In 1954, three years before the launch of Sputnik 1, the world's first
satellite, top-secret discussions were held in the United States to plan
the development of military spy satellites, designed to obtain detailed
photography of the Soviet Union's military strength, and its potential
for waging nuclear war. This book takes a detailed look at the
programmes which resulted from the clandestine decision in the US to
build highly secret spy satellites in parallel with civilian space
plans, revealing for the first time previously classified details of the
design and layout of photographic reconnaissance (spy) satellites
including the Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL), America's planned
military space station. The author has obtained declassified material,
lifting the veil of secrecy covering exactly what spy satellites are,
how they operate, what their limitations are and what they look like.
This book focuses on the development of the spy satellites themselves
and on the political arena in which their successes, and failures, were
played out, providing a fascinating insight into a secretive world.