From SFgate, December 15:
The plane was part of a 'super-secret operation'
On a cold, dark night in January 1952, a distress call went out over Death Valley.
“Mayday. Mayday. Mayday. This is Air Force 001 bailing out north of Barstow, California,” an official crash report would later read. Seconds later, six men jumped out of a 16-ton, two-engine, SA-16 Albatross plane into total darkness. The plane — with its backdoor hanging open — continued unmanned for a few moments, eventually crashing into a nearby desert mountain.
More than 70 years later, the metallic carcass is still there.
“The whole setting for it is just bizarre in a post-apocalyptic way,” said Abby Wines, spokesperson for Death Valley National Park. “It’s kind of on its side on a slope. It’s extremely steep. You’re on the ridge that sticks out into Panamint Valley. When you’re looking through and over the plane, there’s this desolate, open space where there’s nothing but the valley and mountains as far as the eye can see.”
But the site, which can still be accessed by very experienced hikers, is just the start. The real story is why the Air Force was flying over Death Valley in the first place: a fantastical tale that involves the most secret corners of the federal government, classified nighttime training flights and Cold War anti-communist agents.
A jump into darkness
If not for the crash, we would know very little, if anything at all, about the formation of the 580th, 581st and 582nd Air Resupply and Communications Wings, also known as ARC Wings.The project was a joint effort between the Air Force and the CIA, part of a “super-secret operation few people knew about in 1952,” according to an article titled “The CIA’s Death Valley Albatross,” which ran in Air Classics magazine in April 1979.
“The CIA was just flying over the park,” said Kimberly Selinske, Death Valley historian. “It wasn’t like they were using the park. They just happened to crash.”
When SFGATE first called Selinske about the Albatross, she was only vaguely familiar with it. But as Death Valley’s first official historian, a trip to the archives yielded scattered papers, an article and one official narrative compiled in the 1970s.....
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