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Soviet Union Declassified UFO Encounters Revealed

 

Soviet Union Declassified UFO Encounters Revealed

UFO Sightings Behind the Iron Curtain: The Soviet Union's UFO Secrets

We have confirmed that a number of these unidentified objects are indeed solid. So said the leader of the Pentagon's newest investigation into UFOs, which you probably know as UAPs today. The long culture of ridicule is officially over, UFOs are real, they are here, and nobody has a clue who's building them. But while UFOs were part of American culture for nearly a century now, the world would be shocked at the disturbing similarities between events happening in the US and a world away, behind the impenetrable Iron Curtain.

The secrecy is over, and what has come from declassified sources both within the former Soviet government and the CIA itself is nothing short of terrifying. Soviet sightings of UFOs run as long as sightings in America, but most Soviet citizens had no clue what was going on in their own backyards. Thanks to a strict culture of secrecy and censorship, it wasn't until Glasnost started to open Soviet society up that the lid on the Soviet UFO secret finally came unscrewed.

On January 29th, 1986 at 7:55 pm, a quote amazing event occurred on Hill 611 near the village of Dalnegorsk in Primorskiy Kray. This small mining town is of no note, but that night it would become the most important place in the entire Soviet Union. That evening, multiple villagers observed a reddish sphere flying into the town from the southeast. The object flew while making no noise, and appeared to be a nearly perfect sphere of rust red. It got close enough for people to observe that the outer skin of this strange craft was without blemish, and had no obvious control surfaces nor means of propulsion.

For a while, the object hovered up and down over the village, moving at a relatively slow pace. As it ascended, it would glow brighter, before dimming as it descended. Suddenly, the object appeared to be in distress. All witnesses interviewed later by Soviet authorities recalled how the object jerked or jumped suddenly, then fell like a rock straight down onto Hill 611. Witnesses heard a dull thump as it impacted, and then began to burn intensely for an hour.

Valeri Dvuzhilni, head of the Far Eastern Committee for Anomalous Phenomena, arrived at the site two days after the crash. He noticed that despite everything being covered in deep snow, the site of the crash was completely devoid of it, allowing him to observe splintered silica rocks which could only have occurred from extreme temperatures. The rocks were also smoky looking, as if they had been exposed to intense heat.

However, Dr. Dvuzhilni also found physical evidence of the craft. All over the site and embedded in the rocks themselves he discovered silvery pieces of metal. Some were fragments, but a large amount had formed into droplets, almost as if they had been 'sprayed' over the area. This detail would become significant after the fall of the Iron Curtain when Western ufologists would compare notes with their Eastern counterparts. American witnesses had very often reported seeing flying orbs which seemed to spray metal while showing signs of some kind of distress.

At the edge of the crash site was a tree stump that had been severely burned and emitted a strange chemical smell. The physical remains were examined at the Omsk branch of the Academy of Sciences, who made a shocking discovery. Some of the fragments had formed into what appeared to be small nets, and when these were put under examination it was discovered that they were made up of torn and very thin threads 17 micrometers in width. Each thread consisted of even thinner fibers tied up in plaits, and intertwined with the fibers were thin, solid gold wires. The technology to replicate this type of delicate nanoconstruction wouldn't appear on Earth for decades, at least not in human hands anyways.

The fragments which had formed into iron balls were also put under a battery of tests. Each ball consisted of iron with various levels of aluminum, manganese, nickel, chromium, tungsten, and cobalt. This seemed to rule out a natural creation, and the object just being a very peculiar meteorite. Rather, it mostly confirmed that the object was built from heterogeneous alloys. When the balls were melted in a vacuum chamber, they reacted in various ways. On one base they would melt and spread out as expected, but on another they formed into smaller balls with convex glasslike structures. But melting the remains revealed yet another mystery: gold, silver, and nickel would disappear from the balls and be replaced with molybdenum, despite not being present in the sanitized test chamber before testing commenced. The metallic remains would confuse Soviet scientists, as they only produced more questions than answers.

UFO Sightings in Dalnegorsk and Soviet Union

Several UFO sightings were reported in Dalnegorsk, with objects flying over the village and illuminating the nearby mountain and crash site. These objects appeared to move without propulsion and made no noise. Witnesses also reported disturbances in electrical equipment as the lights flew over homes. Eyewitnesses saw various objects, including a large cylindrical object, a dark metallic-looking elongated object, and a bright blinding sphere of light. The objects emitted rays and appeared to be searching for something. The crash and subsequent UFO invasion in Dalnegorsk remained secret for years but had similarities to similar events in the US, suggesting a mysterious phenomenon.

Similarities between American and Soviet UFO Sightings

Cigar-shaped objects and mysterious balls of light are commonly reported UFO sightings in the US. Eyewitnesses have described objects that bob up and down while emitting a shower of molten metal, similar to the objects witnessed in Dalnegorsk. The descriptions of the objects in Dalnegorsk also bear a resemblance to the infamous US Navy Tic Tac video. The Soviet Union also had its own close encounter with alien beings, witnessed by two boys and a girl in a park. The aliens communicated with each other and caused temporary paralysis in one of the children. The incident was met with both ridicule and serious investigation.

The Culture of Ridicule and UFO Reporting

In both the US and Soviet Union, a culture of ridicule surrounded UFO sightings, making it difficult for witnesses to come forward and report their experiences. The fear of ridicule and its impact on their careers led to self-censorship among pilots and military personnel. However, Soviet pilots had been reporting UFOs for a long time, and there were instances of pilots being killed by them. One incident involved a Soviet fighter encountering a large flying disk that emitted beams of light. The pilot reported extreme heat and the copilot experienced health issues after the encounter.