State Department Press Release No. 249 Concerning U-2 Incident
This press release contains the text of a note delivered by the American Embassy in Moscow to the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs reiterating the cover story for the missing U-2 spy plane piloted by Gary Powers.
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OCR Page 1 of 2DEPARTMENT OF STATE
MAY 6, 1960
FOR THE PRESS
NO. 249
The following is the text of a note delivered today by
the American Embassy at Moscow to the Soviet Ministry of Foreign
Affairs:
The Embassy of the United States of America by instruction
of its Government has the honor to state the following:
The United States Government has noted the statement of
the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics, N. S. Khrushchev, in his speech
before the Supreme Soviet on May 5 that a foreign aircraft
crossed the border of the Soviet Union on May 1 and that on
orders of the Soviet Government, this aircraft was shot down.
In this same statement it was said that investigation showed
that it was a United States plane.
As already announced on May 3, a United States National
Aeronautical Space Agency unarmed weather research plane based
at Adana, Turkey, and piloted by a civilian American has been
missing since May 1. The name of the American civilian pilot
is Francis Gary Powers, born on August 17, 1929, at Jenkins,
Kentucky.
In the light of the above the United States Government
requests the Soviet Government to provide it with full facts
of the Soviet investigation of this incident and to inform it
of the fate of the pilot.
*
State--RD, Wash. D.C.
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