Was splashing down on the USSR-controlled territory a possibility for Apollo missions?












9














From what I understand, the planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.



Was there any remote possibility of an emergency splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?










share|improve this question
























  • The Black Sea is probably the most southerly body of water controlled by the Sovs, and I doubt whether a ground landing would have been survivable.
    – RonJohn
    22 hours ago
















9














From what I understand, the planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.



Was there any remote possibility of an emergency splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?










share|improve this question
























  • The Black Sea is probably the most southerly body of water controlled by the Sovs, and I doubt whether a ground landing would have been survivable.
    – RonJohn
    22 hours ago














9












9








9


1





From what I understand, the planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.



Was there any remote possibility of an emergency splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?










share|improve this question















From what I understand, the planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.



Was there any remote possibility of an emergency splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?







apollo-program landing reentry soviet-union space-race






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday

























asked yesterday









alecxe

1238




1238












  • The Black Sea is probably the most southerly body of water controlled by the Sovs, and I doubt whether a ground landing would have been survivable.
    – RonJohn
    22 hours ago


















  • The Black Sea is probably the most southerly body of water controlled by the Sovs, and I doubt whether a ground landing would have been survivable.
    – RonJohn
    22 hours ago
















The Black Sea is probably the most southerly body of water controlled by the Sovs, and I doubt whether a ground landing would have been survivable.
– RonJohn
22 hours ago




The Black Sea is probably the most southerly body of water controlled by the Sovs, and I doubt whether a ground landing would have been survivable.
– RonJohn
22 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















13















The planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.




Often the South Pacific, but sometimes the North Pacific or the Atlantic. Both Pacific and Atlantic recovery zones were established for each mission, with multiple ships allocated to each.




Was there any remote possibility of a splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?




There's relatively little USSR-controlled water per se on the planet's surface, so that would be an extremely unlikely occurrence. Slightly more likely would be landfall on USSR-controlled soil (simply because there's much more of that), but as Uwe points out, the ground track of the usual Apollo parking orbit never reached the high latitudes of the USSR; Apollo 11 for instance inserted into a 32.5º inclination orbit; the southernmost point of the Soviet Union was Kushka (now Serhetabat) in Turkmenistan at 35º north.



In general, landing somewhere unexpected was very unlikely. An abort prior to getting into orbit would leave the command module somewhere in the Atlantic. Once in orbit, any abort would be performed to land near one of the established recovery zones if at all possible. If the abort wasn't now-now-now urgent, the worst case scenario would be maybe 30 minutes from the abort decision (say, over north Africa on a northerly leg) to the point at which the CM could reenter over a big ocean.



But let's say the worst happens, and the CM has to do a prompt emergency reentry without any choice about where to land. I don't know exactly what contingency plans NASA and the rest of the US government had for this situation, but I would expect that American astronauts crash-landing in USSR territory would not be mistreated even during those Cold War years. The Apollo missions were well-publicized, clearly scientific rather than military, and "the whole world was watching". The astronauts probably wouldn't be invited to tour any sensitive facilities nearby, obviously, and the command module might get impounded, inspected and dismantled before eventually being returned, but the crew would almost certainly get home safely.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
    – Uwe
    yesterday






  • 2




    Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 5




    Cuba would have been...interesting.
    – Organic Marble
    yesterday






  • 2




    @OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 4




    An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
    – Uwe
    yesterday



















3














By way
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=5321
http://www.astronautix.com/a/apollosovieapollocapsule.html




The picture that clinched it. Tamas Feher discovered this photo of the 'recovery of an Apollo capsule' in a Hungarian space history book. It actually depicts Apollo BP-1227 being lowered to the deck of the USCG Southwind in Murmansk, USSR, 1970.







share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
    – Hobbes
    15 hours ago






  • 4




    This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
    – dotancohen
    13 hours ago










  • Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
    – A. Rumlin
    7 hours ago












  • If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
    – Uwe
    3 hours ago











Your Answer





StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
});
});
}, "mathjax-editing");

StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "508"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});














draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fspace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f33070%2fwas-splashing-down-on-the-ussr-controlled-territory-a-possibility-for-apollo-mis%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









13















The planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.




Often the South Pacific, but sometimes the North Pacific or the Atlantic. Both Pacific and Atlantic recovery zones were established for each mission, with multiple ships allocated to each.




Was there any remote possibility of a splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?




There's relatively little USSR-controlled water per se on the planet's surface, so that would be an extremely unlikely occurrence. Slightly more likely would be landfall on USSR-controlled soil (simply because there's much more of that), but as Uwe points out, the ground track of the usual Apollo parking orbit never reached the high latitudes of the USSR; Apollo 11 for instance inserted into a 32.5º inclination orbit; the southernmost point of the Soviet Union was Kushka (now Serhetabat) in Turkmenistan at 35º north.



In general, landing somewhere unexpected was very unlikely. An abort prior to getting into orbit would leave the command module somewhere in the Atlantic. Once in orbit, any abort would be performed to land near one of the established recovery zones if at all possible. If the abort wasn't now-now-now urgent, the worst case scenario would be maybe 30 minutes from the abort decision (say, over north Africa on a northerly leg) to the point at which the CM could reenter over a big ocean.



But let's say the worst happens, and the CM has to do a prompt emergency reentry without any choice about where to land. I don't know exactly what contingency plans NASA and the rest of the US government had for this situation, but I would expect that American astronauts crash-landing in USSR territory would not be mistreated even during those Cold War years. The Apollo missions were well-publicized, clearly scientific rather than military, and "the whole world was watching". The astronauts probably wouldn't be invited to tour any sensitive facilities nearby, obviously, and the command module might get impounded, inspected and dismantled before eventually being returned, but the crew would almost certainly get home safely.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
    – Uwe
    yesterday






  • 2




    Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 5




    Cuba would have been...interesting.
    – Organic Marble
    yesterday






  • 2




    @OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 4




    An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
    – Uwe
    yesterday
















13















The planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.




Often the South Pacific, but sometimes the North Pacific or the Atlantic. Both Pacific and Atlantic recovery zones were established for each mission, with multiple ships allocated to each.




Was there any remote possibility of a splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?




There's relatively little USSR-controlled water per se on the planet's surface, so that would be an extremely unlikely occurrence. Slightly more likely would be landfall on USSR-controlled soil (simply because there's much more of that), but as Uwe points out, the ground track of the usual Apollo parking orbit never reached the high latitudes of the USSR; Apollo 11 for instance inserted into a 32.5º inclination orbit; the southernmost point of the Soviet Union was Kushka (now Serhetabat) in Turkmenistan at 35º north.



In general, landing somewhere unexpected was very unlikely. An abort prior to getting into orbit would leave the command module somewhere in the Atlantic. Once in orbit, any abort would be performed to land near one of the established recovery zones if at all possible. If the abort wasn't now-now-now urgent, the worst case scenario would be maybe 30 minutes from the abort decision (say, over north Africa on a northerly leg) to the point at which the CM could reenter over a big ocean.



But let's say the worst happens, and the CM has to do a prompt emergency reentry without any choice about where to land. I don't know exactly what contingency plans NASA and the rest of the US government had for this situation, but I would expect that American astronauts crash-landing in USSR territory would not be mistreated even during those Cold War years. The Apollo missions were well-publicized, clearly scientific rather than military, and "the whole world was watching". The astronauts probably wouldn't be invited to tour any sensitive facilities nearby, obviously, and the command module might get impounded, inspected and dismantled before eventually being returned, but the crew would almost certainly get home safely.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
    – Uwe
    yesterday






  • 2




    Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 5




    Cuba would have been...interesting.
    – Organic Marble
    yesterday






  • 2




    @OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 4




    An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
    – Uwe
    yesterday














13












13








13







The planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.




Often the South Pacific, but sometimes the North Pacific or the Atlantic. Both Pacific and Atlantic recovery zones were established for each mission, with multiple ships allocated to each.




Was there any remote possibility of a splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?




There's relatively little USSR-controlled water per se on the planet's surface, so that would be an extremely unlikely occurrence. Slightly more likely would be landfall on USSR-controlled soil (simply because there's much more of that), but as Uwe points out, the ground track of the usual Apollo parking orbit never reached the high latitudes of the USSR; Apollo 11 for instance inserted into a 32.5º inclination orbit; the southernmost point of the Soviet Union was Kushka (now Serhetabat) in Turkmenistan at 35º north.



In general, landing somewhere unexpected was very unlikely. An abort prior to getting into orbit would leave the command module somewhere in the Atlantic. Once in orbit, any abort would be performed to land near one of the established recovery zones if at all possible. If the abort wasn't now-now-now urgent, the worst case scenario would be maybe 30 minutes from the abort decision (say, over north Africa on a northerly leg) to the point at which the CM could reenter over a big ocean.



But let's say the worst happens, and the CM has to do a prompt emergency reentry without any choice about where to land. I don't know exactly what contingency plans NASA and the rest of the US government had for this situation, but I would expect that American astronauts crash-landing in USSR territory would not be mistreated even during those Cold War years. The Apollo missions were well-publicized, clearly scientific rather than military, and "the whole world was watching". The astronauts probably wouldn't be invited to tour any sensitive facilities nearby, obviously, and the command module might get impounded, inspected and dismantled before eventually being returned, but the crew would almost certainly get home safely.






share|improve this answer















The planned landing areas for Apollo command modules were pre-programmed beforehand and happened in the South Pacific.




Often the South Pacific, but sometimes the North Pacific or the Atlantic. Both Pacific and Atlantic recovery zones were established for each mission, with multiple ships allocated to each.




Was there any remote possibility of a splashdown happening in the USSR controlled waters and what procedures were in place for that event?




There's relatively little USSR-controlled water per se on the planet's surface, so that would be an extremely unlikely occurrence. Slightly more likely would be landfall on USSR-controlled soil (simply because there's much more of that), but as Uwe points out, the ground track of the usual Apollo parking orbit never reached the high latitudes of the USSR; Apollo 11 for instance inserted into a 32.5º inclination orbit; the southernmost point of the Soviet Union was Kushka (now Serhetabat) in Turkmenistan at 35º north.



In general, landing somewhere unexpected was very unlikely. An abort prior to getting into orbit would leave the command module somewhere in the Atlantic. Once in orbit, any abort would be performed to land near one of the established recovery zones if at all possible. If the abort wasn't now-now-now urgent, the worst case scenario would be maybe 30 minutes from the abort decision (say, over north Africa on a northerly leg) to the point at which the CM could reenter over a big ocean.



But let's say the worst happens, and the CM has to do a prompt emergency reentry without any choice about where to land. I don't know exactly what contingency plans NASA and the rest of the US government had for this situation, but I would expect that American astronauts crash-landing in USSR territory would not be mistreated even during those Cold War years. The Apollo missions were well-publicized, clearly scientific rather than military, and "the whole world was watching". The astronauts probably wouldn't be invited to tour any sensitive facilities nearby, obviously, and the command module might get impounded, inspected and dismantled before eventually being returned, but the crew would almost certainly get home safely.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









Russell Borogove

81.6k2271354




81.6k2271354








  • 2




    The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
    – Uwe
    yesterday






  • 2




    Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 5




    Cuba would have been...interesting.
    – Organic Marble
    yesterday






  • 2




    @OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 4




    An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
    – Uwe
    yesterday














  • 2




    The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
    – Uwe
    yesterday






  • 2




    Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 5




    Cuba would have been...interesting.
    – Organic Marble
    yesterday






  • 2




    @OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
    – Russell Borogove
    yesterday






  • 4




    An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
    – Uwe
    yesterday








2




2




The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
– Uwe
yesterday




The plane of the Earth orbit after launch as well as the plane of return trajectory from the Moon had low inclinations. A high inclination crossing USSR territory had a very low probability.
– Uwe
yesterday




2




2




Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
– Russell Borogove
yesterday




Yeah, good point -- looks like Apollo 11's parking orbit was at 32º inclination, well south of any of the USSRistans. A poorly chosen return-from-moon trajectory, maybe? ;)
– Russell Borogove
yesterday




5




5




Cuba would have been...interesting.
– Organic Marble
yesterday




Cuba would have been...interesting.
– Organic Marble
yesterday




2




2




@OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
– Russell Borogove
yesterday




@OrganicMarble Yeah, I'd think that would be worse than USSR proper in some ways.
– Russell Borogove
yesterday




4




4




An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
– Uwe
yesterday




An emergency landing on chinese territory was more likely than on the USSR or Cuba.
– Uwe
yesterday











3














By way
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=5321
http://www.astronautix.com/a/apollosovieapollocapsule.html




The picture that clinched it. Tamas Feher discovered this photo of the 'recovery of an Apollo capsule' in a Hungarian space history book. It actually depicts Apollo BP-1227 being lowered to the deck of the USCG Southwind in Murmansk, USSR, 1970.







share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
    – Hobbes
    15 hours ago






  • 4




    This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
    – dotancohen
    13 hours ago










  • Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
    – A. Rumlin
    7 hours ago












  • If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
    – Uwe
    3 hours ago
















3














By way
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=5321
http://www.astronautix.com/a/apollosovieapollocapsule.html




The picture that clinched it. Tamas Feher discovered this photo of the 'recovery of an Apollo capsule' in a Hungarian space history book. It actually depicts Apollo BP-1227 being lowered to the deck of the USCG Southwind in Murmansk, USSR, 1970.







share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
    – Hobbes
    15 hours ago






  • 4




    This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
    – dotancohen
    13 hours ago










  • Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
    – A. Rumlin
    7 hours ago












  • If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
    – Uwe
    3 hours ago














3












3








3






By way
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=5321
http://www.astronautix.com/a/apollosovieapollocapsule.html




The picture that clinched it. Tamas Feher discovered this photo of the 'recovery of an Apollo capsule' in a Hungarian space history book. It actually depicts Apollo BP-1227 being lowered to the deck of the USCG Southwind in Murmansk, USSR, 1970.







share|improve this answer












By way
http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=5321
http://www.astronautix.com/a/apollosovieapollocapsule.html




The picture that clinched it. Tamas Feher discovered this photo of the 'recovery of an Apollo capsule' in a Hungarian space history book. It actually depicts Apollo BP-1227 being lowered to the deck of the USCG Southwind in Murmansk, USSR, 1970.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 19 hours ago









A. Rumlin

3592




3592








  • 6




    Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
    – Hobbes
    15 hours ago






  • 4




    This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
    – dotancohen
    13 hours ago










  • Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
    – A. Rumlin
    7 hours ago












  • If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
    – Uwe
    3 hours ago














  • 6




    Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
    – Hobbes
    15 hours ago






  • 4




    This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
    – dotancohen
    13 hours ago










  • Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
    – A. Rumlin
    7 hours ago












  • If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
    – Uwe
    3 hours ago








6




6




Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
– Hobbes
15 hours ago




Could you add a bit more information from the linked page? As it stands now, the quoted text does not make sense without reading the linked page.
– Hobbes
15 hours ago




4




4




This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
– dotancohen
13 hours ago




This answer refers to a lost Apollo boilerplate capsule used to practice recoveries. The capsule was lost at sea, the Russians recovered it and handed it over to an American vessel. This was training hardware, not flight hardware.
– dotancohen
13 hours ago












Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
– A. Rumlin
7 hours ago






Nothing is impossible – some things are just less likely than others. aulis.com/images_odyssey_apollo/handover_murmansk.png aulis.com/odyssey_apollo.htm
– A. Rumlin
7 hours ago














If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
– Uwe
3 hours ago




If an Apollo boilerplate capsule was recovered by an USSR ship in international waters far away from a coast, USSR controlled territory was not involved.
– Uwe
3 hours ago


















draft saved

draft discarded




















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Space Exploration Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.





Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.


Please pay close attention to the following guidance:


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fspace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f33070%2fwas-splashing-down-on-the-ussr-controlled-territory-a-possibility-for-apollo-mis%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Cypress Hill

what are some tips for doing well in the interview? [on hold]

How does a super-power salesman not get shut down for legal reasons?