The Denver Post

World’s largest plane becomes a casualty of war in Ukraine

- By Jeffrey Gettleman

BUCHA, UKRAINE » The day war broke out, one of Ukraine’s most decorated pilots stepped onto the balcony of his three-story home to watch a battle raging at a nearby airport.

From where he was standing, the pilot, Oleksandr Halunenko, could see the explosions and feel the shudders. The Russians were invading his country, and he was worried about something close to his heart. Mriya.

The plane.

In a hangar a few miles away rested the world’s largest airplane, so special that only one was ever built. Its name is Mriya, pronounced Mer-ee-ah, which in Ukrainian means The Dream. With its six jet engines, twin tail fins and a wingspan nearly as long as a football field, Mriya hauled gargantuan amounts of cargo across the world, mesmerizin­g crowds wherever it landed. It was an airplane celebrity, aviation enthusiast­s say, and widely beloved. It was also a cherished symbol of Ukraine.

Halunenko was Mriya’s first pilot and loved it like a child. He has turned his home into a Mriya shrine — pictures and paintings and models of the aircraft hang in every room.

But that morning, he had a terrible feeling.

“I saw so many bombs and so much smoke,” he said. “I knew Mriya could not survive.”

The war in Ukraine, not even 2 months old, has destroyed so much: thousands of lives, entire families, happiness and security for countless people.

But it also has destroyed material things that mean a lot — homes burned to the ground; supermarke­ts that fed communitie­s smashed by shelling; toys and prized possession­s scorched beyond recognitio­n.

In the case of Mriya, which took a direct hit during the pivotal battle at that airport, the damage to the aircraft has stirred an incredible outpouring of what can be described only as grief. Heartbroke­n airplane buffs around the world are getting Mriya tattoos. A sad cartoon has been circulatin­g, with tears streaming out of Mriya’s eyes.

But there may be no one as broken up as Halunenko, who comes from a generation in which emotions are not so easily shared.

“If I were not a man,” he said, “I would cry.”

Halunenko, 76, was a child of the Cold War. His father was a Russian army captain, his mother a Ukrainian peasant. Both died when he was young.

At boarding school in southeaste­rn Ukraine, he took flying lessons and discovered he had a gift. He became a MIG-21 fighter pilot and, later, an elite Soviet test pilot. He captained all kinds of aircraft, from sleek new fighter planes to powerful freighters but nothing as grand as what he soon would fly.

In the 1980s, the Soviet leadership was eager to get back into the space race. Engineers designed a reusable spacecraft called the Buran that looked like the U.S. space shuttle.

But the components were spread all around — the shuttle was constructe­d in Moscow, the rockets were made hundreds of miles away, and the launchpad was in

Kazakhstan. The only feasible way to get everything in the same place was to fly the shuttle and the rockets on the back of a plane, a really big one.

And so, at the Antonov aviation company production plant in Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, Mriya was born. It made its first flight in 1988, Halunenko at the controls.

At 276 feet long and six stories high, the plane, designated AN-225, was bigger than any other in the sky. It boasted 32 landing wheels and a wingspan of 290 feet. Its maximum takeoff weight stood at a staggering 1.4 million pounds, far more than a fully loaded 747. Its nose cone flipped up so that big objects, such as turbine blades or even smaller jets, could be slid into its cavernous belly.

There are different ways to measure size, but experts said Mriya was longer and heavier than other giant aircraft.

“The AN-225 absolutely was the largest airplane ever built, of any type, for any use,” said Shea Oakley, an aviation historian in New Jersey. “People came out to see this airplane wherever it flew just to marvel at the size of the thing.”

Halunenko, whose grizzly white beard makes him resemble a late-in-life Ernest Hemingway, smiled as he remembered an air show in Oklahoma more than 30 years ago.

“It takes a lot to impress the Americans,” he said. “But I’ll never forget the crowds lined up to see us.

“And no one knew where Kyiv was,” he laughed.

Mriya wasn’t easy to fly, especially with a space shuttle strapped to its back. It turned

in wide arcs — Halunenko held his arms straight out like wings and rocked side to side. On the ground it was hard to dock.

After the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the shuttle program went down with it. Mriya was repurposed into a gigantic flying workhorse. It hauled generators, vast pieces of glass, stupendous quantities of medical supplies and even battle tanks.

And the Ukrainians kept tinkering with it. In 2001, Halunenko broke more aviation records, including for the heaviest cargo load (253.8 tons) ever lifted in the air. The plane also holds the world record for transporti­ng the longest piece of air cargo — a 138-foot turbine blade — and hosting the highest altitude art exhibition.

By 2004, Halunenko, who was awarded the acclaimed Hero of Ukraine medal, retired as its pilot. But Mriya carried on. In the past two years, it made hundreds of flights, often stuffed with COVID-19 supplies. For one journey to Poland, 80,000 people livestream­ed the landing. With a new paint job, the yellow and blue of the Ukrainian flag, Mriya was Ukraine’s winged ambassador to the world.

Its last mission came Feb. 2, delivering COVID-19 test kits from China to Europe before returning to its base in Hostomel, said Dmytro Antonov, one of its latest pilots.

“She was in great operating shape,” he said. “We were expecting at least 15 to 25 more years out of her.”

As the war neared, U.S. intelligen­ce officials warned Ukraine that the Russians planned to seize the Hostomel airport, not far from Kyiv. Hostomel has a long runway that the Russians wanted so that they could fly in thousands of troops.

Mriya’s owners discussed moving the plane to a safer location, Antonov said, but it never happened. Company officials declined to comment on the decision, saying it was under investigat­ion.

At 6:30 a.m. Feb. 24, the day the war started, Russian missiles slammed into a national guard base near Hostomel airport. A few hours later, Russian helicopter­s blasted the airport with more missiles that hit the hangars where Mriya and other airplanes were stored, Ukrainian soldiers said.

“But we didn’t know Mriya was still here,” said Sgt. Stanislav Petriakov, a soldier at the airport. “We thought Mriya had been moved.”

A pitched battle broke out, but the Ukrainians soon ran out of ammunition and retreated to a forest.

It is not clear how Mriya was destroyed. Ukrainian soldiers said that they intentiona­lly shelled the runway to prevent the Russians from using it. The Ukrainians said it was not their shells that hit Mriya, whose hangar is about 700 meters from the runway. When asked who he thought hit the plane, Antonov, the pilot, said, “Nobody knows.”

For the next month, as the Russians occupied and brutalized Bucha, where Halunenko has lived for more than 20 years, the old pilot stood his ground. He lectured the young Russian soldiers who searched his house not to point their guns at him, and at times, he defied their orders to stay inside.

But he couldn’t stop thinking about Mriya.

“She’s like my child,” he said. “I taught her to fly.”

When the Russians finally left at the end of March, Halunenko stayed away from the airport. Until Sunday evening.

That’s when he stepped past burned trucks, and with shoes crunching over pieces of metal and glass he walked across a battlefiel­d of debris toward the plane.

Slowly he approached the plane.

It was a mangled fuselage with a huge hole ripped out of its middle, a nose cone sliced up by shrapnel, a wing torn open and his captain’s chair lost in a tangle of blackened metal and ash.

Halunenko simply stood there, his face a blank screen.

His wife, Olha, who had come to support him, whispered: “Oleksandr is a pilot. Right now he’s just processing the informatio­n. Later the emotions will hit him.”

After walking around the plane, he put his hand on one of the burned engines and hung his head down.

“We had hoped she was repairable,” he said. “But now we realize we are saying goodbye.”

However, all might not be lost.

The Ukrainian government, knowing the power of Mriya’s symbolism, has vowed to rebuild her with war reparation­s it hopes to squeeze from Russia.

Unknown to many, there is a second, half-finished Mriya fuselage. The plan, said Yuriy Husyev, chief executive officer of Ukroboronp­rom, the state-owned company that runs Antonov, was to use that fuselage along with salvaged parts from the old Mriya to “build a new dream.”

Halunenko is sober about this, knowing it would take “huge money” to resurrect his old friend.

But sitting in his living room, surrounded by photograph­s of Mriya soaring through crystallin­e skies and parked on snowy airfields, he said, “something else is important here.” “No other country has created such an aircraft,” he said.

Mriya, he added quietly, was Ukraine’s prestige.

 ?? Daniel Berehulak, © The New York Times Co. ?? Oleksandr Halunenko, the first pilot of Mriya, surveys damage to the world's largest cargo aircraft on Sunday at the Antonov airfield in Hostomel, near Kyiv, Ukraine.
Daniel Berehulak, © The New York Times Co. Oleksandr Halunenko, the first pilot of Mriya, surveys damage to the world's largest cargo aircraft on Sunday at the Antonov airfield in Hostomel, near Kyiv, Ukraine.
 ?? Photos by Daniel Berehulak, © The New York Times Co. ?? The wreckage of Mriya, the world's largest cargo aircraft, litters the Antonov airfield in Hostomel, near Kyiv, Ukraine.
Photos by Daniel Berehulak, © The New York Times Co. The wreckage of Mriya, the world's largest cargo aircraft, litters the Antonov airfield in Hostomel, near Kyiv, Ukraine.
 ?? ?? Oleksandr Halunenko holds a replica of Mriya and the Soviet reusable spacecraft Buran on Monday at his home in Bucha.
Oleksandr Halunenko holds a replica of Mriya and the Soviet reusable spacecraft Buran on Monday at his home in Bucha.

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