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==Ballistic missiles== Korolev was commissioned into the [[Red Army]] with the rank of [[polkovnik|colonel]] in 1945; his first military decoration was the Badge of Honor, awarded in 1945 for his work on the development of rocket motors for military aircraft. On 8 September 1945, Korolev was brought to Germany along with many other experts to recover the technology of the German [[V-2 rocket]].{{sfn|Harford|1997}} The Soviets [[German influence on the Soviet space program|worked with German specialists]] to understand and replicate the rocket technology, placing a priority on recreating the entire German [[V-2 rocket]]. In February 1946 the Institute Nordhausen was formed, with Korolev as Chief Engineer, Glushko as head of Engine assembly and propulsion systems and German [[Helmut Gröttrup]], who previously worked with [[Wernher von Braun]], as General Director.<ref name="RSW_SovietinGermany">{{cite web |last1=Zak |first1=Anatoly |title=Soviet rocket research in Germany after World War II |url=http://www.russianspaceweb.com/rockets_ussr_germany.html |website=Russian Space Web |access-date=28 June 2022 |archive-date=14 February 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160214151928/http://www.russianspaceweb.com/rockets_ussr_germany.html |url-status=live }}</ref> The work continued in [[East Germany]] until late 1946, when 2,000+ German scientists and engineers were sent to the USSR through [[Operation Osoaviakhim]]. Most of the German experts, Gröttrup being an exception, had not worked directly with [[Wernher von Braun]]. Many of the leading German rocket scientists, including Dr. von Braun himself, surrendered to Americans and were transported to the United States as part of [[Operation Paperclip]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Sputnik Biographies--Sergei P. Korolev (1906-1966)|url=https://history.nasa.gov/sputnik/korolev.html|access-date=16 June 2020|website=history.nasa.gov}}</ref> Stalin made rocket and missile development a national priority upon signing a decree on 13 May 1946,{{sfn|Harford|1997}} and a new institute called Scientific Research Institute No. 88 ([[NII-88]]) was created for that purpose, in the suburbs of Moscow. Development of [[ballistic missile]]s was placed under the military control of [[Dmitriy Ustinov]] through the decree signed by Stalin, and Ustinov appointed Korolev as chief designer of long-range missiles at Department No. 3 of NII-88.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=40-41}} During this period Korolev demonstrated his organisation and management capabilities by organising a "Council of Chief Designers", which assisted in circumnavigating the bureaucratic hierarchy of the Soviet missile industry. This group eventually assumed engineering control over the early [[Soviet space program]].{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=47}} Korolev returned from Germany in February 1947 and took up his duties as chief designer and Head of Department No 3 of NII-88, initially tasked with reproduction of the V-2. The Soviets were only able to obtain parts to assemble approximately a dozen V-2 rockets, so the decision was made to replicate a Soviet version, which was designated the [[R-1 (missile)|R-1]]. Initially Korolev opposed this decision as he thought it was a waste of time and they should move immediately to manufacture a more advanced version, which had been designated the [[R-2 (missile)|R-2]]. However Korolev was overruled and was ordered to assemble what V-2s they had for flight testing, then create the R-1 using Soviet infrastructure and materials. NII-88 also incorporated 170+ German specialists{{snd}}including Helmut Gröttrup and [[Fritz Karl Preikschat]]{{snd}} with approximately half based at Branch 1 of NII-88 on [[Gorodomlya Island]] in [[Lake Seliger]] some {{convert|200|km}} from Moscow. The Germans provided a variety of support to the Soviet efforts, particularly on assembling the V-2 and creating the R-1.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=41-49}} The first Soviet tests of V-2 rockets took place in October 1947 at [[Kapustin Yar]], with Korolev as management lead for the project. Numerous German engineers also participated in the tests. A total of 11 V-2 rockets were launched, with 5 reaching their designated targets.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=55-56}}{{sfn|Chertok|2005|p=36-38 Vol 2}} In September 1948 testing of the R-1 began at Kapustin Yar, where Korolev was a formal member of the "State Commission for testing the R-1". No Germans participated in these tests, which launched 9 rockets between September and November 1948.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=61-62}} [[File:Korolev Kurchatov Keldysh.jpg|thumb|right| "Chief Designer" Korolev (left) with "father of the Soviet atomic bomb" [[Igor Kurchatov]] (centre) and "Chief Theoretician" [[Mstislav Keldysh]] (right), 1956 ]] Korolev continued to lobby for the design and construction of the R-2, including meeting with [[Stalin]] in April 1947, but faced competition from a proposal from the Germans, called the G-1. Whilst the German proposal was initially supported by Soviet management, Korolev opposed utilising German specialists for personal reasons and basically ignored their suggestions and advice. Due to political and security concerns, German specialists were not allowed knowledge or access to any Soviet missile design{{sfn|Chertok|2005|p=57 Vol 2}} and in December 1948 work on the G-1 proposal was terminated.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=63}} The Ministry of Defence decided to dissolve the German team in 1950 and repatriated the German engineers and their families between December 1951 and November 1953.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=82}} In April 1948 the go ahead for "scientific and experimental work" was approved, which led to the creation of the R-2. The [[R-2 rocket|R-2]] doubled the range of the V-2, and was the first design to utilize a separable warhead. This was followed by the R-3, which had a range of {{convert|3000|km}}, and thus could target England.{{sfn|Siddiqi|2000|p=57-61}} Glushko couldn't obtain the required thrust from the R-3 engines, so the project was canceled in 1952. Korolev joined the [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Soviet Communist Party]] that year to request money from the government for future projects including the [[R-5 missile|R-5]], with a more modest {{convert|1200|km}} range. It completed a first successful flight by 1953. The world's first true [[intercontinental ballistic missile]] (ICBM) was the [[R-7 Semyorka]]. This was a two-stage rocket with a maximum payload of 5.4 tons, sufficient to carry the Soviets' bulky [[Nuclear weapon|nuclear bomb]] an impressive distance of {{convert|7000|km}}. During the summer of 1957, the first three launches of the R-7 all failed, severely demoralizing Korolev and his colleagues. The failures also jeopardized his position and dream of using an R-7 to launch an artificial satellite in the future.<ref name=":2" /> The fourth test, completed on 21 August 1957, was finally able to deliver a dummy payload to the [[Kamchatka Peninsula]]. The Soviet news agency [[TASS]] made a brief announcement about the ICBM's success, but it was largely ignored or dismissed by members of the American public and media.<ref name=":2" /> Because of Korolev's success with the R-7 and because the Soviet Union had successfully created the ICBM before the United States of America, he was nationally recognized by the Soviet Union, although his name was kept secret. However, despite the Soviet R-7 initial success, it experienced later failures as it was not intended to be a practical weapon.{{sfn|Harford|1997}} On 19 April 1957 Korolev was declared fully "[[Rehabilitation (Soviet)|rehabilitated]]", as the government acknowledged that his sentence was unjust.<ref name=esa-father>{{Cite web|title=Sergei Korolev: Father of the Soviet Union's success in space|url=https://www.esa.int/About_Us/ESA_history/50_years_of_humans_in_space/Sergei_Korolev_Father_of_the_Soviet_Union_s_success_in_space|access-date=16 June 2020|website=www.esa.int|language=en}}</ref><ref name=Great/>
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