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Russian scientist deciphers message from aliens

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Jennie McGrath
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« on: June 11, 2007, 07:07:43 pm »

Russian scientist deciphers message from aliens, which he found on Earth
2005/06/29



Extraterrestrial beings visited planet Earth and left their calendar and a message to the human civilization, Russian mathematician Vladimir Pakhomov believes. “I did not find the message from aliens by accident. I was searching for it, because I was sure that they had visited our planet,” the scientist said.

A lot of specialists paid attention to several coincidences, which they could find in peoples' legends and tales, particularly in those stories, which told of extraterrestrial beings visiting Earth in ancient times.

Explorer and traveler, Erich von Daeniken, wrote that it was extremely difficult for humans to find aliens' traces on Earth. The global ocean takes two-thirds of the planet's surface, ice covers the planet on its poles, vast deserts and immense woods occupy the rest of the planet's territory. The explorer supposed that aliens, if they had ever landed on Earth, would of course have to think, what kind of a message they could leave on the planet so that it could be saved through thousands of ages.

Scientist Vladimir Pakhomov believes that aliens probably decided to leave their calendar on the planet. Egyptian pharaohs, for example, were taking a rather strange oath when they were acceding to the throne: they promised not to make even slightest changes in the calendar.

A lot of ancient manuscripts tell of the god of wisdom that was known under two names - Thoth and Hermes. Legends say that the god wrote and hid certain “books” before he returned to heaven. Researcher Graham Hancock wrote in his book, “Heaven's Mirror” that the books of the god of wisdom remained imperishable and invisible through the centuries. Legends say that the god did not want humans to find and read the books, for the human race did not deserve such an honor.

The humanity did not have the necessary knowledge and technologies to read the aliens' calendar, but the latter existed on the planet anyway. “I was shocked with the matrix of the eternal calendar, which was found on the walls of the Sophia Cathedral in Kiev, Ukraine. The matrix makes it possible to determine the calendar structure of any year. For example, you can easily find out the day of your birthday in a hundred years with the help of this eternal calendar,” Pakhomov said. The scientist used the calendar of the Sophia Cathedral as the starting point to decipher ancient cryptograms.
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http://funreports.com/fun/29-06-2005/1232-0
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Jennie McGrath
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« Reply #1 on: June 11, 2007, 07:09:35 pm »

Interesting, but it isn't really specific, is it?

Here's another word on the subject!


Rense.com
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Russian UFO Research Revealed
By Jim Oberg
Special to SPACE.com
8-9-00


Response To Russian And American Debunkers

By Paul Stonehill <rurc@earthlink.net>
8-16-00

Re: Exclusive: Russian UFO Research Revealed
By Jim Oberg - Special to SPACE.com
link


I have studied Soviet ufology for many years; while living in the Soviet Ukraine, and after my emigration to the West. My contacts with Soviet ufologists precede the Afghan War; as for eyewitnesses, back in the 1960s I talked to former Soviet military pilots, who observed unidentified flying phenomena, The Russian UFOLOGY Research Center, a research entity I'd formed in 1991 (profiled in October 1993 issue of OMNI magazine) has for years collected accounts of sightings in the former USSR.

Some reports came in long before the Soviet Union collapsed. There are accounts from Soviet military pilots, sailors; files of the KGB released in 1992; and much more. THE SOVIET UFO FILES, published in 1998, authored by Paul Stonehill, and reviewed by Philip Mantle, contains much information heretofore unavailable in the West. Another book is in the works, as even more information has become available. Mr. Mantle is also a tremendous source on Russian ufology, well-known in the CIS.

Messers Platov and Migulin have consistently debunked UFO sightings, whether under the ancien regime, or after the break-up of the USSR. Mr. Sokolov is by no means final authority on Soviet UFOs. We knew about the SETKA research for years; there were other research projects conducted in the USSR, too. Much more important Soviet military officials have reported UFO sightings and discussed them in the media, during the perestroika period. They did not do it for money. Even Mr. Oberg should know that; I have my doubts whether he would admit it even to himself. Those cases that were hoaxes have been discussed in my book. But one cannot wish away UFOs, nor can one explain them away through historical materialism and Marxist_Leninist ideology. Russia is free today: people are free to discuss UFOs; military veterans I have corresponded with did not do it for money; shame on those who cast such shameful explanation on people who just want to reveal long-forbidden cases.

We have accounts of cosmomauts, scientists, military and intelligence officals, veterans of Soviet military conflicts, and many others. UFOs have been reported consistently in the USSR; Soviet Communist government disliked the unruly visitors, and did its best to cover-up sightings, or explain them away, using D. Menzel's methods.

I have always been surprised that any attempts of an independent research of Soviet UFOs came under fierce attack from debunkers. Why? Are we stepping on someone's toes? Are we daring to go where we sould not be allowed? Who decides the access? Former Soviet scientific officialdom, devoted Marxist-Leninists, who denied others the opportunity to learn, to access forbidden files? Mr. Oberg? UFOs were officially banned from being mentioned in the USSR's media until Mr. Gorbachev removed the ban in 1989. Who is trying to gag researchers today?

On behalf of my Russian, Ukrainian, Georgian and other colleagues in the countires that once had comprised the USSR, I assure debunkers wherever they may be that the research will go on. We have yet to uncover more files and sources. We have yet to find more explanations. We have yet to talk to many eyewitnesses who have been silent heretofore.

Paul Stonehill Russian Ufology Research Center California

-----


In an special report obtained by SPACE.com, two of Russia's leading UFO investigators have summarized the results of the Soviet Union's official 13-year study of UFO reports.

They maintain that the Western media claims of "secret KGB files" and "captured aliens" are untrue.

"One can hardly imagine a greater absurdity," they write, although they do admit that their own research program (1978-1990) was indeed classified "SECRET" at the time and that there remained cases that could not be explained.

The investigators, Dr. Yuliy Platov of the Academy of Sciences and Colonel Boris Sokolov of the Ministry of Defense, wrote up their conclusions for an issue of the official Reports of the Academy of Sciences journal, published in Moscow. Dr. Platov forwarded an advance copy of the report to SPACE.com.

"Many people are the eyewitnesses of strange things," the writers report, "which cannot always be precisely identified with natural or man-made effects. However, this amount is very insignificant, and from this there does not follow even a 'hint' of the probable interference of extraterrestrial forces into our lives."

In a brief background for the project, Platov and Sokolov describe how the mass UFO sighting of September 20, 1977, over the northwestern city of Petrozavodsk and elsewhere, sparked high-level public and official interest in UFOs. Two parallel studies, one within the civilian scientific establishment and one within the military, were set up to run for the following 13 years. The civilian team actually continued formal investigations until 1996, Platov reveals.

The official groups did not use the term "UFO" (or "NLO" in Russian). Instead, they referred to "paranormal phenomena." But everyone involved in the project knew exactly what this meant -- any apparently unexplainable aerial apparitions.

Military secrets

Platov and Sokolov explain that from the start, the teams "assumed a high probability of a military-technical origin of the observed strange effects."

This was based in large part on the iron-clad identification of the "Petrozavodsk UFO" with the launching of a spy satellite from a secret nearby base. But this factor dictated that the study be kept secret because most of the suspected causes were already military secrets.

Another reason for secrecy was "to decrease a public resonance" regarding the reality of UFOs -- a "resonance" that would only grow if the government's formal interest were known.

Finally, there was the possibility of military application of discoveries regarding some of the perceived properties of UFOs such as radar invisibility and high maneuverability.

Sokolov himself is widely quoted on Internet UFO pages endorsing this last possible benefit of UFO research. However, his more prosaic explanations for some "classic" Russian UFO cases failed to show up on several search engines I tried.

The biggest UFO network ever

In January 1980, the Soviet Ministry of Defense issued a directive to all military forces to report "any inexplicable, exotic, extraordinary phenomenon". Sokolov described how this essentially converted millions of military personnel across one sixth of the Earth's surface into a sensory network for UFOs. "It is not likely that anybody could organize such a large-scale research," he boasted, "and practically with no financing."

Over the course of more than a decade, Platov's and Sokolov's teams together collected and analyzed about 3,000 detailed messages, covering about 400 individual events.

A pattern soon emerged.

"Practically all the mass night observations of UFOs were unambiguously identified as the effects accompanying the launches of rockets or tests of aerospace equipment," the report concludes. These sightings were mainly associated with activity at the secret rocket base at Plesetsk, north of Moscow.

In about 10-12 percent of the reports, they also identified another category of "flying objects," or as they clarified it, "floating objects." These were meteorological and scientific balloons, which sometimes acted in unexpected ways and were easily misperceived by ground personnel and by pilots.

Specifically, Platov and Migulin describe events on June 3, 1982, near Chita in southern Siberia, and on September 13, 1982, on the far-eastern Chukhotskiy Penninsula. In both cases, balloon launches were recorded but the balloons reached a much greater altitude than usually before bursting. Air defense units reacted in both cases by scrambling interceptors to attack the UFOs.

"The described episodes show that even experienced pilots are not immune against errors in the evaluation of the size of observed objects, the distances to them, and their identification with particular phenomena," the report observes.

The Ukrainian trigger

The most sensational Russian UFO case of the 1980s involved a story of UFOs nearly triggering nuclear war. This reportedly occurred on October 5, 1982, at a missile base near Khmelitskiy in the Ukraine.

One typical version of this event appeared on an ABC Prime Time Live program which aired on American television in October, 1994. Host Diane Sawyer and correspondent David Ensor presented interviews with former Russian military personnel who described a 900-foot-wide UFO hovering over their missile base while their command consoles switched themselves to "prepare to launch" for 15 seconds before returning to normal. The location was given as Byelokoroviche, but it's the same incident.

Sokolov, who took part in the investigation which began the very next day, presents a very different version in the new report.

The eyewitness reports from more than 50 people, as documented within hours of the sighting, described bright flashing objects on the northern horizon, in the form of "a balloon." Within hours the investigation team had located records of parachute flares and night-bombing exercises occurring at another military base in precisely that direction at precisely that time.

"It should be added," Platov and Sokolov continue, "that the fault of the operation of the command post equipment had nothing to do with the observed phenomena, it just completely accidentally coincided in time." The fault merely involved an indicator light, and there was no evidence the missiles themselves were affected in any way. Nevertheless, the missile base commander, while genuinely alarmed, evidently found it more convenient to blame extraterrestrials rather than his own maintenance troops for the scare.

Nobody's abducting Russians

The official investigators also point out a striking absence of certain types of reports from their files. "In contrast to numerous descriptions of various kinds of contacts with aliens," they write, "there has not been obtained, within the framework of the project which involved the great observational potential of the army and civilian organizations, any message about UFO landings, any message about contacts with pilots of UFOs, any message about the abductions of individuals by UFOs."

"This means," they conclude, "that either the territory of the USSR was, due to any reasons, closed for alien visitations during, at least, 13 years, or that the hypothesis of an extraterrestrial origin of UFOs is inconsistent. Any serious investigator of the problem of UFOs should, at least, face this reality."

Platov and Sokolov clearly are aware that popular press reports, both in Russia and in the West, will undoubtedly still refer to "Soviet UFO secrets." In the harsh economic conditions of post-Soviet Russia, many people, especially military veterans, will continue to be willing to tell any story that other people are willing to pay for.

But their insider positions in one of Earth's greatest government UFO investigations, and their evident lack of any motivation aside from telling the truth as they found it, will make their report a significant contribution to our understanding of what really has been happening regarding this mysterious and fascinating subject..


http://www.rense.com/general3/rusufo.htm
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