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A Cold War Encounter Over the North Pole

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
January 13, 2026 3:01 am

A Cold War Encounter Over the North Pole

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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January 13, 2026 3:01 am

A veteran shares his story of flying a B-50 bomber as a weather plane close to Russia's airspace during the Cold War, where he encountered Russian MiG fighters and had to navigate a potentially deadly situation.

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by a veteran who flew on weather planes close to Russia. over the North Pole. Take it away, Rich. When I first met James, he was already an old man. Yeah.

And what he had done was he had signed up with our internet service as the customer. Yeah. Well, this is back in the uh, well, early 90s actually, mid-90s, somewhere around in there, and People of James Caliber didn't exactly take nicely to computers, so sometimes they did things that they needed some help with. Mm-hmm.

Well, he called and I realized that I needed to drop by and help him.

Well, in this case, he was living in senior housing and it wasn't that far from the college. I told him I'd drop by after work. And he was living in one of the senior citizens' apartments, nothing too exciting, you know. And his computer was sitting there on a Bot from Kmart desk.

Now, one of the things I noticed right away when I walked in was his furnishings. One of the walls was an air chart. and it had what looked like the northern coast of the Soviet Union on it. And here's penciled in in red is a course, and it skirted the coast barely inside International Airspace. He had a navigational slide ruler there, he had some other things there, and he had a photograph of what at first glance looked like a B-29 bomber.

He scored me away real quick on that. He said, No, it's not a B29. You ever heard of the B50? Of course I have. The B-50 was an attempt by Boeing to keep the production line going.

Now these were the same guys that built the B-29. And they were always doing upgrades on the plane and stuff like that.

Well what they did was they took the B twenty nine, gave it a higher tail service, better metal, more powerful engines, that kind of stuff, and they said it was a whole new bomber.

Well, the Air Force bought it. Why? Because they needed something to be able to deliver the atom bomb to Russia if they needed it to.

Now, it turned out the B-50 would be the last of the fully piston-powered bombers the Air Force ever had. After that, they would replace it with things like the B36, the B47, and of course, ultimately the B52.

So now they had these airplanes sitting around that were basically new, they gave them other missions. Maybe not as a bomber, but certainly they could do reconnaissance work and they could do weather work.

Well, James went on to tell me: he said, I was a navigator on what they call a WB-50.

Now the W stands for weather. I looked at the map a little bit and said, that's the Russian coast. He said, yeah, it is, isn't it? What he's telling me is that they used to fly the B-50 up over the pole to collect weather data. And he said it was important for a couple of reasons.

One, he said they had to go out there and know what the weather is just in case something kicked off between the United States and Russia. He said, know what the weather looked like for our bombers going in.

Now some of the work he did Help make things like the U-2 flights possible, you know, like the one that Francis Gary Powers did. And of course, I was very familiar with Gary Powers and his disastrous flight. Another thing he told me was they sniffed the air looking for evidence of atomic testing. If he saw an increase in fallout, it was a pretty sure bet that the Russians had tested an atomic bomb someplace. He also said that some of the B-50s were fitted out to monitor radio transmissions, radar transmissions.

The idea was to go in there and you'll be able to get what the frequencies were on their radars and stuff like that, anything particular about it. That way they had a better chance of defeating it.

Some had high-resolution cameras. They looked for things. But here's plain, they're all about weather.

Now, one of the things he pointed out, he said their job was extremely ticklish. I mean, they're flying right there, right there on the cusp of international airspace. Off a little bit, maybe a mile or so.

Well, guess what? They're in Russian airspace. At that point, it became legal prey for Russian fighters. Instead, the problem is that incidents had happened. Everybody in the military community knew about it.

And it's on both sides of the equation. The Russians were doing the same thing to us. We didn't we intercepted and down some of their aircraft. They intercepted and down some of our aircraft. Why?

Because of navigational errors and stuff like that.

So too close in. They're prey for the fighters. Too far out, they don't know what the weather looks like.

So he had to be on the ball. on his course. It'd fly right along the edge here.

Now, he's pretty sure the Russians didn't like them being there. After all, this is a bomber. Is flying right there on the edge of their airspace.

So they didn't actually see him as a direct threat. They probably were pretty sure it was a weather plane. Like I said, since it was a bomber, they had to make sure. And so. Every once in a while They've your company.

He said they were flying over the pole during the middle of the day. And he remembered the sky was amazingly clear. I mean, it was so clear, it was, you know, it was astonishing. Not a single cloud anywhere. And they're flying along at about 25,000 feet.

And of course, the B-50 was pressurized, so you didn't have to wear a mask and stuff. And if you looked out the window of where he was sitting, he could look out and see this huge expanse of ice. You can see lines crossing it, you know, where they looked like roads, but they were really pressure ridges, where the ice was coming together and buckling up and stuff like that. If you looked out the other side, you'll see Russia. I mean he could see snow, he could see mountains, and in places he could even see sunlight glinting off of glass or metal or something like that.

So far, their flight had been routine. Nothing exciting, nothing right home about. The engines were going, they were doing their job, talking back and forth, and he kept checking their position constantly. He had said they had to make absolutely certain they were inside international airspace. And then he remembers the pilot making an announcement.

We've got company. And he got up, he looked out of his small portal, and off to one side, maybe 100, 150 yards out, there was a MiG-19. And you can see the red star painted on it. Here's the pilot. You can see the pilot, you know, he's got his goggles on, he's got an oxygen mask on.

He's looking at the B-50 like, oh my God, what a big target. And then somebody else said we got another on the other side. And he went and went and looked out the other window and sure enough there was another MIG out there. And he said we flew that way for several minutes. He kept looking out the fire off one wing, you look at the other one and stuff, and he noticed the one on one side was starting to get a little bit closer to him.

It was like he was trying to herd him into Russian airspace. He reported that the pilot said, Yeah, I've been watching him. Started to crowds just a little bit, but the thing was. You maintain your course. I mean, the instinctive thing is to try to maintain your distance.

The problem is, if they. try to maintain their distance. You know, hit her and run into Russian airspace and at that point, guess what? It's open season on him. And finally, the mix stops.

Maybe 20 meters beyond their wings, so like that. And it flew that way for several minutes. And you know, he's sitting there, you know, this is really getting kind of nervous for him because he knew the B50 set up a little bit of a slipstream. And it would be very easy for the something something as small as the MIG to get sucked into it. If that happened, there was a danger of an air collision, and both sides would lose.

You know, he just knew that it was scary and he had to do something about it. And he's there nervous stuck there and finally he did the only thing he could think of. He held his middle finger out. put it up to the window, and held it towards the plane. He says he doubts very much the Russian ever saw it.

I mean, let's be honest about it. The Russians out there, bright sunlight. He's sitting inside a dark airplane, you know, sunlight glitting off the metal, stuff like that. No chance you ever saw it. But he said it sure made him feel good.

After that, they saw more mix.

Sometimes they maintained their distance, sometimes they wouldn't. He compared it this way. He said, You know, it was... Routine, but at the same time there was nothing routine about it. You just kind of got used to it.

He says, look like a shark following a sailboat. As long as no one does anything stupid. It's going to be okay in the end. And that's James's story about the Mig. And what a story that Richard Munez told about his pal James.

And I can just see James in my own mind. Clipping a Russian MiG pilot the bird. and whether he saw it or not. What a beautiful image. And of course, we know what the MiGs were trying to do, right?

Crowd him into Russian airspace.

so they could take him down. We love telling these stories. This one, again, comes from WHO. A listener there, Richard Munis, thanks so much for your contribution. If you have stories about American heroes, men, women, in combat or non-combat positions, share them.

Send them to ouramericanstories.com. They are truly some of our favorites. The story of James and his B-50 bomber and a Russian MIG here. on our American stories. The new year brings new health goals and wealth goals.

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Mm-hmm.

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