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

UFOS OVER YEISK - Contd .....
Not a UFO, but a Bee over Dagestan in 2000…
According to Russian journalist Vyacheslav Fyodorov
(http://www.warlib.ru/),
the UFO sighted over Dagestan on November 14, 2000 was
actually an advanced
Russian weapon, an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). The
sighting was widely
reported throughout the world after the initial story
carried by Interfax
Agency; Philip Mantle and my new book about Russian
ufology contains a
detailed account of this and other fascinating
sightings and UFO reports
from the Caspian Sea. Dagestan is one of the republics
of the former USSR;
a part of the Russian Federation, it is located between
Caspian Sea on the
East and Caucasus mountains on the West; it borders
Chechnya.
Combining Mr. Fyodorov’s information and some thorough
independent research,
I have found out the following.
In March of the year 2000, the Russian Defense Ministry
had approved an
unmanned reconnaissance system Stroy-P (unmanned
reconnaissance complex or
PRC). The system was created in the Yakovlev
Experimental Design Bureau, a
major Russian military aircraft manufacturer, (OKB
imeni Yakovleva) named
for A. S. Yakovlev, a famous Soviet aircraft designer.
The Yak Aircraft
Corporation is now a privatized Russian aviation
corporation. Pchela (a
drone component of the complex) was built, as far as is
known, at the
Kishtim Radio Plant, with the help of the Smolensk
Aviation Plant (while
the Smolensk Aviation Plant joined with the Yakovlev
Design Bureau in March,
1992 to form the Yak Aviation Company, the two entities
seem to be operating
separately); the official maker of the Pchela is Kulon
Scientific Research
Institute (R&D Institute of Aircraft Technology). This
system, or complex,
includes a launcher on caterpillar-fitted platform, two
vehicles and ten
(initially, five) Pchela-1T 061 aircraft. The Stroy-P
complex was accepted
for service with the Russian Army in 1997.
A Pchela (remotely piloted reconnaissance drone that
provides television
surveillance of ground targets) weighs 130 kilograms
(loaded), has an
operational range of 110 to 150 kilometers, can fly at
altitudes ranging
from 100 meters to 3 kilometers, and cruises at speeds
from 11- to 150
kilometers an hour. Combat-recorded range: 55
kilometers. Its flight
endurance is 2 hours (it needs 20 liters of gasoline
for this). Its power
plant is piston plus two solid rockets takeoff boosters
(power at 32hp).
Onboard of the Russian drone are a video camera, a
still camera, a mapping
camera, and a secure radio. It uses a parachute for
landing. Pchela is
probably equal in capability to many Western UAV in the
same class. However,
it is a slower, tactical unmanned aerial vehicle than,
for example, the
Russian the 800-kilometer-per-hour Reis UAV.
The chronology is as follows: in 1982, the Soviet
military gave instructions
to the A.S. Yakovlev Design Bureau to develop a small,
remotely piloted
aerial vehicle (distantsionno-pilotiruemiy letatel'niy
apparat, or DPLA).
The person in charge of the project was a talented
designer, Yuri Yankevich
. Years later, a DPLA-605 Pchela was developed. This
was first Soviet UAV
capable of monitoring ground targets with an on-board
television camera that
had a real-time downlink. Later, Pchela (Russian word
for a honey bee), the
unmanned tactical reconnaissance drone (bespilotnyi
samolet, in Russian),
was modified to Pchela-1T (TV observer), Pchela-1IK
(new version ), and
according to www.aviation.ru/Yak/, to Expert , a 5-th
generation unmanned
tactical reconnaissance drone to replace Pchela from
the Stroy-P system.
Back in the summer of 2000 the Russians were conducting
test flights of
their Pchela-1T light unmanned reconnaissance aircraft,
according to Mr.
Fyodorov . Apparently, Russian media carried stories
about the
“airplane-robot” and its onboard TV camera. The Pchela
drones tested in
November of 2000 are also equipped to fly in the
nighttime and have infrared
vision capability. The timing of the UFO sighting over
Dagestan and the
tests of the Pchela drones coincide.
Similar “UFO” flew into the Soviet Union back in 1969,
and turned out to be
an unmanned American espionage aircraft. The Soviets
were sufficiently
impressed, and their government ordered that a similar
aircraft be developed
per Soviet standards and equipment. However, the
Soviets were designing
their own unmanned spy planes back in the late 1950s
and 1960s. We can be
certain that some UFO sightings through the years of
the Cold War were
nothing but tests of such aircraft observed by innocent
bystanders.
Meanwhile, the Pchela was incorporated, as a weapon, by
Russian armed forces
in 1997. There is a special unit dedicated to the use
of unmanned aviation
systems in the town of Akhtyubinsk, in the Astrakhan
province of southern
Russia (a Russian state aviation research center is
located there as well).
Russian Bees are sold to foreign buyers, too, and have
been featured at the
Russian pavilions at the international aviation
exhibitions. The Russians
have used the Pchela in Chechnya, but Mr. Fyodorov
doubts that the Russian
military has utilized the weapon’s potential fully.
However, Russian
Military Parade magazine (1999) claims something
different. Their
information came from a source in the Russian Defense
Ministry. This source
claimed that decision to use PRCs in Chechnya to
provide continuous aerial
reconnaissance and target designation data for the
Federal troops has been
taken after analyzing the results of combat operations
in Dagestan. The fact
is, when suppressing the fire positions of the rebels,
the Russian troops
were in lack of reconnaissance information, transmitted
in the real time
mode. Also, in 1995, the Stroy-P complex was already
used in Chechnya (a
Pchela weighed 138 kilograms at the time). According to
www.rg.ru/english/Archiv/2000/0114/1.htm, the unmanned
air reconnaissance
military unit was situated on the mountain Goiten-Kort
near Khankala. The
“plane-robot” proved its unique abilities having
received a lot of valuable
information that saved hundreds of lives. But the
Russian Defense Ministry
lacked funds to procure the upgraded weapons (according
to the information
form 1999; obviously, in the year 2000 the funds to
procure upgraded Stroy-P
complexes were found). According to the same source,
the Pchela-1 RPC made
10 flights in Chechnya, with the total flight time
accumulated of 7 hours 25
minutes. Why would the Pchela be operated over
Dagestan? -To provide the
round-the-clock control over 200 kilometers of the
Chechnya border, and to
block the attempts of rebels to penetrate the adjacent
territories,
according to the Military Parade’s source. In 2000, the
same magazine had an
interesting article written by Nikolai Novichkov ,
Editing Director of the
ITAR-TASS Department of Scientific and Technical
Information. The author
claimed that due to financial restraints, the Defense
Ministry has not yet
purchased a single new Stroy-II complex and currently
has only three earlier
produced sets (the article was published in early
2000), one of which was
tested in Chechnya. Russia's Defense Ministry is
expected to spur adoption
for service of the Pchela-1T RPV (or RPC-P.S.) with
night vision equipment.
The Pchela-1T RPVs employed in Chechnya (at the time
Mr. Novichkov’s article
was published) were equipped with only day surveillance
TV cameras. The
Pchela version, fitted out with infrared night-vision
devices, was developed
a long time ago, but its tests still had not been
completed in early 2000
due to lack of funds. In November of 2000 the tests
were performed, as the
sightings reported confirm. Another confirmation of the
tests can be found
here:
http://www.vor.ru/science/madeinrus15_eng.html
The “UFO” sighted over Dagestan, it appears, was one of
Russian Army’s
tactical reconnaissance assets.
By the way, in 1989 a Nikolai Novichkov was one of the
editors of the
English-Russian Dictionary of Antimissile &
Anti-satellite Defense (Moscow
Military Publishing House). The dictionary had
unidentified flying object as
an entry (page 353). I believe he is the author of the
article in Military
Parade. This is a footnote in the turbulent history of
UFOs over the USSR.
Paul Stonehill
Russian Ufology Research Center
Author of The Soviet UFO Files
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