Catalina affair

From Freepedia

On June 13, 1952 a Swedish military DC-3 flying over the Baltic Sea, clandestinely carrying out signals intelligence gathering operations for the USA, disappeared east of the Isle of Gotland. Three days later two Swedish military Catalina flying boats searched for the DC-3 north of Estonia. One of the planes was shot down by the Soviet warplanes but the crew ditched near the West German freighter "Münsterland" and was rescued.

Aftermath

The USSR denied shooting down the DC-3, but a few days later a liferaft with Soviet shell shrapnel was found. In 1956 while meeting the Swedish prime minister Tage Erlander, the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev admitted that the Soviet Union had shot down the DC-3. This information was not released to the public at the time.

In 1991 the Soviet airforce admitted it had shot down the DC-3. In the summer of 2003 a Swedish company found the remains of the downed DC-3 by using sonar. Some time later the Catalina was also found, 22 kilometers east of the official splashdown point.

Conclusion

Bullet holes showed that the DC-3 was shot down by a MiG-15 fighter. The exact splash down time was also determined, as one of the clocks in the cockpit had stopped at 11:28:40 CET. To this date the remains of five of the eight-man crew have been found.



Views
Personal tools
In other languages
Similar Links