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Home > History:
Military Art Collection
DIA Military Art Collection
The
Smithsonian Air & Space Museum Exhibit
Manned Space Flight: Manned space flight
symbolized American and Soviet technological achievements and
had significant military applications. The technology used to
place astronauts or cosmonauts in orbit could also be used in
military missiles. The Soviets pursued a permanent presence in
space, launching the Salyut space station series beginning in
1972, followed by the Mir in 1986. U.S. manned space flight efforts
competed with the Soviets in the race for prestige and technological
superiority.

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Vostok Launch
by Richard Terry, 1978
Manned space flight began on April 12, 1961, with Yuri Gargarin's
single-orbit mission. The liquid-fueled, two-stage Vostok
rocket that lifted Gagarin into space was used to launched
a variety of military and civilian spacecraft from 1959 to
the 1980s. During the 1980s, several years after this illustration
was made, the Soviets began using Vostok rockets to place
commercial satellites in orbit for other countries. Vostok
means "east" in Russian.
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Buran Space Shuttle
by Ronald C. Wittmann, 1986
Developed in the late 1970s, the Buran space shuttle resembled
the U.S. Space Shuttle in design and concept. The Soviets
planned to use it to place satellites in orbit and to resupply
the Mir space station. The Soviets launched the Buran only
once, in 1988 without a crew. Russia cancelled the program
in the early 1990s after the end of the Cold War. Buran means "snowstorm
in the steppes" in Russian.
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Mars Lander
by Brian McMullin, 1986
The Soviet Union had conceptual plans in the 1980s to send
manned spacecraft to Mars in the 1990s, even though its program
to land cosmonauts on the moon failed. The mission would
have required launching the spacecraft’s components into
Earth orbit for assembly. The roundtrip journey to Mars would
have taken at least a year. Post-Soviet Russia cancelled
the program due to its expense and questions regarding its
feasability.
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Offensive Weapons: Soviet offensive forces grew dramatically
in quality and quantity during the Cold War. These included
missiles, submarines, and aircraft capable of delivering
nuclear weapons. The U.S. devoted considerable resources
to assessing and countering this threat. Both the United
States and the Soviet Union produced thousands of offensive
nuclear warheads capable of destroying both countries many
times over. Arms control treaties during the last two decades
have significantly reduces these nuclear arsenals.
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Scud B
by Dennis Mosher, 1978
The Soviets first deployed the Scud B in the late 1950s.
A tactical, mobile, ballistic missile, it could deliver a
conventional, nuclear, biological, or chemical warheads to
a target about 320 kilometers (200 miles) away. The Soviets
exported Scud B missiles to its Warsaw Pact allies and to
such countries as Iraq, China, and North Korea. The Iraqi
use of Scuds during the Gulf War showed the continuing threat
posed by these weapons.
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Delta II Submarine
by Edward L. Cooper, 1987
This depiction of the Delta III nuclear-powered submarine
was completed shortly after the warship entered service in
the late 1970s. A Delta III could fire the nuclear-tipped
SS-N-18 Stingray ballistic missile from 16 launch tubes.
With a range of 6,500 kilometers (3,900 miles), Stingrays
could hit targets in the United States from Soviet home ports
or coastal waters. The DELTA III is still deployed with the
Russian navy today.
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SS-25 Mobile ICBM
by Edward L. Cooper, 1986
The deployment of the mobile SS-25 Sickle intercontinental
ballistic missile (ICBM) in the 1980s made Soviet land-based
nuclear forces harder to locate and destroy. As seen in this
work from 1986, the missile and support equipment was mounted
on massive off-road vehicles that enabled rapid dispersed.
The Sickle carried a single nuclear warhead and was about
the same size as the U.S. Minuteman ICBM. Post-Soviet Russia
continues to deploy this missile
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Defensive Weapons: Beginning in the
late 1960s, the Soviet Union has conducted a substantial
research program to develop a defense against ballistic missles.
The Soviets built, and Russia continues to maintain, the
world’s only operational anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system.
Additionally programs focused on the development of of other
ground- and space-based weapons using laser, particle beam,
and kinetic energy technology.
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Pushinko ABM
by Ronald C. Wittmann, 1983
The Soviet Union built the world's only operational anti-ballistic
missile (ABM) system around Moscow in the 1970s. Beginning
in 1980, they improved and expanded this system. Two of these
improvements are shown in this 1983 illustration: the silo-based,
nuclear-tipped GAZELLE interceptor missile and a new large
radar intended to control ABM engagements.
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Space Laser
by Ronald C. Wittmann, 1987
Soviet research into ground- and space-based laser weapons
systems began in the 1960s. They Soviets actually built several
ground-based lasers in the 1980s which reportedly could destroy
or interfere with satellites and aircraft. The space-based
laser system envisioned in this 1987 work was designed to
destroy or incapacitate satellites and intercontinental ballistic
missiles, but was never built.
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Space Particle Beam
by Ronald C. Wittmann, 1987
The Soviets first explored the use of space-based particle
beams weapons in the late 1960s. As portrayed in this 1987
illustration, the weapon would have targeted satellites or
intercontinental ballistic missiles with high-velocity particle
beams. The Soviet Union also studied other space-based directed-energy
weapons, including those using laser and kinetic energy technology.
None of these types of weapons were ever deployed.
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Reconnaissance Systems: The United States and the Soviet Union used
many different reconnaissance systems during the Cold War. Some imaged
military targets, others detected radar and radio emissions, and still
others intercepted communications. Advances in technology enabled the
both nations to conduct these missions from the relative safety of space
beginning in the 1960s. Soviet systems provided military and political
leaders with information on U.S. military forces and developments.
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YAK-25RM Mandrake
by Brian W. McMullan,1978
American U-2 overflights of Soviet territory in the late
1950s prompted the Soviet Union to develop its own high-altitude
reconnaissance aircraft, the Yak-25RM Mandrake, which is
depicted in this 1972 illustration. Unlike the U-2, the Soviets
designed the Mandrake around an existing airframe, the all-weather
Yak-25 interceptor. Carrying cameras and signals intelligence
equipment, the Mandrake flew missions in the early 1960s
over the Middle East, South Asia, China, and the border regions
of NATO nations.
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Cosmos 389 ELINT
by Brian W. McMullin, 1982
This 1982 work shows the Cosmos 389 satellite, which was
launched in December 1970 and performed electronic intelligence
(ELINT) missions. Cosmos 389 was the first in a series of "ferret" satellites
that pinpointed sources of radar and radio emissions to identify
air defense sites and command and control centers. Transmitted
to ground stations, the data was used for Soviet targeting
and war planning.
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RORSAT
by Ronald C. Wittmann, 1982
The Soviet Union placed a series of radar-equipped ocean
reconnaissance satellites (RORSATs) in low Earth orbit beginning
in 1967. Employing powerful radars and working in pairs,
they located and targeted U.S. ships for destruction by Soviet
naval forces. Nuclear powered RORSATs launched in the 1970s
occasionally malfunctioned, including one that crashed and
spread radioactive debris across northern Canada in 1978.
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