In the Shadow of the Moon
Page 1
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the memory of those who
suffered and died under fascism and to the future generations who
must stand vigilant against its resurgences.
Epigraph
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
—Newton’s Third Law of Motion
It is the very error of the moon.
She comes more nearer earth than she was wont
And makes men mad.
—William Shakespeare, Othello: Act 5, Scene 2
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
Note to a Reluctant Reader
Stage I: The Quest for Rockets
Chapter 1: The Osenberg List
Chapter 2: The Honored Nazi
Chapter 3: Rise of the Rocket Fanatic
Chapter 4: Camp Dora
Chapter 5: Betraying Hitler
Chapter 6: An Innocent Traitor
Chapter 7: Confiscating the Spoils of War
Chapter 8: Back to the USSR
Chapter 9: Space Cowboys
Chapter 10: The Cold War
Chapter 11: Welcome to the Watercress Capital of the World!
Chapter 12: The Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM)
Chapter 13: A Rocket Man in Tomorrowland
Stage II: The Quest for Satellites
Chapter 14: A Red Moon Rises
Chapter 15: Army vs. Navy
Chapter 16: Object D
Chapter 17: Sputnik
Chapter 18: Bleep-Bleep-Bleep
Chapter 19: The Invisible Man
Chapter 20: Laika and the Cosmo-Mutt Cover-Up
Chapter 21: The Invisible Woman
Chapter 22: The American Satellite
Stage III: The Quest for the Moon
Chapter 23: NASA Is Born
Chapter 24: “The Right Stuff”
Chapter 25: Squirrel and Little Arrow
Chapter 26: Growing Pains at NASA
Chapter 27: Blast Radius
Chapter 28: The First to Fly
Chapter 29: The Russians’ “Right Stuff”
Chapter 30: “Poyekhali!” (“Let’s Go!”)
Chapter 31: “Light This Candle”
Chapter 32: Behind the Wall
Chapter 33: “She Is a Gagarin in a Skirt”
Chapter 34: “The President Has Been Shot”
Chapter 35: Stepping-Stones to the Moon
Chapter 36: Da Svidaniya (“Goodbye”)
Chapter 37: “A Rough Road Leads to the Stars”
Chapter 38: Apollo Takes Flight
Chapter 39: “One Small Step”
Chapter 40: Return to Rocket City
Chapter 41: Life after Apollo
Chapter 42: Out of the Shadows
Chapter 43: All That Remains
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Endnotes
About the Author
Books by Amy Cherrix
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Copyright
About the Publisher
Note to a Reluctant Reader
If you’ve picked up this book, chances are you’ve heard of the space race. Maybe you were intrigued by the words “hidden history” on the cover. Or maybe you’ve already learned about it in history textbooks and think it’s “old news.”
I thought I knew the story, too. But what the textbooks never told me was that the greatest, most visible race humankind has ever undertaken was won in the shadows by a former Nazi and a Russian who was jailed for crimes against his country. The story begins at the end of World War II with these two brilliant but controversial men. Wernher von Braun was a German Nazi officer, engineer, and eventual immigrant to the United States who came to America (under questionable circumstances, as you will see) to teach the US Army how to build rockets. Sergei Korolev was a celebrated Russian engineer in his own right, who was once imprisoned as a traitor to his country. By 1957, Korolev and von Braun were on opposite sides of the space race. This world-changing contest would bring stunning victories and tragic losses to both sides as Korolev and von Braun fought to be the first to reach the moon. They were strangers who never met, but their rivalry would alter the contours of science, politics, warfare, and space travel. However, despite their importance to one of the most astounding achievements in human history, crucial details of their lives and work were deliberately hidden from the public for decades.
So what does any of this have to do with you? The space race is over. The United States won when Apollo 11 landed on the moon in July 1969. Surely that’s the end of the story, right? In a way, it’s just the beginning, because von Braun’s and Korolev’s influence is all around us today. The rockets they perfected as spaceships were also intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs)—weapons of mass destruction that can carry nuclear warheads thousands of miles and threaten every life on this planet, including yours.
The tensions at the heart of the space race between the United States and Russia (then known as the Soviet Union) reverberate in the twenty-first century. As I write this book, media headlines from around the world read like a spy thriller. Russia hacked America’s presidential election in 2016 in an attempt to undermine democracy. The American president has been accused of colluding with the Russians to win that election illegally. All the while, 250 miles above Earth, aboard the International Space Station (ISS), American astronauts and Russian cosmonauts routinely cooperate in the name of science. Cooperation between the two countries expanded when the US ended its space shuttle program in 2011. For nine years, the US paid the Russians to carry American astronauts to the ISS aboard their Soyuz rocket, a vehicle originally developed under Sergei Korolev’s leadership in the 1960s. America’s triumphant return to crewed spaceflight from US soil came in May 2020, when the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and its Crew Dragon spacecraft launched NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley and Robert Behnken safely to the ISS.
Against this backdrop, the United States has set its sights on a return to the moon and a crewed landing on the surface of Mars by the 2030s. As humankind prepares to take the next “giant leap” deeper into the cosmos, now is the perfect moment to look back at the once-hidden history of the space race for clues about how to face the future. A new countdown is about to begin. This time, you’ll be there to witness it. How will you record its history?
Stage I
The Quest for Rockets
Chapter 1
The Osenberg List
When the Polish lab technician plunged his hand into the toilet bowl of a University of Bonn bathroom to retrieve a bundle of half-flushed papers, he couldn’t have known he held a clue to one of Hitler’s darkest secrets.
It was late March 1945. Adolf Hitler’s reign of terror was finally drawing to a close, and British intelligence officers had received an important lead on Nazi activity in Bonn, Germany. Communication reports suggested that the University of Bonn’s faculty could be burning evidence that linked them to war crimes. After the Allies overtook the university, the lab technician came forward with the mysterious papers. He told a British soldier that he had discovered them shoved into a toilet bowl, as if someone had tried to flush them. He had a hunch the documents might be important to the Allies. After all, why would someone try to flush ordinary documents down a toilet?
The lab technician was right to be suspicious. This “toilet paper” was part of a larger file that would come to be known as the Osenberg1 List, a classified roster of Hitler’s most notable—and notorious—scientists and engineers, some of whom had been building a lethal arsenal for the Nazis, like stockpiles of
biological weapons capable of infecting and killing an entire population. Others were doctors who had conducted unspeakable experiments on concentration camp prisoners, and engineers who designed Hitler’s high-tech mechanical weapons. If the Allies could locate these valuable military assets and interrogate their inventors, they could use the information to better protect their troops from Nazi attacks and learn their secrets as well. One engineer in particular was of great interest to the American army, and among the most wanted men in the world: Dr. Wernher von Braun. As the Nazis’ genius rocket designer, he had invented the A-4 rocket, one of the deadliest weapons in Hitler’s arsenal of Wunderwaffen, or “wonder weapons.” The vehicle was renamed to match the terror it inspired. They called it the V-2.
The V stood for vengeance.
At almost four stories tall, this marvel of aeronautical engineering was the world’s first ballistic missile. It was loaded with explosives and launched into a vertical arc, or trajectory, its powerful engine thrusting the rocket to an altitude of fifty miles—the edge of outer space—making it the first man-made object to reach such an altitude. After its fuel reserves were exhausted, the rocket turned and plummeted back toward the Earth, propelled by gravity at more than five times the speed of sound, too fast to be detected or stopped.
A V-2 rocket launches from the Peenemünde Army Research Center, around 1937.
The Germans had used the V-2 missiles, each one capped with a one-ton warhead, to bombard Paris, London, and Antwerp, Belgium, since early September 1944. The constant threat of deadly V-2 attacks terrorized Western Europe. The British government ordered mass evacuations of its cities and issued millions of gas masks to civilians. People lived in a state of fear. But as deadly and destructive as the bombings were to populated cities, the V-2 had been deployed too late in the war to help Hitler defeat the Allies. Their persistent bombing campaigns from traditional aircraft were already overwhelming the Germans.
Von Braun’s technology was years ahead of that of any other country in the world, and the American government had no intention of allowing it to be seized by the other Allied nations, especially the Soviet Union. The US-Soviet alliance against Hitler had been temporary as they fought to defeat their common enemy. The United States and the USSR knew that the deep philosophical differences between them would continue to divide the two countries after the war ended. The Soviet Union was a communist country intent on spreading its communist ideals to other nations. In contrast, the US wanted to contain communism at any cost in order to ensure the advancement of American capitalism around the world. This fundamental disagreement was positioned as freedom and democracy versus communism. But that was propaganda. In truth, it was communism versus capitalism.
Securing the V-2 for the US was crucial for another reason: military power. If the rocket could be paired with America’s new nuclear weapon, the United States would become the greatest military force in the world. But where were the weapons manufactured? How many V-2s did Germany have?
And most important: Where was the V-2’s inventor, Dr. Wernher von Braun?
CLASSIFIED INTELLIGENCE DOSSIER
TOP SECRET
DO NOT COPY!
Von Braun, 1930s.
Subject: DR. WERNHER VON BRAUN
Status: Wanted by governments of the Allies as the mastermind of the Nazis’ V-2 weapon.
Date and Place of Birth: March 23, 1912, Wirsitz, Germany
Occupation: Technical director of the Nazis’ Peenemünde Army Research Center
Family: The middle child in an aristocratic German landholding family. Parents are Emmy von Braun and Magnus von Braun Sr. He has two siblings: Magnus von Braun Jr. and Sigismund von Braun.
Education: Earned a PhD in physics from the University of Berlin by the age of twenty-two. His dissertation on liquid-fuel rockets was considered so sensitive to national interests that the German army code-named and classified it.
Party Affiliation: Member of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (aka the Nazi Party) since 1937.
Other Affiliations: SS-Sturmbannführer (major) in the SS (Schutzstaffel, or Protection Squad); Originally established as Adolf Hitler’s personal bodyguard unit, it would later become both the elite guard of the Nazi Reich and Hitler’s executive force, prepared to “carry out all security-related duties, without regard for legal restraint.”
Special Skills: Experienced pilot; avid horseman; sailor
Location: Unknown . . .
Chapter 2
The Honored Nazi
THREE MONTHS EARLIER . . .
NORTHWESTERN GERMANY, NEAR THE VILLAGE OF OSTERWICK
From the outside, eight-hundred-year-old Castle Varlar looked like it belonged in a fairy tale. As the well-dressed guests arrived on the night of December 9, 1944, they admired its grand medieval architecture. The rolling, snow-covered grounds had once been home to a monastery, a holy place of worship. But inside the castle, the idyllic setting crumbled into a sinister reality. Red-black-and-white Nazi flags covered the walls. No detail had been spared, down to the eagle-and-swastika emblem on each china place setting around the lavish banquet table. The formal affair at the castle would be a night to remember, filled with food, drink, and, later, fireworks.2
The Nazis were celebrating. Four of Hitler’s best technical minds, including his star rocket engineer, Dr. Wernher von Braun, were receiving the Knight’s Cross of the War Service Cross, one of Hitler’s highest noncombat honors. With wavy blond hair, blue eyes, and an athletic build, the thirty-two-year-old von Braun looked more like a movie star than an intellectual that night. He came from a wealthy German pedigree, embodying Hitler’s twisted ideal of a white master race.
Also among the honorees was von Braun’s boss and mentor, Walter Dornberger, an engineer and general in the German army. He invented a mobile launchpad for the V-2, a revolutionary contribution that made it possible to fire the weapon quickly and from almost any location. Dornberger had recruited von Braun at the age of nineteen to work for the German army. The skilled soldier and operative taught his brilliant but idealistic protégé how to navigate the complexities of working within the Nazi regime.
Wernher von Braun’s trademark confidence and charm would have been on full display during the party. He reveled in the spotlight and lavished attention on others, making a person feel as if they were the only one in the room who mattered. When crossing paths with fellow SS officers, he would have raised his right hand in the Nazi salute and said, “Heil Hitler,” in his distinctly nasal voice, a sound mismatched to his broad, six-foot frame.
The partygoers assembled and the ceremony began. After the first of the four medals was awarded, the hall was abruptly plunged into darkness. The diners watched as the drapes of a large nearby window were whisked open, as if to reveal a stage. Outside, a mobile launchpad with its V-2 rocket had been moved into full view of the captivated spectators. Its liquid fuel ignited, and “the room was suddenly lit with the flickering light of the rocket’s exhaust,” Walter Dornberger recalled. As the V-2 roared upward and disappeared into the sky, the reverberations from the missile’s engine shook the old castle’s walls. After each of the three remaining Knight’s Cross medals was awarded, the scene was repeated, and another V-2 was launched in honor of the recipient.
The rockets that launched from Castle Varlar that night were more than elaborate special effects, however. They were weapons of mass destruction, targeting the city of Antwerp, Belgium, in order to weaken its port, a crucial asset of the Allies.
The City of Sudden Death
The V-2s launched from Castle Varlar would reach Antwerp in a matter of minutes. Just 137 miles away, eighteen-year-old Charles Ostyn worked in the city as a drafting apprentice. “It was like a streak from a comet,” he said of witnessing the V-2 in flight. “As fast as a shooting star.”
Fast and deadly. In contrast to Ostyn’s poetic description of the V-2’s flight, its impact was a sickening spectacle of crumbled buildings and wailing sirens. Emer
gency vehicles raced to the scene, and medical personnel scrambled to bandage the bleeding. The dead were hauled out of the rubble as scraps of clothing, metal, and glass debris rained down on the devastation. There had been no warning, no time for an alarm, because the rocket traveled faster than the speed of sound. In a cruel twist of the laws of physics, the whine of the V-2’s approach was heard too late to serve as a warning; the sound arrived after the missile had already exploded.
V-2s also rained fire on London and Paris during the war. But because of its strategic importance to the Allies, Antwerp endured the worst of Hitler’s V-2 attacks—and was hit with nearly two thousand vengeance weapons. Some 3,700 civilians were killed. Belgians nicknamed it the “City of Sudden Death,” since the bombings happened frequently and without warning. Life in Antwerp left people like Ostyn terrified, without any hope that the relentless bombings would end.
Back at Castle Varlar, though, the awestruck party guests had no idea that von Braun was privately conspiring to betray Hitler. He and a handful of loyal coconspirators planned to abandon Germany and surrender to the United States. The decision had been made almost a year earlier, in January 1944, when von Braun convened a secret meeting of his most trusted associates to discuss the future of the V-2 rocket. Two things had become clear to them. First, Germany was going to lose the war. Hitler had initially doubted the V-2’s capacity to turn the tide in his favor and delayed its deployment. By the time he was convinced of the rocket’s potential, his empire known as the Third Reich was in tatters, barely holding its own against the Allies.
Second, the group agreed that no matter what happened in the final months of the war, von Braun’s visionary rocket development work must not be destroyed when Germany fell. They were secret partners in a dream to use the V-2 for something more inspiring than warfare. Because of its ability to climb to the edge of outer space, the V-2 was the world’s first glimpse of interplanetary travel. This weapon of mass destruction also had the potential to be a humanitarian tool of scientific discovery. It was a bold and ambitious dream with world-changing possibilities—and life-and-death stakes. If anyone found out what they were plotting, the conspirators could be accused of treason, arrested, and executed.