Examples of using Belenko in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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Belenko asked for a political asylum.
In 1980, the U.S. Congress enacted S. 2961,authorizing citizenship for Belenko.
On 6 September Belenko flew off with fellow pilots on a training mission.
This is the mainpoint to bear in mind when thinking about Belenko and, unfortunately, this fact is often forgotten.
Belenko has not wandered into an embassy, or jumped ship while visiting a foreign port.
To evade both Soviet and Japanese military radar, Belenko had to fly very low- about 100ft above the sea.
Belenko''s particular aircraft was brand new, representing the latest Soviet technology.
Japanese fighters were scrambled, but by then, Belenko had dropped below the thick cloud cover again.
Dina Belenko is a still-life photographer based in Khabarovsk, Khabarovsk Territory, Russian Federation.
To evade both Soviet and Japanese military radar, Belenko had to fly very low- about 100ft(30m) above the sea.
Belenko landed his jet in Hakodate in the north of Japan and was whisked away by Japanese authorities.
Japan's foreign ministry replied that Belenko had committed a crime and that the jet was evidence in a criminal investigation.
Belenko states the Mig-25 cannot intercept the SR-71 for several reasons: The SR-71 fly too high and too fast;
American reconnaissance planes, SR-71s, were prowling off the coast, staying outside Soviet airspace by photographing terrainhundreds of miles inland with side-angle cameras,” Belenko wrote.
On Sept. 6, 1976 Belenko walked his child to the kindergarten and went to the base to fly.
Denis Belenko Design Band have created the Shustov Brandy Bar for the Brandy Factory, located in Odessa, Ukraine.
In order to assist the American experts in evaluating the aircraft, Belenko brought with him the pilot's manual for the MiG-25“Foxbat”, expecting to assist American pilots in evaluating and testing the aircraft.
Belenko described an upcoming"Super Foxbat" with two seats and an ability to intercept cruise missiles.
In September 1976, second lieutenant Viktor Belenko flew a MiG-25P from an airbase in the Far East to Japan, landing on the island of Hokkaido, where he requested political asylum.
Belenko had intended to fly his aircraft to Chitose airbase, but with fuel running low, he had to land at the nearest available airport.
Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko, who defected to Japan in a MiG-25 on Dec. 6, 1976, confirmed it in its“MiG Pilot” book.
Belenko had intended to fly his aircraft to Chitose airbase, but with fuel running low, he had to land at the nearest available airport.
The then Lieutenant Belenko was a pilot with the 513th Fighter Regiment, 11th Air Army, based in Chuguyevka, Primorsky Krai, in the east of the country.
Belenko had brought with him the pilot's manual for the MiG-25, expecting to assist American pilots in evaluating and testing the aircraft.
Belenko is not the only pilot to have defected from the USSR in this way, nor was he the first such to defect from a Soviet bloc country.
Belenko was granted asylum by U.S. President Gerald Ford, and a trust fund was set up for him, granting him a very comfortable living in later years.
