by Gideon Marcus
Being #2, they try…harder?
Last October, just after Apollo 7 went up, it looked as if the Soviets still had a chance at beating us to the Moon. Their Zond 5, really a noseless Soyuz, had been sent around the Moon two months ahead of our Apollo 8 circumlunar flight. Just a month later, the similar Zond 6 took off on November 16 and zoomed around the Moon before not just landing, but making a pinpoint landing in the Kazakh S.S.R. (near its launch site) with the aid of little wings. Apparently, the prior Zond 5's splashing down in the Indian Ocean was not according to plan.
Shortly after the flight, the Soviets dropped the bombshell that Zond 6 could have been manned—and the next one might well be.
Continue reading [August 31, 1969] Over (and under) the Moon (September 1969 Analog)