Cold War Air Thieves (Hardback)
Stealing Military Aviation Technology and the East-West Battle for Aviation Secrets
Imprint: Air World
Pages: 256
Illustrations: 16 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036143497
Published: 30th June 2026
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The Cold War was a conflict defined by the battle for intelligence. And nowhere was this intelligence war more keenly fought than in the sphere of military aviation. Gaining information on the enemy’s latest warplanes and aviation-related hardware was a prime intelligence objective for both sides throughout the titanic ideological struggle that dominated the second half of the 20th century. Had the Cold War turned hot, the side possessing the greatest knowledge of its opponents’ combat aircraft would enjoy a crucial tactical advantage.
Lagging behind the US and its NATO allies in many areas of aviation technology, the USSR also relied heavily on industrial espionage as a means of bridging the technological gap between East and West, shaving years and many millions of roubles off the development process in such key areas as the gas-turbine engine, long-range strategic bombers, air-to-air guided missiles, electronic countermeasures and stealth technology.
Recruiting senior engineers and designers working in the opposing side’s aviation industries to spy for them, orchestrating the defection of pilots in their state-of-the-art aircraft, recovering shot-down aircraft wreckage from warzones like Korea, Vietnam and Afghanistan, even stealing components from under the noses of their enemies – nothing was off limits for the CIA, KGB, MI6 and Mossad in their relentless pursuit of aviation technology.
Cold War Air Thieves explores in depth for the first time this hidden war fought by the intelligence services of both the capitalist and communist countries during the Cold War to obtain by any means necessary the secrets of some of the most potent warplanes ever to take to the skies.
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About Steven Taylor
Steven Taylor is a freelance journalist, specialising in military history, who has contributed to various UK newspapers, including the Sunday Express, Daily Telegraph and Mail on Sunday, as well as the magazines FlyPast, Britain At War and Military History Matters.
This is his third book for Pen & Sword.
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In the summer of 1940, a new German aircraft began appearing in the skies over the British Isles. Unlike the rest of the Luftwaffe’s fleet in the Battle of Britain, these aircraft were flying at a height of 40,000 feet and higher – way beyond the reach of the RAF’s defending fighters. These virtually untouchable intruders were examples of the Junkers Ju 86P. The world’s first operational combat aeroplane equipped with a pressurized cabin, they were able to reach a maximum altitude of 42,000 feet. The Ju 86P’s introduction ushered in a new era of aerial warfare, where combat would take…
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