Anonymous ID: 14dc6f Aug. 30, 2018, 4:57 p.m. No.2806849   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The project was a follow-on to very successful Corona satellite program and a complement to the higher-resolution Gambit satellite.

 

All these programs required 315,000 feet of film to be dropped in re-entry vehicles from orbit and retrieved in mid-air by U.S. forces. Gambit and Hexagon were declassified late this year, and its engineers were profiled this week by the Associated Press.

 

Hexagon was known as "Big Bird" and up to 1,000 Perkin-Elmer employees worked on the program during its peak in the 1970s. Almost nothing was known about the program, except for scraps of information that leaked out to reporters. For example, in 1977, the AP reported, "At present, the United States has only one Big Bird reconnaissance satellite at a time in orbit. If the Big Bird were to be destroyed by surprise attack, it might be months before the Air Force could replace it." It was also known by the likes of William Safire that our satellites could "read the license plates on the cars of Kremlin officials." But what was known was mostly lore: "the American Big Bird… is said to be able to photograph from 100 miles up people walking the streets of Moscow."

 

Literally the C_A's Eyes in the Sky.