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Storm of Fire: Could the Soviets Have Won the Moon Race?. / David S. Michaels.

by Michaels, David S; SIRS Publishing, Inc.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: SIRS Enduring Issues 2002Article 48Science. Publisher: Ad Astra, 2001ISSN: 1522-3264;.Subject(s): Launch vehicles (Astronautics) | Manned space flight | Space flight -- History | Space flight to the moon | Space race -- Soviet Union | Space research -- Soviet UnionDDC classification: 050 Summary: "Most everyone knows the Moon Race ended with Neil Armstrong's 'small step' on 20 July 1969. The victory appears so inevitable that for two decades many Western 'experts' believed the Kremlin's claim that it never intended to land men on the Moon at all. But the Soviets had indeed pursued manned lunar missions in the 1960s, an immense and costly program that was officially disavowed when it failed." (AD ASTRA) This article examines the Soviet Union's attempts to land on the Moon before the United States accomplished the feat.
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Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2002.

Originally Published: Storm of Fire: Could the Soviets Have Won the Moon Race?, March/April 2001; pp. 30-35.

"Most everyone knows the Moon Race ended with Neil Armstrong's 'small step' on 20 July 1969. The victory appears so inevitable that for two decades many Western 'experts' believed the Kremlin's claim that it never intended to land men on the Moon at all. But the Soviets had indeed pursued manned lunar missions in the 1960s, an immense and costly program that was officially disavowed when it failed." (AD ASTRA) This article examines the Soviet Union's attempts to land on the Moon before the United States accomplished the feat.

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