But against all odds, Powers emerged from the wreckage and was seized by the KGB.
He confessed to espionage charges, revealing to the world that Eisenhower had just lied to the American people--and to the
Soviet Premier.
Infuriated, Nikita Khrushchev slammed the door on a rare opening in Cold War relations.
In A Brotherhood of Spies, award-winning journalist Monte Reel reveals how the U-2 spy program, principally devised by four men working in secret, upended the Cold War and carved a
new mission for the CIA.
This secret fraternity, made up of Edwin Land, best known as the inventor of instant photography and the head of Polaroid Corporation; Kelly Johnson, a hard-charging taskmaster from Lockheed;
Richard Bissell, the secretive and ambitious spymaster;
and ace Air Force flyer Powers, set out to replace yesterday's fallible human spies with tomorrow's undetectable eye in the sky.
Their clandestine successes and all-too-public failures make this brilliantly reported account a true-life thriller with the highest stakes and tragic repercussions.
368 pages.