Inside CIA's Secret China Spy Mission

Back in the day, America’s spies didn’t have the kind of surveillance satellites that can pinpoint you from orbit. The CIA had to rely on much rougher methods like climbing the Himalayan mountains. In theory, it was an ideal place to put sensor devices and spy on China. It also nearly ended in complete failure.

 

It was 1965, and the Pentagon and CIA were worried. The Vietnam War was beginning to ramp up. The People’s Republic of China had recently conducted its first nuclear test, but intelligence was limited. Chinese missile tests were being conducted at a secretive facility a few hundred miles north of the Himalayan mountains, but intelligence estimates for the missiles’ range — and compatibility with nuclear warheads — was unclear. The mountain range blocked ground-based sensors, which could have picked up the missiles’ radio telemetry signals. Worse, Pakistan had just kicked out America’s spy planes, and precision satellite imagery was still primitive.

 

There was another option. Two years prior, the first successful American expedition to the summit of Mount Everest had completed its trip with a small team of Sherpa guides. Gen. Curtis “Bombs Away” LeMay, the Air Force’s top officer and who secured some funding for the 1963 expedition, wanted to know if the mountaineers would go back.

 

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