the_af 6 hours ago

Which security reasons does the article state for not keeping at least one prototype (in a museum, without security-ensitive parts) and the blueprints?

As far as I can tell they only kept part of the nose/cockpit.

Honestly asking, I might have missed it.

  • cf100clunk 5 hours ago

    The article doesn't get into how Soviet spies were uncovered in Canada in the 1950s and 60s. Governments were not being paranoid in the face of those revelations.

    • the_af 3 hours ago

      Right, the spy threat would be the "security reasons" I guessed at.

      But still, wouldn't successful projects which were later decommissioned be more at risk of spies than an unsuccessful project? Yet successful projects do not have their blueprints and airframes routinely destroyed without a trace.

  • kens 4 hours ago

    Interestingly, the nose of the plane was only preserved because someone hid it. It was supposed to be destroyed too.