www. -THE COLD WAR - SPUTNIK - AND SOVIET SPACE DOG LAIKA- .com
November 3rd, 2007 - Commemorating the 50th Anniversary of Russian Space Dog Laika and Her Flight on Sputnik-2

On October 4th, 1957,  Russia shocked the World when it blasted Sputnik-1 into earth orbit as the first artificial satellite.  
Bitter Cold War rivals, American and Russia stood toe to toe, both armed with nuclear bombs and both locked in an
ideological life or death struggle.  Up until this time, America was thought to be the High-Tech leader of the world but the
Russian Sputnik demonstrated a powerful rocket and satellite capability which America didn't have.  With bruised pride,
America felt outclassed by a nation of peasants.  Fear spread throughout the USA, because the powerful Sputnik rocket could
hurl A-bombs right into the heart of America.  Feeling helpless, Americans gazed up at Sputnik as it glided across the twilight
sky.  "Now the Americans sleep under a Russian Moon", boasted leader Nikita Khrushchev.  Exploiting the Russian lead, he
wanted to embarrass America further with his vision of a more magnificent spaceship.  Khrushchev ordered his rocket
engineers to build Sputnik-2 in just three weeks, and this time, a living being should ride the rocket into orbit.  In early
November the special order was met as Khrushchev's cobbled together spaceship was ready for blast-off and a small dog
named Laika was ready to rocket into history on its fire and thunder.  Part of a group of research dogs, she was selected
mainly for her calm nature.  Specially trained, Laika was conditioned to vibration, noise, lengthy confinement and  restricted
movement within small capsules, and also high G centrifuge runs and airplane rides to familiarize her with the sensations of
flight.  Being wired with biomedical sensors and wearing space garments became a way of life for Laika.  She also learned to
eat a food / water mix in jelly form.  (ABOVE)_Cameras flashed as Laika posed for the media on Oct. 27th, and then, after
some coaxing and to the delight of radio listeners, she barked into a microphone
.  Later she was flown from the Moscow
training center to the secret Baikonur launch site.  On the morning of Oct. 31st  she was taken for a walk before being fitted
with space gear.  Chained within the tiny capsule for 65 hours, Laika waited as last minute problems kept Sputnik-2  
grounded on the launch pad.  Finally, on the morning of November 3rd, 1957, the countdown reached zero.  Laika barked at
liftoff as she rode Sputnik-2 into the unknown cosmos and became the first earthling to orbit the planet.  Hastily built, her tiny
capsule was unable to handle the harsh conditions of space and she died of heat stress after surviving for only 5 to 7 hours.  
In truth, there never was a happy homecoming planned for Laika, because, in 1957 the Russians did not know how to return a
space capsule safely to earth.  Entombed inside her capsule, Laika rode the fury of the rocket one way into doom.  In
retrospect, her flight was a politically motivated stunt, less about science and more about beating the Americans.  Meanwhile,
Premier Nikita Khrushchev beamed with delight as Russia beat America once again by orbiting the first biological specimen.  
From street dog to space dog, Laika served her Russian Masters well.  The Sputniks caused a reflex response from America
as President Eisenhower created NASA, and ARPA which later became the WWW as we know it today.  The early Space Age
quickly evolved into a game of who was first.  Competition between Russia and America triggered a technological explosion
which rained back down to Earth for the practical benefit of all Mankind.   Always remember the  small stray dog from the
streets of Moscow, her sacrifice helped lead Humanity into the future, and changed the World forever.
by: Russian Space Observer_ Aaron George Bailey _ Sherwood, Arkansas
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTE_the dotted CUT line above.  The text is purposely off center to adjust for proper printing through the browser.