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  • 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,  

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