Could the soviets know it was faked but they could not tell it to the world because they are isolated from the rest or because they were losing and nobody wanted to hear them about the landings?
Look up your own newspapers of July 1969 and read what the Soviets said about Apollo 11. It can be exciting to read about news as it was originally written.
Here's what an Australian newspaper said:
The West Australian, Wednesday 23 July 1969, page 8
Congratulations from Kosygin
Moscow, Tuesday
Soviet Prime Minister Alexei Kosygin sent congratulations to the Apollo 11 astronauts and President Nixon yesterday through former vice-president Humphrey, who is visiting Moscow.
Mr Humphrey was called to Mr Kosygin's office in the Kremlin after the moon walk.
Mr Humphrey quoted Mr Kosygin as saying: "I want you to tell the President and the American people that the Soviet Union desires to work with the U.S. in the cause of peace."
Prompt reports
The Russian radio reported the landing of the astronauts within ten minutes of touch-down and announced the ascent from the moon even more promptly. Moscow television showed the moon walk yesterday.
A first screening was edited to blank out the American commentary and the voices of the astronauts. It ended just before the astronauts raised the U.S. flag on the moon's surface.
About two hours later, in another TV broadcast, the sound and the flag raising had been restored.
In Peking, the official newspapers, TV and radio totally ignored Apollo 11, but some Chinese people may have heard of the landing by courtesy of Radio Moscow. A half-hour Chinese-language news broadcast from Moscow gave 30 seconds to the landing.
In London, a man who almost arranged the death of Saturn rocket designer Wernher von Braun sent him a cable of congratulations - and relief.
Politician Duncan Sandys, who planned a raid designed to kill Nazi Germany's major rocket scientists at Peenemunde (one of them Dr von Braun), said: "I am thankful that your illustrious career was not cut short in the bombing raid at Peenemunde 26 years ago."
And a New Zealand newspaper:
Manawatu Evening Standard, Friday 25 July 1969, page 1
Astronauts home — Perfect, but upside down, landing
NZPA Aboard USS Hornet, July 24
Apollo-XI's astronauts, their footprints stamped forever in history, splashed (upside down) "in excellent condition" today to make good America's commitment to walk on the moon in the 1960s.
A beaming President Nixon was aboard the aircraft carrier USS Hornet in the Pacific, 1000 miles southwest of Honolulu, when the epic voyage of the three explorers came to its end.
Civilian Neil Armstrong, aged 38, Air Force Colonel Edwin Aldrin, aged 39, and Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Collins, aged 38, blazed back through the atmosphere and disappeared into the most severe medical quarantine in history. They came back from a voyage of nearly a million miles in space.
The United States top space official, Dr Thomas Paine, administrator at NASA, predicted the Russians would be on the moon too, within 18 months, and urged his countrymen not to "turn inward" and sacrifice interplanetary exploration to internal problems.
Bedlam broke out in many American cities, large and small. Car horns, city and ship sirens screamed and fireworks crackled in San Francisco, where the Mayor, Mr Joseph Alioto, had asked every noise-making device in the city to be turned on for five minutes. Church bells rang in New England.
Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins splashed down a few miles from the Hornet just at dawn, and bobbed in the dark ocean for more than an hour while they put on quarantine garments.
AAP-Reuter reported that Mission Control in Houston, Texas, said the unofficial splashdown time was 195 hours, 18 minutes and 21 seconds after lift-off from Cape Kennedy. This was a bare 45 seconds earlier than the original flight plan.
Black out
The spaceship seared into earth's atmosphere at over 24,000 miles an hour, and there were tense minutes of waiting for radio contact to be re-established after the re-entry blackout.
The flight controller, Mr Ron Evans, put in nine tight-voiced calls to the spacecraft before getting an answer.
Apollo-XI landed upside down in the sea, and there were long minutes while controllers waited for flotation bags to inflate and right the bell-shaped capsule, and so confirm that all was well aboard.
Then a recovery helicopter pilot radioed: "The crew is excellent and ready to take on swimmers."
Before they were taken aboard the helicopter which brought them to Hornet, the astronauts were sprayed and scrubbed with a fluid scientists believe will effectively take care of any moon organism — if such exist. The spacecraft was also sprayed and scrubbed.
The astronauts already had been given biological isolation garments — head-to-foot suits designed to prevent contamination of the earth by possible moon germs.
A frogman then sprayed the outside of the spacecraft with germ-killing fluid.
Trailer
The astronauts were taken by the helicopter to an aluminium trailer on the deck of the Hornet, to be quarantined from the world for 18 days.
The astronauts stepped on the Hornet's deck and walked steadily, clad in their isolation suits, into the rear door of the trailer that will be kept sealed, for a two-day trip to Honolulu on the Hornet and then by air to the space centre near Houston.
A moment later one astronaut's face appeared at a window and a great cheer broke out on the hangar deck.
In mission control at Houston, weary controllers cheered themselves hoarse and the room bloomed with American flags.
Soviet praise
From Moscow, the Soviet President, Mr N. Podgorny, today congratulated President Nixon on "the successful completion of the outstanding flight of the spaceship Apollo-XI, the moon landing and the safe return to earth of the American cosmonauts."
The Soviet President's telegram said: "Please convey our congratulations and best wishes to the courageous space pilots Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin and Michael Collins."
Russian television viewers saw their first live transmission from the epic Apollo-XI flight, as the moon-walking astronauts landed on the Hornet.
I'm also intrigued about you saying "I believe the landing happened ..."
Did you really think there was only one?
And regarding the rock thefts, I think that confirms that the landings happened. Why would anyone want to steal fakes?
At least your post got me wondering where New Zealand's Apollo 11 rock is now, and Google instantly gave me the link:
http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/64368 Te Papa is our national museum.
Then there's the rock that the Apollo 17 guys dedicated to other countries not long before they stepped off the lunar surface. I don't recall hearing what happened to that.
Gazpar, you've obviously spent time looking at hoax literature, but have you balanced that by looking at the other side? Spent a few tens or hundreds of hours at the Apollo Lunar Surface Journals and the Apollo Flight Journals?
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/frame.htmlhttp://history.nasa.gov/afj/Read just the Mission Summaries at
Apollo by the Numbers? Thought about all the highly-detailed information there and whether or not scientists could blow big holes in it if it wasn't reliable?
http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4029/SP-4029.htmContents page:
http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4029/Apollo_00g_Table_of_Contents.htm