Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • It all began at 4 am on September 20th, 1977.  Rumors of strange lights, sometimes even craft,  

  • in the skies over the Soviet Union had  persisted since World War II. With top  

  • secret US spy planes flying over the nation  though, there was little reason to believe the  

  • phenomenon was otherwordly. But what happened  that morning in the city of Petrozavodsk would  

  • leave Soviet leadership with no doubtssomething unexplained had crossed nearly  

  • the entire air space of the Soviet Union, and  even been spotted by NATO countries in the west.

  • No one is sure who was the first to spot the  phenomenon, but a group of dock workers just  

  • starting the early shift were stunned  when they saw a blinding light emerge in  

  • the horizon from the direction of Lake Onega  in northwest Russia. A local first-aid unit,  

  • numerous military personnel, on-duty  militia members, seamen at the port,  

  • airport staff and an amateur astronomer  all bore witness to what happened next.

  • At first the few residents of Petrozavodsk  who were up at this early hour feared the  

  • worst- a nuclear attack was occurringThis being the height of the Cold War,  

  • the threat of American nuclear weapons  raining down on their heads was an ever  

  • present one for the Soviets, much like  the reverse was true of the Americans.  

  • The approaching light was almost too bright  to look at directly, and as it neared the  

  • city it seemed to reform itself to resemble  a massive jellyfish in the sky. Any thoughts  

  • that this might be an incoming nuclear attack  of some sort vanished when the light slowed  

  • to a hover and suddenly bathed the city below  it in beams of ultra-thin light, like lasers.

  • The mysterious object continued drifting  over the city for ten to twelve minutes  

  • before transforming into a bright semicircle and  jetting off to the northwest in the direction it  

  • had come from. Witnesses described it leaving  a faintly glowing red hole in the clouds it  

  • punched through before disappearing, as if  it had burned through the clouds themselves.

  • As news of the event broke, the Soviet Union  scrambled to respond to what might have just  

  • been the most significant intrusion  of its air space in history. Was this  

  • another damned American secret craft of  some kind, or could it be that something  

  • else entirely had just made its presence  known to the citizens of Petrozavodsk?

  • The director of the nearby hydro-meteorological  observatory noted that none of his personnel on  

  • duty had witnessed the event. However, there  was no denying the flood of eyewitness reports  

  • coming from the city itself. Soon thoughreports came in of a similar phenomenon  

  • across the Soviet Union, and even reports  that it had been spotted in Finland as  

  • well. Photos of the phenomenon were even  reported to have been taking by the Fins,  

  • though no one knows what happened  to the images. Only one image of  

  • the event inside the Soviet Union was ever  released, and its authenticity is unknown.

  • A quiet panic set in amongst the political  and military elite of the Soviet Union,  

  • as by now it was undeniable that something  completely unexplained had crossed a significant  

  • chunk of their air space, and gone completely  unnoticed by the Soviet Union's air defense  

  • networks. Local authorities in affected regions  wrote to the Presidium of the Academy of Science  

  • asking for an official explanation to quell  their citizen's fears, but none was available.  

  • Letters from the public were growing in number  by the day, and nations in northern Europe were  

  • expressing concern over a possible new weapon test  by the Soviet Union, which they naturally denied.

  • Anatoly Aleksandrov, under domestic and  international pressure, wrote a letter  

  • to the vice president and chariman of  the military-industrial commission,  

  • requesting that a formal investigation be  put together. This prompted the chairman  

  • to ask Dr. A. Schokin, chairman of the  scientific and technical council, to bring  

  • up the possibility of launching an official  investigation at the next council meeting.

  • The next month, at the council meeting, the  contents of Aleksandrov's letter was shared with  

  • the committee, and Lietuenant General B.A. Kijasov  would state, quote- The Academy of Sciences of  

  • the USSR can neither ignore, nor explain the  paranormal phenomenon similar to that observed  

  • in September, 1977, in Petrozavodsk, and, thusthe AS asks to organize a thorough investigation  

  • of paranormal phenomenon with the involvement of  organizations of the Ministry of Defense and MIC.”

  • Eyewitness statements from military service  members helped to legitimize the need for a  

  • formal investigation to the council, and  ultimately the meeting concluded with a  

  • resolution recommending that funding be included  in the 1978 state budget for a program titled:  

  • Research of Paranormal Atmospheric and Space  Phenomena. The STC also recommended that a  

  • group of experts be sent to Petrozavodsk  to investigate the mysterious sighting.

  • The recommendation was adopted and included  in the next update to the current five years'  

  • plan for defense research activities, setting  out two investigations to begin work in 1978  

  • and run without interruption until 1990. The  one investigation would be conducted by the  

  • Ministry of Defense, specifically focusing  on the effect of paranormal atmospheric  

  • and space phenomenon on the military and its  equipment, and the second would be conducted  

  • by the Academy of Sciences and focused on  understanding the nature of the phenomenon.

  • The two Soviet investigations would  collectively become known as 'the network',  

  • but had two dramatically different goals that  made cooperation difficult, if not impossible.  

  • The military arm of the investigation was  only concerned with how UFOs affected the  

  • Soviet Union's ability to defend itself, and  investigated them as a possible threat to the  

  • Union's conventional and nuclear capabilitiesThe civilian arm of the investigation meanwhile  

  • conducted more broad research into the phenomenon  in an attempt to understand its true nature.  

  • Given that the military side of the house had  access to far better sensors and witnesses,  

  • the civilian investigation was often  frustrated as the military investigation  

  • classified many reports, and even evidenceoutside the reach of the Academy of Sciences.

  • The Soviet investigation was, as  most things in the Soviet Union,  

  • carefully sheperded to project the correct  political and cultural narrative. The term  

  • UFOfor instance was banned, both because of  its implication of extraterrestrial origin and  

  • because of its ties to America. Instead, UFOs  were termedparanormal phenomenon.” Further,  

  • rather than conducting an open and public  investigation, the Soviet Union classified  

  • the research in order to avoid public alarm or  the appearance of endorsing any of a number of  

  • publicly held theories about the phenomenonThe investigation thus had three stipulations:

  • First, all investigative activities were  

  • automatically classified under  the guise of defensive research.

  • Second, until proven otherwise, all  UFO phenomenon were assumed to be  

  • military activity and/or research and development.

  • Third, in the event that investigation of the  phenomenon led to the discovery of previously  

  • unknown origins, such as an extraterrestrial  one, then any discoveries or knowledge gathered  

  • was to first, and immediately, be  used for military applications.

  • The Soviet UFO investigation was thus as flawed  from the start as the American Project Blue Book  

  • before it, if not even more so. While Project  Blue Book kept many findings close to its chest,  

  • it at least engaged the public  in its ongoing investigation,  

  • often relying on public hotlines to discover  investigative leads as people reported UFO  

  • sightings and sometimes even outright crashes  or landings. Project Blue Book also shared at  

  • least some data with the public, allowing  for independent verification- or critique.

  • The Soviets would keep their investigation much  more secretive, releasing only pre-approved  

  • conclusions about specific events from time to  time. Often decried as being 'overly' classified,  

  • The Network's investigations were hampered by the  division of labor between the Academy of Sciences  

  • and the military, with the military refusing  to share much of its data or conclusions with  

  • the civilian-led investigation. The pre-assumption  that all UFO activity was military in nature also  

  • hamstrung the investigation- you don't conduct  science by entering an investigation with a  

  • preconclusion to the origin of what you're  investigating. Here though the Soviets were  

  • simply doing as the Americans had before them, as  both sides shared similar thinking: UFO activity  

  • could be exploited by a potential adversary as  cover for their own technological breakthroughs.

  • The third term of the investigation was  unsurprising. Whatever the UFO phenomenon was,  

  • it had displayed truly incredible feats  of physics and the ability to penetrate  

  • the Soviet air defense network and avoid  interception. Any recovered technology  

  • or scientific discoveries were to be  first used for military application.

  • Thus the two investigations set off on parallelbut different paths. The military investigation  

  • took a keen interest in reported penetrations of  air space over military bases, port facilities,  

  • and most alarming of all, nuclear weapon  or energy sites. It sought to investigate  

  • the psychological impact on servicemen who had  witnessed it and the malfunctions the phenomenon  

  • was reported to induce on military equipmentWhen possible, attempts were made to identify  

  • the exact cause and the degree of threat that  it posed to Soviet military capabilities.

  • The civilian investigation meanwhile relied  on public reports and those gathered by the  

  • various arms of the Soviet scientific  community. Both investigations however  

  • published very few public reports given  the classification of their research,  

  • which made it difficult for the  civilian investigation to do its job.

  • The military investigation was headquartered at  one of the central military research institutes  

  • in Moscow. V. Balashov, an expert in the study  of the effect of radiation and other phenomenon  

  • on military equipment was put in charge  of the investigation- which telegraphed  

  • that the Soviets were particularly concerned  about reported effects on military equipment  

  • by UFOs. A small group of four to five  military and civilian experts aided  

  • Balashov with his research, with the group  being frequently swapped out year by year.

  • Dr. V. Migulin, director of the Institute of  Terrestrial Megnetism Ionosphere and Radio  

  • Wave Propagation of the Academy of Sciences was  assigned as chief of the civilian investigation.  

  • He was a radio physicist and expert in the  field of radio wave oscillation and propagation,  

  • and radiolocation. IZMIRAN was designated as  head institute of the investigation and a similar  

  • workgroup of four to five specialist  was assigned to work under Migulin.

  • Details remain scarce about the military  investigation, even though it ended 33  

  • years ago. The civilian investigation however was  budgeted by participating organizations, it did  

  • not receive special government budgeting and thus  was significantly hampered by a lack of funds.  

  • This shortage meant that specialized equipment to  track and record or photograph UFOs could not be  

  • procured, and some investigations such as into the  development of large-scale plasma formations in  

  • the atmosphere could not be carried out. As the  least funded of all defense research projects,  

  • the civilian investigation was far more passive  than active, collecting data and carrying out  

  • surveys long after the fact, with little ability  to conduct proactive research or data collection.

  • Nonetheless, the civilian arm collectedmassive amount of data from eyewitnesses  

  • and even analyzed alleged physical  encounters or landings. Unfortunately,  

  • given the project's limitations, onlysmall percentage of the total data could  

  • be thoroughly reviewed. Eventually, the project  came to three conclusions about the phenomenon:

  • 1. UFOS are the product of human activity 2. UFOS are the product of natural  

  • processes taking place on Earth, in the  atmosphere, or in the near-space region 

  • 3. UFOs are the result of activity  from extraterrestrial civilizations

  • The Academy admitted that while the third  conclusion was the most far fetched,  

  • and had the least supporting evidence,  

  • nonetheless the investigators felt that it was  impossible to remove it as a possibility. Much  

  • like in US efforts such as Project Blue Book or  Project GRUDGE, a not insignificant number of  

  • incidents just couldn't be explained with their  current scientific understanding of the world.

  • But even as some within the Soviet Union  wished for the UFO phenomenon to die down,  

  • it did the exact opposite, with activity  increasing exponentially as sensors improved  

  • and more and more witnesses felt more comfortable  coming forward. Disturbingly for the Soviets,  

  • neighboring NATO countries were also often  experiencing the exact same phenomenon,  

  • and similarities in reported phenomenon were  appearing world wide. A tall iron curtain  

  • still existed between east and west, but the  Soviets were discovering that the same disc,  

  • or cigar, or orb-shaped objects  were being reported globally.

  • Given the rapidly advancing pace of US air  and space technology, the Soviet military  

  • had a markedly more enlightened approach  to UFO reporting within the military than  

  • the US did. While the US heavily engaged in  ridicule culture even within its own military,  

  • the Soviet Union enacted new guidelines  that obligated its soldiers to report  

  • any strange or unexplained phenomenon that  they experienced while on duty. Given that  

  • Soviet spy planes never flew over the United  States though, it was easy to see why the  

  • two sides took such radically different  approaches to their reporting on UFOs.

  • In 1980, the Chief of General Staff of the USSR  issued a directive that allowed the civilian UFO  

  • investigation access to eyewitness reports from  military personnel. This effectively gave the  

  • Soviet civilian UFO investigation access  to witnesses covering a staggering 1/6th  

  • of the earth, a feat no other organization  or nation could hope to achieve. However,  

  • the military investigation still retained much  information under high levels of classification,  

  • and sharing of data gathered  by various military sensor  

  • platforms remained out of reach  of the civilian investigation.

  • UFO reports within the Soviet military  received two levels of priority. The first  

  • was of a sighting or experience that had  no direct effects on the safety or normal  

  • function of the military unit in questionThe second, and much more serious priority  

  • which received immediate attention was when  the phenomenon caused equipment malfunctions,  

  • failures, or harm to Soviet personnel or  equipment. These reports were immediately  

  • sent to the program chiefs and completely  bypassed all intermediary stages of reporting

  • Over the course of the investigation, over  3,000 pieces of data was gathered and analyzed  

  • that was consideredextraordinary”, however  this did not mean that they were necessarily  

  • otherworldly. Ultimately the investigation  would reveal that most night time sightings  

  • were the result of rocket launches or tests of  aerospace equipment. The Petrozavodsk incident  

  • was ultimately explained as the launch of  the Kosmos 955 satellite from a cosmodrome  

  • in Plesetsk. However, some would take issue  with the explanation, which failed to account  

  • for the widely witnessed beams of light that  the object in question shot down to the ground,  

  • as well as the object's ability to  hover slowly and change directions.

  • Other similarly incredible UFOs sightings  however could be easily explained by rocket  

  • launches. On June 14th, 1980, a massive  dolphin-shaped object was described by  

  • witnesses all over European RussiaThis was discovered to be the launch  

  • of the Kosmos 1188 satellite, and was  witnessed all the way in South America.

  • The result of the next most widely reported UFO  turned out to be balloons, which were widely used  

  • around the world to study atmospheric phenomenon  and could drift for miles. Normally though these  

  • balloons don't drift too far form their launch  locations, and thus most eyewitnesses would not  

  • be overly surprised by one. However, as the  investigation showed, sometimes balloons can  

  • do surprising things, completely confounding  witnesses. One such incident was a UFO reported  

  • by a Soviet fighter squadron on patrol over  the border with China. A pilot had detected a  

  • spherical object at an altitude of 50,000 feet and  moved to engage it when it suddenly disappeared.

  • An investigation discovered a local meteorological  station that had launched a balloon at the exact  

  • time of the UFO encounter. This balloon's shell  had been unexpectedly tough, accounting for it  

  • climbing much higher than expected. At some point  its possible that the balloon had simply burst,  

  • fooling the pilot into believing that the  craft he was witnessing had disappeared.

  • Three months later, fighter pilots over the  Chukot Penninsula had a similar encounter,  

  • with the object once more disappearing. A  nearby meteorological station was discovered  

  • to have launched a balloon of their own  at the same time, though lost telemetry  

  • data from it in a malfunction. It was  believed that the two balloons could  

  • have come from the same manufacturing  batch and thus shared a defect that  

  • made their skin much tougher than expectedallowing them to rise higher than intended.

  • Balloons and rockets were found to explain  90% of UFO reports inside the Soviet Union,  

  • prompting skeptics to disregard the possibility  of an unidentified aerial phenomenon entirely.  

  • Yet a significant number of cases avoided  explanation, and as the Academy of Sciences  

  • itself pointed out, some of these had  a significant number of witnesses.

  • Other cases that defied explanation included  alleged landings or crashes of physical craft.  

  • One such incident that defied explanation occurred  on Hill 611 near the village of Dalnegorsk. Here,  

  • a multitude of witnesses observedflying, reddish sphere crash into the  

  • hill with a very violent impact. The Academy  of Sciences sent a field team to investigate  

  • and discovered physical evidence- along with  burned terrain verifying that something had  

  • indeed crashed there with great force, the  investigators discovered fine metal mesh,  

  • small spherical residue objects, and  pieces of what appeared to be glass.

  • The composition of the debris was similarly  baffling, including gold, silver, nickle,  

  • alpha-titanium, molybdenum, and beryllium  compounds. Skeptical physicists concluded  

  • that the ball had been some form of plasmoid which  had captured the metallic elements in the upper  

  • atmosphere before descending to earth. Howeverthis explanation was rejected on the grounds  

  • that for this to explain the discovered  debris, the elements involved would have  

  • to exceed current levels by a factor of 4,000. Doctor of Chemical Sciences V. Vysotskiy stated,  

  • quote- without doubt, this is evidence of a high  technology, and it's not anything of a natural  

  • or terrestrial origin. Dr. Vysotskiy pointed to  the discovery that the fine mesh included bits  

  • of metallic threads with a diameter of only 17  microns, and these threads were themselves made up  

  • of even thinner strands twisted into tight braidsExtremely thin gold wires were interwined amongst  

  • the smallest of threads, a feat well outside the  possibility of human manufacturing at the time.  

  • However, Physicist Yuriy Platov of the Terrestrial  Magnetism Institute disagreed, and stated that the  

  • material was nothing more than debris from  a failed rocket launch. Whether said rocket  

  • launch took place at the same time as the sighting  unfortunately remains unknown, as the Soviet Union  

  • often kept its launches a secret and did not  release information on their dates or success.

  • Sightings of landings by trained professional  also troubled the skeptical conclusion to the  

  • project's data. In 1989 an engineer along  with a group of workers at a collective  

  • farm witnessed a disk-like craft land and emit  two beams of light from the sides. The craft  

  • remained on the ground for twenty minutes  before flying away noiselessly. This UFO,  

  • like many other alleged landings, had left behind  a depression in the vegetation where it landed.  

  • This phenomenon was also widely reported not just  in the USSR, but beyond it- and no explanation has  

  • ever been offered, as often this vegetation  is showed to be either burned or wilted,  

  • or dies soon after the alleged landing  occurs. In the USSR, Anatoliy Listratov,  

  • chariman of the All-Union Astronomical And  Geodesic Society, stated quote- at the sites  

  • of the landings... the operating frequency of  a crystal-controlled oscillator changes. Simply  

  • speaking, electronic time pieces run at rates  that are either too fast or too slow- end quote.

  • Reports similar to the Petrazavodsk incident  were also coming from the military. Listratov  

  • had received reports from military aviators  of a UFO sighted over the city of Borisov. The  

  • crews of two aircraft spotted a large flying  disk with five beams of light emanating from  

  • within it. Three beams were aimed at the ground  below and when the planes first came across it,  

  • two beams were aimed upwards into the skyGround control instructed one of the planes  

  • to change course and approach the object, with the  disk immediately flying level to the approaching  

  • aircraft and firing one of the light beams at  it. The beam blinded the men inside the cockpit,  

  • and both felt heat as it passed over them. Both  crew members became sick immediately after the  

  • incident, with the copilot being forced to leave  military service due to a serious decline in his  

  • health which included prolonged periods of  unconsciousness. The aircraft commander died  

  • months after the encounter, with the  cause of death being listed as cancer.

  • Some sightings became impossible to deny or  explain. Chief amongst these was a sighting  

  • of a massive UFO near the city of Mosk, with  hundreds of witnesses flooding local newspapers  

  • to report on the incident. One report filed  by a Major V Loginov stated that the object  

  • was not visible to radar, and appeared asvisible shining sphere one and a half times as  

  • large as the moon. The object cast very bright  beams of light around the itself, and hovered  

  • over the airport for about five minutes before  slightly descending. The object then appeared  

  • to turn off its light beams and accelerate at  great speed towards the northwest. Pilots at a  

  • neighboring airport reported seeing the object  visually but couldn't detected it on radar,  

  • and military personnel at Altay Kray, reported  in within five minutes of the craft disappearing  

  • from over Omsk, stating that they too could  now see the object. The Major concluded that  

  • to travel from Omsk to Altay Kray, the object had  to be moving at around 7,000 kilometers an hour.

  • The Soviet investigation into UFOs ended  in 1990 as the nation was facing its own  

  • impending collapse. However, a separate effort  continued in the new Russian Federation until  

  • at least 1998. With the collapse of the  Soviet Union though, researches on both  

  • sides of the old iron curtain were at last  able to share notes, and western observers  

  • were stunned to discover that the exact same  incidents at nuclear weapon sites and other  

  • military installations perfectly mirrored what  had been reported in the US and by its allies.

  • It's currently unknown if the Russian Federation  continues to pursue research into UFOs,  

  • but with the US having been discovered to be  continuously researching the phenomenon for  

  • decades without acknowledging it after its  own official investigation was shut down,  

  • it's likely that the old Soviet project to  understand the phenomenon is alive and well today.

  • Now go learn about the secret UFO crash  recovery program with Intelligence Official  

  • Reveals US Is Recovering Crashed Alien  UFOs, or click this other video instead.

It all began at 4 am on September 20th, 1977.  Rumors of strange lights, sometimes even craft,  

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

B1 US

機密的蘇聯UFO調查 - 俄羅斯的藍皮書計畫(Classified Soviet UFO Investigation - Russia’s Project Blue Book)

  • 35 0
    波閎 posted on 2023/10/07
Video vocabulary