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  3. How did the CIA manage to steal and reverse-engineer a Soviet moon probe without anyone noticing?

How did the CIA manage to steal and reverse-engineer a Soviet moon probe without anyone noticing?

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  • S This user is from outside of this forum
    S This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    In 1959, during a Soviet space tech exhibition in Mexico City, the CIA carried out what seems like a real-life sci-fi spy mission—Operation Lunik. They temporarily took possession of a Soviet Luna 2 probe, disassembled it, photographed every internal component, and reassembled it flawlessly… all in a single night. The Soviets never realized it had been touched.

    The goal? Gather intel on Soviet space capabilities during the early space race.

    This really happened. There’s a full documentary about it too
    Operation Lunik – The CIA’s Daring Cold War Space Heist

    What I want to know is: how did they pull this off so cleanly? Wouldn't that level of tech handling require a full lab setup, or at least leave some trace?

    What do you think—was this just Cold War chaos at its peak, or did the CIA actually have insane logistics and access we don’t usually hear about?

    S P 2 Replies Last reply
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    • S [email protected]

      In 1959, during a Soviet space tech exhibition in Mexico City, the CIA carried out what seems like a real-life sci-fi spy mission—Operation Lunik. They temporarily took possession of a Soviet Luna 2 probe, disassembled it, photographed every internal component, and reassembled it flawlessly… all in a single night. The Soviets never realized it had been touched.

      The goal? Gather intel on Soviet space capabilities during the early space race.

      This really happened. There’s a full documentary about it too
      Operation Lunik – The CIA’s Daring Cold War Space Heist

      What I want to know is: how did they pull this off so cleanly? Wouldn't that level of tech handling require a full lab setup, or at least leave some trace?

      What do you think—was this just Cold War chaos at its peak, or did the CIA actually have insane logistics and access we don’t usually hear about?

      S This user is from outside of this forum
      S This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      Soviet military and intelligence efficiency was greatly exaggerated.

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      0
      • S [email protected]

        In 1959, during a Soviet space tech exhibition in Mexico City, the CIA carried out what seems like a real-life sci-fi spy mission—Operation Lunik. They temporarily took possession of a Soviet Luna 2 probe, disassembled it, photographed every internal component, and reassembled it flawlessly… all in a single night. The Soviets never realized it had been touched.

        The goal? Gather intel on Soviet space capabilities during the early space race.

        This really happened. There’s a full documentary about it too
        Operation Lunik – The CIA’s Daring Cold War Space Heist

        What I want to know is: how did they pull this off so cleanly? Wouldn't that level of tech handling require a full lab setup, or at least leave some trace?

        What do you think—was this just Cold War chaos at its peak, or did the CIA actually have insane logistics and access we don’t usually hear about?

        P This user is from outside of this forum
        P This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        I imagine they followed the pattern of nearly all successes - work hard and get really really lucky.

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