It is believed that the first contact with a group of extraterrestrial beings took place not only in the United States in the 1950s, but also in the Soviet Union during World War II.
In 1942, several diplomatic meetings were held to discuss various issues of mutual interest.
According to Soviet documents, an agreement was made. According to the 23/04 agreement, these meetings were to be held secretly. The aliens were accompanied by several special agents and they met only with high-ranking officials.
At the 1961 meeting, an incident involving three military personnel occurred, as document 072/E shows. This became a breach of agreement when it was discovered that the soldiers were carrying recording devices at the military base that had not been sanctioned by either the extraterrestrial team or the KGB agents.
The meetings were held in secret, according to the agreement of 23/04. According to the terms of the contract, audio recording and photography were prohibited. After the incident 072/E the agreement was revised, but contact was restored.
The events were announced in the newspaper Pravda, where an article was published about the alleged first contact with a group of grey aliens in 1942.
In 1969, a UFO reportedly crashed in the Sverdlovsk region and was captured by Soviet forces. The video reportedly shows a close-up of the crash, with the “flying saucer” partially buried in the ground. The body of a dead alien was reportedly found inside the spacecraft.
According to the Russian newspaper Pravda, the KGB had a special unit that studied mystical and unexplained phenomena both inside and outside the country.
General Ponomarenko, commander of the Urals Military District, said the unit was also responsible for ensuring that intelligence officers were involved in UFO incident investigations. Reports from agents were immediately forwarded to Colonel Grigoriev, head of the KGB’s scientific department.
In August 1989, an unidentified flying object was spotted near the city of Prokhladny. It was detected by Soviet radar, but the military was unable to establish contact with it. The UFO was eventually classified as hostile, and Soviet aviation attempted to shoot it down using a MiG-25 fighter.
As a result, the slow-flying UFO was shot down. After the crash, scouts arrived at the scene and found obvious damage to the flying saucer. Due to the radiation caused by the event, the rescue team had to don protective gear before approaching the scene.
A helicopter soon arrived at the crash site and delivered the “UFO” to the air force base in Mozdok.
When the specialists boarded the ship, they found three bodies: two dead aliens and one that was in a state of near death. Doctors and medical personnel made every effort to save the creature, but unfortunately, they failed.
The three entities measured around 1.2 meters in height, covered in gray, reptilian skin, and were devoid of hair. Their large black eyes were shielded by a slender protective layer. Each hand ended in three elongated, slender fingers. Encased in glass vessels, their bodies, along with the “UFO,” were transported to the Kapustin Yar missile test site for in-depth analysis.