscow which holds the wrecked plane and other material commemorating the so-called "U-2 incident" of May 1, 1960.
On that day, Francis Gary Powers, a U.S. pilot carrying out a secret mission for the CIA to photograph Soviet nuclear sites, was shot down near the Urals Mountains city of Sverdlovsk, now called Yekaterinburg.
Powers parachuted out and was captured by the Soviets, who later convicted him of espionage and threw him in prison.
In 1962, Powers was released in a U.S.-Soviet spy swap at the border between East and West Germany, in exchange for America's release of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel. Powers died in 1997.
The incident was a major embarrassment for the United States, which had denied carrying out spy flights over the Soviet Union, and it derailed efforts to make peace between the two Cold War superpowers.
Russia still considers its shoot-down of the U-2 a triumph and displays the plane's wreckage in its main military museum in Moscow, which also features an expansive World War II exhibition and trophies seized from Georgian forces during the Russia-Georgia war of 2008.
Francis Gary Powers Jr, 44, told reporters that he did not bear any ill will towards present-day Russia, though he conceded that his father had been an "adversary" of the Soviet Union.
"I do not feel that I am an enemy to the people in Russia," said Powers Jr, who was visiting Moscow for a conference marking the 50th anniversary of the U-2 incident.
"I think Russia and America have very good working relations. I have been very well treated since I've been here," he added.
Son of U.S. spy marks 50 years since Soviet capture
Francis Gary Powers Jr. examines the wreckage of his father's U-2 spyplane at the Central Armed Forces Museum in Moscow on April 30, 2010. Historians on May 1 will mark the 50th anniversary of the so-called "U-2 incident" in which US pilot Francis Gary Powers flying on a CIA mission was shot down in Soviet Union air space near the town Sverdlovsk.
Photograph by: ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty Images, ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty Images
MOSCOW - Fifty years after his father was shot down by the Soviets in an incident that marked a turning point in the Cold War, Francis Gary Powers Jr on Friday visited the wreckage of his dad's U-2 spy plane.
"It's a wonderful display," Powers Jr said while standing in the hall of the Central Armed Forces Museum in Moscow which holds the wrecked plane and other material commemorating the so-called "U-2 incident" of May 1, 1960.
On that day, Francis Gary Powers, a U.S. pilot carrying out a secret mission for the CIA to photograph Soviet nuclear sites, was shot down near the Urals Mountains city of Sverdlovsk, now called Yekaterinburg.
Powers parachuted out and was captured by the Soviets, who later convicted him of espionage and threw him in prison.
In 1962, Powers was released in a U.S.-Soviet spy swap at the border between East and West Germany, in exchange for America's release of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel. Powers died in 1997.
The incident was a major embarrassment for the United States, which had denied carrying out spy flights over the Soviet Union, and it derailed efforts to make peace between the two Cold War superpowers.
Russia still considers its shoot-down of the U-2 a triumph and displays the plane's wreckage in its main military museum in Moscow, which also features an expansive World War II exhibition and trophies seized from Georgian forces during the Russia-Georgia war of 2008.
Francis Gary Powers Jr, 44, told reporters that he did not bear any ill will towards present-day Russia, though he conceded that his father had been an "adversary" of the Soviet Union.
"I do not feel that I am an enemy to the people in Russia," said Powers Jr, who was visiting Moscow for a conference marking the 50th anniversary of the U-2 incident.
"I think Russia and America have very good working relations. I have been very well treated since I've been here," he added.
Son of U.S. spy marks 50 years since Soviet capture