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(.#349).- UFOs and revelations of the secret archives of the KGB.
UFOs and revelations of the secret archives of the KGB.
November 11, 2015.
Many KGB secret documents are now publicly available in Russia.
Can we be sure of their authenticity?
It must be admitted that former KGB members could very easily "eliminate" information that the agency did not wish to see published publicly.
However, these documents can provide researchers with some information, especially on UFOs and the involvement of secret services.
The main functions of the KGB included foreign intelligence, counterintelligence, operational research activity, border protection of the USSR, protection of the Communist Party leadership and the Soviet Government, organization of government communications and the fight against nationalism, dissent, crime and anti-Soviet activity.
Dual UFO Policy
The Russian authorities have always explained that UFOs did not exist and that it was a hostile propaganda. And that, for example, the celestial bodies were a technical device of NATO, designed to spy on the USSR.
All those who spread rumors about UFOs or aliens were systematically threatened and accused of anti-Soviet propaganda.
At the same time, many UFO witnesses have made written statements that are carefully stored in the KGB archives. In other words, it seems that the agency has secretly acknowledged the existence of this phenomenon to the point of considering it a threat to national security.
Surveillance and data collection Ovni
Just like their Western counterparts, the Russians had authority in the person of Dr. Felix Zigel (1920-1988), Professor of Higher Mathematics and Astronomy at the Moscow Institute of Aeronautics.
In the past, it has attempted to establish a world research organization on Ufology.
On November 10, 1967, the president and the first vice-president were introduced to the Soviet public by television. Professor Zigel showed drawings of the UFO observed in the Caucasus in 1967 and photographs of flying objects of unknown origin.
General Stoliarov insisted that his colleagues and he, baptized for the occasion "Committee Stoliarov", had the task of exposing the pseudo-scientific interpretations made phenomena of strange and inexplicable origin. He appealed to all interested people to advance in scientific research on this phenomenon.
In November 1967, Zigel's speech on national television marked the beginning of a large collection of information on UFOs.
Regarding Igor Sinitsyn, deputy head of the KGB, we note that in an interview given by Yuri Andropov to "The Observer", the latter mentioned what he saw in the office of his boss about the UFO phenomenon.
This would concern what would have happened in 1977, after the appearance in the sky of a large unknown object on Petrozavodsk.
The record contains official counter reports on UFO cases.
Andropov asked the president of the Military-Industrial Commission, AP Kirilenko, permission to recover all the elements. He even developed a program that requires every soldier to report all cases of UFO sightings.
Soviet secret research on UFOs and misinformation
In 1978, the powerful military-industrial commission set up two UFO research centers, one at the USSR Academy of Sciences, and the other at the Soviet Ministry of Defense.
Research on paranormal phenomena at the USSR Academy of Sciences has been the subject of a special scientific program referred to as "Setka-AN". The Soviet Ministry of Defense has launched a similar program called Setka-MO. Both centers assisted in researching UFOs and exchanged information on the subject.
The first act of Setka-AN was to use exclusively the term "abnormal atmospheric phenomena" instead of "UFO".
The Setka-AN debunkers set out to prove that UFOs did not exist, and that they were essentially misinterpretations, rocket launches, or ball lightning.
It should be noted that there have been cases of "abnormal aerospace phenomena" at the same time as unauthorized mobile missile launches, and at other times appearances of UFOs during military exercises resulting in disruptions in radio communications. and equipment failures.
The program ended in 1991, but a group of experts remained in the Department of Physics and General Astronomy of the Russian Academy of Sciences, where they analyzed the reports received up to 1996.
Scientific arguments concerning the nature of UFOs had been set aside by military researchers; however, they paid particular attention to the assumption that UFOs could be manifestations of an extraterrestrial civilization.
They were concerned about the unpredictable behavior of UFOs as well as the interactions on technology and military personnel.
They wanted at all costs to recover the properties of UFOs for their own military purposes.
The KGB and UFO archives
In 1991, KGB documents were provided to Pavel Popovich (he urged them to disseminate the information). He was the second head of the KGB (Counterintelligence) Directorate to receive information on UFOs. The file (124 pages of printed text) contained copies of UFO reports: manuscripts, typescripts, KGB testimonials and briefing notes, rough drawings and eyewitness reports of UFOs.
A cover letter was drafted by USSR Vice-President of State Security Committee NA Sham.
This cooperation between UFO researchers and the KGB was unprecedented and marked a turning point in UFO research in the Soviet Union and probably around the world.
Years later, Sham declared that the KGB had not been engaged in the search for abnormal phenomena (he referred to Setka as the entity responsible for the research).
2008: The KGB opens part of its archives.
On 28 July 1989, at the base of Kapoustine Yar (Astrakhan region), around midnight, sentries from two military units observed for two hours, at different distances, an unidentified flying object. Those who were closer to the object managed to draw it. The following are some excerpts from the reports in which the testimonies of the Russian military are recorded.
The source of these following testimonials comes from Vladimir Zamoroka, doctor of science, and from declassified documents from the KGB archives :
Lieutenant V. Voloshin, liaison technician
To observe the UFO, I settled on the antenna tower at a height of 6 meters. In the night sky, I clearly could see a powerful flashing signal that looked like a series of flashes. The object flew over the workshops and headed for the stockpiles of missiles that were 300 meters away. There he hovered down to an altitude of about 20 meters. The UFO projected a pale green light that recalled the luminescence of phosphorus. It was shaped like a disk 4 to 5 meters in diameter, overhung by a hemisphere.
While the disc was hovering, an intense beam of light spurted from its lower part and made 2 to 3 circles. Then the flying object returned towards the train station, but returned soon after and again placed itself above the stock of missiles, this time at an altitude of 60-70 meters. Two hours after the start of the observation, the UFO went towards Akhtubinsk and disappeared.
Flashes from the bottom of the disc were not regular. It looked like the UFO was taking pictures (!). It moved sometimes jerks, making rapid changes (vertical or oblique), sometimes by uniform movements interrupted from time to time by stationary flights. His silhouette and that of the beam he projected are represented on the drawing »
Corporal A. Lévine
About 3 miles from me, I saw a flashing UFO. At the very spot where he hovered, I saw a beam of light gush from the ground and make movements to the right and left. Another object appeared and began to rise. As it ascended, the light that emanated was becoming weaker and weaker. After 2 hours of observation, I saw a third object at an altitude of 300-400 meters: it projected a flashing red light. Suddenly, a series of lights, like a garland of bulbs on a Christmas tree, ran through his perimeter, and I saw that it was shaped like a cigar. The "cigar" approached the first UFO and they disappeared together over the horizon. "
In 1984, the French newspaper "Le meilleur" also examines the question of Russian UFOs and indicates that "the Soviet government has just created a commission of inquiry into abnormal atmospheric phenomena. The reason for this excitement is due to a very real event that occurred over the city of Gorky on March 27, 1984. A team of air traffic controllers from the Gorky Airport Control Tower reported in an official report the strange ballet of a flying saucer-shaped object, in the suburb of Gorky. Its evolutions lasted 40 minutes. The control tower has spotted on its radar screens the presence of a huge object flying at an altitude of about 1000 meters and evolving at 200 km / h. The object has the dimensions of an airliner. However, Gorky's control tower does not use fighter jets to intercept the object. "
A 23 May 1985 report signed by Colonel V. Alifanov, flight director, mentions a meeting in Khabarovsk territory.
On 26 July 1989, in the area of Sochi airport, the documents reproduce the conversations about UFOs observed that the air traffic controller had with the crews of 3 airliners with ship numbers 138, 397 and 500.
The Soviet Union would have recovered Aliens?
Some rumors from the west claimed that the Soviet air defense had recovered a flying saucer of extraterrestrial origin. They would have practiced on reverse engineering and recovered a humanoid body that would have been studied at the Semashko Institute.
The UFO was reportedly shot down in 1968 in the Urals near the town of Berezniki.
Television programs have recently conducted several interviews on this issue, and a former KGB member, Klimchenko, has reportedly intervened.
His statements are of course corroborated by the article in the newspaper "Evening Sverdlovsk" of 29 November 1968. The witnesses to the incident said that they had seen with their eyes an object spit, and that as soon as they were arrived at the scene, the army would have prevented them from going further and cordoned off the area.
P. Klimchenko explains that the operation of locating and capturing the UFO was codenamed "myth". Scientists were convinced that humanoids were not of human origin.
How reliable is this information?
No document published by the KGB mentions this case.
According to Klimchenko, the doctors involved in the famous autopsy, Sawicki and Gordienko, both died suddenly on the same day.
The death of these doctors still raises many questions.
Some foreign journalists say that the leak of information about the activities of the former KGB is deliberate in response to events such as those of Roswell.
ovnis-direct.com/ovnis-et-archives-secretes-du-kgb-659985.html#uRPRHy5n
www.elishean.fr/
Copyright les Hathor © Elishean/2009-2015/ Elishean mag
F I N .
UFOs and revelations of the secret archives of the KGB.
November 11, 2015.
Many KGB secret documents are now publicly available in Russia.
Can we be sure of their authenticity?
It must be admitted that former KGB members could very easily "eliminate" information that the agency did not wish to see published publicly.
However, these documents can provide researchers with some information, especially on UFOs and the involvement of secret services.
The main functions of the KGB included foreign intelligence, counterintelligence, operational research activity, border protection of the USSR, protection of the Communist Party leadership and the Soviet Government, organization of government communications and the fight against nationalism, dissent, crime and anti-Soviet activity.
Dual UFO Policy
The Russian authorities have always explained that UFOs did not exist and that it was a hostile propaganda. And that, for example, the celestial bodies were a technical device of NATO, designed to spy on the USSR.
All those who spread rumors about UFOs or aliens were systematically threatened and accused of anti-Soviet propaganda.
At the same time, many UFO witnesses have made written statements that are carefully stored in the KGB archives. In other words, it seems that the agency has secretly acknowledged the existence of this phenomenon to the point of considering it a threat to national security.
Surveillance and data collection Ovni
Just like their Western counterparts, the Russians had authority in the person of Dr. Felix Zigel (1920-1988), Professor of Higher Mathematics and Astronomy at the Moscow Institute of Aeronautics.
In the past, it has attempted to establish a world research organization on Ufology.
On November 10, 1967, the president and the first vice-president were introduced to the Soviet public by television. Professor Zigel showed drawings of the UFO observed in the Caucasus in 1967 and photographs of flying objects of unknown origin.
General Stoliarov insisted that his colleagues and he, baptized for the occasion "Committee Stoliarov", had the task of exposing the pseudo-scientific interpretations made phenomena of strange and inexplicable origin. He appealed to all interested people to advance in scientific research on this phenomenon.
In November 1967, Zigel's speech on national television marked the beginning of a large collection of information on UFOs.
Regarding Igor Sinitsyn, deputy head of the KGB, we note that in an interview given by Yuri Andropov to "The Observer", the latter mentioned what he saw in the office of his boss about the UFO phenomenon.
This would concern what would have happened in 1977, after the appearance in the sky of a large unknown object on Petrozavodsk.
The record contains official counter reports on UFO cases.
Andropov asked the president of the Military-Industrial Commission, AP Kirilenko, permission to recover all the elements. He even developed a program that requires every soldier to report all cases of UFO sightings.
Soviet secret research on UFOs and misinformation
In 1978, the powerful military-industrial commission set up two UFO research centers, one at the USSR Academy of Sciences, and the other at the Soviet Ministry of Defense.
Research on paranormal phenomena at the USSR Academy of Sciences has been the subject of a special scientific program referred to as "Setka-AN". The Soviet Ministry of Defense has launched a similar program called Setka-MO. Both centers assisted in researching UFOs and exchanged information on the subject.
The first act of Setka-AN was to use exclusively the term "abnormal atmospheric phenomena" instead of "UFO".
The Setka-AN debunkers set out to prove that UFOs did not exist, and that they were essentially misinterpretations, rocket launches, or ball lightning.
It should be noted that there have been cases of "abnormal aerospace phenomena" at the same time as unauthorized mobile missile launches, and at other times appearances of UFOs during military exercises resulting in disruptions in radio communications. and equipment failures.
The program ended in 1991, but a group of experts remained in the Department of Physics and General Astronomy of the Russian Academy of Sciences, where they analyzed the reports received up to 1996.
Scientific arguments concerning the nature of UFOs had been set aside by military researchers; however, they paid particular attention to the assumption that UFOs could be manifestations of an extraterrestrial civilization.
They were concerned about the unpredictable behavior of UFOs as well as the interactions on technology and military personnel.
They wanted at all costs to recover the properties of UFOs for their own military purposes.
The KGB and UFO archives
In 1991, KGB documents were provided to Pavel Popovich (he urged them to disseminate the information). He was the second head of the KGB (Counterintelligence) Directorate to receive information on UFOs. The file (124 pages of printed text) contained copies of UFO reports: manuscripts, typescripts, KGB testimonials and briefing notes, rough drawings and eyewitness reports of UFOs.
A cover letter was drafted by USSR Vice-President of State Security Committee NA Sham.
This cooperation between UFO researchers and the KGB was unprecedented and marked a turning point in UFO research in the Soviet Union and probably around the world.
Years later, Sham declared that the KGB had not been engaged in the search for abnormal phenomena (he referred to Setka as the entity responsible for the research).
2008: The KGB opens part of its archives.
On 28 July 1989, at the base of Kapoustine Yar (Astrakhan region), around midnight, sentries from two military units observed for two hours, at different distances, an unidentified flying object. Those who were closer to the object managed to draw it. The following are some excerpts from the reports in which the testimonies of the Russian military are recorded.
The source of these following testimonials comes from Vladimir Zamoroka, doctor of science, and from declassified documents from the KGB archives :
Lieutenant V. Voloshin, liaison technician
To observe the UFO, I settled on the antenna tower at a height of 6 meters. In the night sky, I clearly could see a powerful flashing signal that looked like a series of flashes. The object flew over the workshops and headed for the stockpiles of missiles that were 300 meters away. There he hovered down to an altitude of about 20 meters. The UFO projected a pale green light that recalled the luminescence of phosphorus. It was shaped like a disk 4 to 5 meters in diameter, overhung by a hemisphere.
While the disc was hovering, an intense beam of light spurted from its lower part and made 2 to 3 circles. Then the flying object returned towards the train station, but returned soon after and again placed itself above the stock of missiles, this time at an altitude of 60-70 meters. Two hours after the start of the observation, the UFO went towards Akhtubinsk and disappeared.
Flashes from the bottom of the disc were not regular. It looked like the UFO was taking pictures (!). It moved sometimes jerks, making rapid changes (vertical or oblique), sometimes by uniform movements interrupted from time to time by stationary flights. His silhouette and that of the beam he projected are represented on the drawing »
Corporal A. Lévine
About 3 miles from me, I saw a flashing UFO. At the very spot where he hovered, I saw a beam of light gush from the ground and make movements to the right and left. Another object appeared and began to rise. As it ascended, the light that emanated was becoming weaker and weaker. After 2 hours of observation, I saw a third object at an altitude of 300-400 meters: it projected a flashing red light. Suddenly, a series of lights, like a garland of bulbs on a Christmas tree, ran through his perimeter, and I saw that it was shaped like a cigar. The "cigar" approached the first UFO and they disappeared together over the horizon. "
In 1984, the French newspaper "Le meilleur" also examines the question of Russian UFOs and indicates that "the Soviet government has just created a commission of inquiry into abnormal atmospheric phenomena. The reason for this excitement is due to a very real event that occurred over the city of Gorky on March 27, 1984. A team of air traffic controllers from the Gorky Airport Control Tower reported in an official report the strange ballet of a flying saucer-shaped object, in the suburb of Gorky. Its evolutions lasted 40 minutes. The control tower has spotted on its radar screens the presence of a huge object flying at an altitude of about 1000 meters and evolving at 200 km / h. The object has the dimensions of an airliner. However, Gorky's control tower does not use fighter jets to intercept the object. "
A 23 May 1985 report signed by Colonel V. Alifanov, flight director, mentions a meeting in Khabarovsk territory.
On 26 July 1989, in the area of Sochi airport, the documents reproduce the conversations about UFOs observed that the air traffic controller had with the crews of 3 airliners with ship numbers 138, 397 and 500.
The Soviet Union would have recovered Aliens?
Some rumors from the west claimed that the Soviet air defense had recovered a flying saucer of extraterrestrial origin. They would have practiced on reverse engineering and recovered a humanoid body that would have been studied at the Semashko Institute.
The UFO was reportedly shot down in 1968 in the Urals near the town of Berezniki.
Television programs have recently conducted several interviews on this issue, and a former KGB member, Klimchenko, has reportedly intervened.
His statements are of course corroborated by the article in the newspaper "Evening Sverdlovsk" of 29 November 1968. The witnesses to the incident said that they had seen with their eyes an object spit, and that as soon as they were arrived at the scene, the army would have prevented them from going further and cordoned off the area.
P. Klimchenko explains that the operation of locating and capturing the UFO was codenamed "myth". Scientists were convinced that humanoids were not of human origin.
How reliable is this information?
No document published by the KGB mentions this case.
According to Klimchenko, the doctors involved in the famous autopsy, Sawicki and Gordienko, both died suddenly on the same day.
The death of these doctors still raises many questions.
Some foreign journalists say that the leak of information about the activities of the former KGB is deliberate in response to events such as those of Roswell.
ovnis-direct.com/ovnis-et-archives-secretes-du-kgb-659985.html#uRPRHy5n
www.elishean.fr/
Copyright les Hathor © Elishean/2009-2015/ Elishean mag
F I N .