I don't recall any serious suggestion there was a B-17 in Russia in the early eighties. Being pre- Glasnost and pre- western earning mafia, it sounds unlikely and unconnected to later rumours and real recovered other aircraft types in the 1990s.
Steve Nelson wrote:
Although the Russians pressured the U.S. for four-engine bombers under lend-lease, I understand the American government refused to supply the Soviet Union with anything that would give them a genuine strategic capability.
Got me thinking there. Of course the Russians did have a four engine heavy, but the nature of the war they chose to fight tactical equipment remained a higher priority, and while the Pe-8 was a competitive type in the early war, by the time the US arrived it was probably superseded. I'm not aware they were seriously after strategic kit, although I'm sure they'd have asked for
anything and if they were given B-24 and B-17s they'd have been used tactically.
Interesting though:
Quote:
The USSR had no plans for strategic bombardment, and only a few Pe-8 attacks on Germany were flown, the first on 11 August 1941 when aircraft of the 81 DBAD (Long Range Bomber Division) bombed Berlin. Most Pe-8 attacks on Berlin were 'nuisance' bombings involving only a handful of aircraft (e.g. 14 in the first raid). It was used in the strategic bomber role to attack targets in German-held Eastern Europe and as a tactical bomber to support ground forces in the battles of Stalingrad and Kursk. The Pe-8 at first equipped a single bomber regiment, the 432 BAP (ON) (432nd Special Bomber Regiment) and its reserve unit, the 433rd; they were later reorganized into the 746 and 890 BAP (Bomber Regiments).

Quote:
The Pe-8's most important claim to fame is flying Soviet foreign minister Molotov and his delegation from Moscow to London and Washington DC and back for talks on the opening of a second front against Nazi Germany (May 19-Jun 13th, 1942), on the return trip crossing German-controlled airspace without incident.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petlyakov_Pe-8
Intriguing when you consider the Soviets had broken quite a lot of fresh ground with 'large aircraft' from the Great War into the 1930s.
Regards,