|
UFODIMENSION ARTICLE :. |
|
| |
UFOs OVER RUSSIA Paul Stonehill |
|
Posted Feb 21.05

UFOS OVER YEISK
1960
There has been a number of UFO sightings and crop
circles reported in the Russian city of Yeisk during the last century. After
the fall of the Soviet Union, an active UFO-research group, headed by Yuri
Stroganov (now a journalist) was established in Yeisk.
Recently I received an interesting confirmation about
UFO sightings from Yeisk, and a very coherent explanation as to the nature
of the objects.
A prominent Russian UFO researcher, author, and journalist Mikhail Gershtein sent it to me, and I want to share it.
In 1960, a group of Soviet army cadets observed
anomalous phenomena in the sky. They decided to write a letter about it to the
KRASNAYA ZVEZDA newspaper.
The letter contained the following:
September 10, 1960
“Dear Editors:
We are residents of Yeisk. We are asking you to explain
an unusual phenomenon. In August of 1960, by chance, twice we have
observed flight of a celestial object. On September 9, at 20:15 (Moscow
time), the flight again took place, from west to east. The heavenly body was of
an average size. The speed of its flight was less than that of a satellite.
The flight lasted 8 to 12 minutes.
Here is what was unusual about it:
1) It flew sideways from the observers;
2) Its luminescence was flickering;
3) Its movement was curvilinear
What could it have been? Would we be able to observe it
again?
Respectfully,
On behalf of a group of army cadets,
Kozlov Valery, Barilin Igor
Our address is:
City of Yeisk, VVOL, Stalin Street, K-1-V
On September 16, 1960, the editors of the KRASNAYA
ZVEZDA sent the letter they received from Yeisk to the Moscow Planetarium.
They requested that the Planetarium scientists reply to the letter.
Some time later (the date is not indicated), the Moscow
Planetarium sent a reply to the cadets.
“Dear comrades Kozlov and Barilin!
The phenomenon you had observed was one of the
experiments to study the upper layers of the atmosphere. Such research was
described in PRIRODA magazine, Issue 5, 1959; pp. 74-76.
Respectfully,
Lecturer Tsigankova.
Another letter from the Planetarium to KRASNAYA ZVEZDA
stated the following:
“Dear Editors!
As to your inquiry, we are informing you that the
comrades who sent you the letters had observed research projects, planned through
the program of the International Geophysics Year. The purpose of the
projects was the study of our planet Earth as a whole; scientists from over 66
countries had participated, including Soviet scientists.
(signed)
Rosenblyum.
While the explanation proffered by Soviet scientists
was probably correct, other anomalous phenomena sighted over the city and in
its fields were cannot be easily explained.
Today the city contains the Yeisk Air Force Academy and
VM Komarov Higher Military Aviation School, and 959th Training Regiment.
The Aviation School had trained such prominent personalities as the Cuban
astronaut Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez, and the Commander of Ukrainian Air Force
Viktor Strelnikov . Yeisk is located in the Southern Russia, not far from
the battlefields of Chechnya. Krasnodar Krai, of which Yeisk is a part, is
a region of great economic significance for Russia. The krai (region)
contains transportation infrastructure vital to Russian and Caspian Basin
energy exports. It is also an important agricultural area and lies in Russia's
fertile Black Earth zone. Like most Russia, Krasnodar suffers from an
insufficient energy supply, inadequate infrastructure, and a lack of capital.
1991
It all began in the summer of 1991. On August 16, Maxim
Churbakov, a cadet of the Yeisk Military Aviation School, took off on his
third solo flight.
The engine of his airplane functioned for just fourteen
minutes and then it stalled. Churbakov reported to the flight control:
"Forty-second, engine shutdown, altitude 1400, r.p.m. down to 20 percent."
On the ground they were unable to find a solution to
the problem at once, and the cadet had to take a decision himself.
Fifty-seconds after the engine shutdown he reported: "I am preparing to eject and am
turning away from the town."
The second minute had begun. At the moment of ejection,
the plane was over a body of water. Soon a fishing boat picked up Maxim.
Meanwhile, on the shore his plane was in flames.
In this case no UFO was involved. In the newspaper of the military district there soon appeared a snapshot of Maxim with his flying
instructor, and the correspondent quoted the words of the area commander
Air Force Major General V. Mihailov: "You know, when I first heard about this
accident in the air training regiment, I was upset. It's a pity to lose an
expensive machine.
But when I established all the circumstances of the incident, when I had spoken to the cadet, and listened to the tape of the
radio traffic, I was even glad. I felt much better about it. What fine people we have!"
After this rejoicing over the cadet's self-possession
and presence of mind, the general gave instructions that a copy of that tape
be used as a training aid...so that other future pilots should learn from it
how to behave in emergencies.
The correspondent concluded his article on the optimistic note: "...after the necessary medical examination Maxim will return to
his flight training.
And, I am certain, he will become a fine pilot."
The newspaper appeared on August 27, but Maxim was a
short-lived hero...for only one day. To be more exact, until August 28, when
at 5:31 p.m., during another training flight, at an altitude of 4000 meters,
he saw an orange sphere. The object was similarly above the clouds,
somewhat on his starboard side, and Maxim immediately reported it to the flight
control. Meanwhile, the sphere had begun approaching him, increasing to two
meters in diameter.
It burned his eyes, and the pilot shut them and lowered
his head. ("At first I felt curious, but then I felt dread" Maxim later
recalled those moments.)
FROM MAXIM CHURBAKOV'S REPORT:
"I had the feeling that someone was watching me, and
there was an unpleasant sensation on the back of my head in the right side. I
began lifting my head, but was unable to look--for some reason I experienced a
feeling of fear. The "generator" indicator on the emergency panel went on. I
began reporting a generator failure, but just then the "fire" warning
system went on. I saw a trail of smoke in the wake of the plane. The burning
sensation in my eyes increased, and smoke appeared in the cockpit. I began
extinguishing the fire, and reported everything to the flight control.
I was ordered to eject. I declined to do so, because I saw a large populated
center in front. The "fire" warning light continued to blink. I went into a
glide toward the fields. My eyes hurt badly, and
because of tears in them I could not see well. Much of the radio traffic was
incomprehensible. Someone was intervening in the radio exchange, and sometimes
there was nothing but a screeching sound in the earphones. The plane was
difficult to control, and its speed fluctuated plus-minus 100 kilometers. At an
altitude of 1000 meters I ejected and came down in a field of maize."
On the ground the cadet was viewed with unconcealed
suspicion. To wreck two planes in a row was no laughing matter. A week later
the area commander came to the hospital where the recent hero was being
examined. To start with, the commander debunked his recent act of heroism, saying
that the engine of his plane had been shut down by the cadet himself and had
not stalled. The general admitted that he had been hasty in commending
the future pilot. Actually, general Mihailov said some more things.
FROM MAXIM CHURBAKOV'S REPORT:
"He said they had found an aluminum wire, which I had
supposedly wound around the autopilot switch. And while doing so, I had
let go of the control stick. The commander said that all this had been proved
and there was no point in my denying it. If I did not confess, the
documents would be sent to the prosecutor's office."
Such "cordial" discussions were conducted with him more
than once. In the end, criminal proceedings were instituted against him.
It was soon after that his mother, in tears, and her visibly upset son
arrived at the Russian UFO Center (SOYUZUFOTSENTR at the time), begging its
researchers to find an explanation of the mysterious sphere. Maxim was accused
of deliberately destroying expensive machinery. He was to be made a
scapegoat. The military authorities informed the mother that Maxim, a young
man, can spend the next ten years in prison, and still be only 29 at the end of
his sentence.
Zinaida Ivanovna, Maxim's mother, did not want her son
to spend even a day in the prison. Maxim was already expelled from the
Yeisk Military Aviation School (visscheye voyennoye aviatzionnoye uchilische, a
prestigious institution), and sent to serve in the army.
Several Russian ufologists initiated an investigation
of their own. They recalled a similar case in the Soviet Union in 1981. In
October of that year the Air Force pilot V. Korotkov was flying his MIG,
when suddenly a glowing sphere, approximately five meters in diameter, appeared
in front of it. For a few minutes it accompanied the fighter. As a result,
the radio communication system ceased operating, fuel combustion
was disturbed, and the engine shut down. Then, the sphere shifted toward
the tail unit. There was an explosion that damaged the fin, and after that
the sphere vanished from view. The engine began functioning again, and the
airplane made a safe landing. Experts investigating this incident arrived at the conclusion that the
entire blame rested with glowing plasma. It ionized the air, and a powerful electric charge built up on the plane's skin, exploding
and fusing part of the fin. It too could have caused the engine shutdown.
The investigators at the SOYUZUFOTSENTR also have reviewed many facts on record of car engines stopping when a UFO appeared in
the vicinity. Ufologists know, too, that the effects of UFOs extends
not just to human beings, who experience a burning sensation in their
eyes, temporary blindness, and shed tears. They also affect machinery, electrical equipment
being particularly vulnerable. As for what happened to
Churbakov, the area where the incident occurred-the boundary between Rostov
region and Krasnodar Krai-is well-known as one where there have been
frequent UFO sightings. In fact, one of the most active Russian ufologists resides
in Yeisk, and has recently completed a book about Russian military
studies of UFOs. His name is Yuri Stroganov, and his research work is widely
known and respected throughout the world. Yuri sent an interesting piece
of information to the Russian Ufology Research Center (the information was
later confirmed by Alexei Burenin, a top Russian chemical engineer).
In 1992, a UFO landing was reported from the Two
Sisters hill near the town of Belaya Kalitva in the Rostov region. At the site, a
circle 9 meters in diameter was discovered, and there was a black deposit
in the soil. An analysis of rock samples from the Two Sisters hill
performed at a laboratory in the city of Rostov revealed that the samples were of a brittle
porous mass, yellowish brown on fracture and with traces of thermal effects (fused and enriched with manganese and iron) on the surface.
The surface changes in the samples were 2-3 mm deep,
and the manganese content in these layers was hundreds of times higher
than in samples of the rock proper.
The first report about Maxim Churbakov's misfortune
arrived in my center in 1992. Boyevaya Vakhta (Battle Watch, a Russian
military newspaper) carried an article titled "An orange sphere against fighter
airplane." The author, Y. Leonidov, was clearly moved by the young pilot's
story. He asked the military investigators to pay attention to the
information about UFOs that has come down from such "heights" as the Air Force
Colonel General I. Maltsev. The distinguished Russian general had revealed
in 1991 that the UFOs encountered by Soviet fliers had possessed great
maneuverability, as if lacking any inertia. The aircraft on our planet, added
Maltsev, did not possess such capabilities. But in 1992 Ye. Leonidov was not very hopeful that
Maxim would be set free.
Two years later everything changed. The investigators
of the Russian UFO Center had completed their work. Ye. Leonidov published
excerpts of the investigation in the UFO Center's newspaper "UFO."
FROM THE CONCLUSION OF THE UFO CENTER:
"Having examined the documents and circumstances
relating to the event, the commission considers that during the flight there was a
typical encounter with a UFO. The data of the UFO center confirm the
diversity of the effects of unidentified objects on people and machinery. The
most frequent of these are effects of electric equipment (as a rule, it
switches off). In the case of human beings, it is the organs of vision that are
affected first."
This case was examined not only at the UFO Center. The
findings of the ufologists were borne out, for example by S. Kuzionov
and Yu. Raitorovsky, two investigators of anomalous phenomena. The experts
tested the cadet by subjecting him to retrospective hypnosis. Rima Leibow,
the director of the New York Center for Treatment and Study of Anomalous
Injuries, worked with them.
Here is an excerpt from the affidavit issued by Rima
Leibow (as reported by Ye. Leonidov):
"Maxim Churbakov was guided by common sense and acted
in line with the circumstances that arose. This is a normal reaction to
such an event. His account is absolutely truthful, and the accuracy of his
description in his report of what happened cannot be questioned."
In conclusion, here is another document.
FROM THE DECISION TO DISMISS THE CRIMINAL CASE
"An analysis of the evidence submitted justifies the
conclusion that the stimulation of engine shutdowns and a fire during M.
Churbakov's flights on August 16 and 28, 1991, took place not because of his
will or desire; therefore his actions implied no breaches of flight
regulations, and the criminal case against Churbakov shall be dismissed
owing to the absence of any crime in his acts."
The story of the encounter between Maxim Churbakov and
a UFO had a happy end, after all. The former pilot escaped a very
dangerous fate of a prisoner in the overcrowded and chaotic jails and
prisons of modern Russia.
Also, because he was expelled from the uchilische, Maxim did not become a
military pilot, and escaped the bloody, protracted war in Chechnya. The
encounter with a UFO turned out to be very auspicious for Maxim, after all.
Paul Stonehill
Author of THE SOVIET UFO FILES (1998)
>> Part Two
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
BOOKMARK FarShores.org here!
All Copyrights © are acknowledged.
Material reproduced here is for educational and research purposes only.