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- Russian UFOlogy (UFO Update, October 1993)
- (Vol. 15, No. 11, p. 113)
-
- Paul Stonehill was just eight years old when he met the retired pilot
- who would change his life. While flying over the Russian arctic, the
- pilot told Stonehill he had seen a disk-shaped craft following his
- plane so closely that his crew opened fire. Intrigued, the youngster
- began a lifelong quest to learn about UFOs, especially those sighted
- over his homeland of Kiev. After emigrating to the United States as a
- teen, Stonehill kept in touch with other Russians interested in the
- Soviet-banned study of UFOlogy by smuggling messages through friends.
- Now a 34-year-old executive and naturalized U.S.citizen, Stonehill
- says his networking has put him in touch with scientists, military
- personnel, and UFO witnesses and investigators all over the former
- USSR. In fact, thanks to glasnost and his recently established Russian
- UFOlogy Research Center in Tarzana, California, Stonehill now openly
- acts as liaison between UFOlogy contacts in Russia and the new
- Commonwealth of Independent States and counterparts in the United
- States. "I want to provide Americans with a true picture of UFOlogy in
- the former Soviet Union,"Stonehill comments, "and I want to help my
- Russian colleagues discern between tabloid UFOlogy and serious research.
- "Toward that end, Stonehill reviews hundreds of Russian UFO cases a
- year,calling some 60 percent "genuine, backed by witnesses and hard
- facts." In fact, piecing together information from his Russian
- contacts, Stonehill says he's come up with evidence that UFOlogy was a
- focus of the former Soviet regime. For instance, when a large UFO
- allegedly plummeted to Earth outside the city of Omsk in the late 1980s,
- the military reportedly moved the wreckage to Moscow. "Soviet academics
- have confirmed that it was taken to five secret state research sites,"
- Stonehill insists. "My sources say the Soviet government conducted
- secret research based on the technology devised from this crash."
- Based on research by underground Soviet UFOlogists such as Anatoly
- Cistratav, Stonehill now also suspects there must have been some joint
- U.S.-Soviet programs aimed at developing the so-called Star Wars
- technology. Meanwhile, when it comes to fostering communication
- between Russian and American UFOlogists, Stonehill isn't alone. Former
- NASA experimental psychologist Richard Haines of Los Altos, California,
- recently founded the Joint USA-CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States)
- Aerial Anomaly Federation. The Federation, including more than 160
- groups throughout the United States and the former Soviet Union, will
- sponsor yearly meetings, translate UFO documents, and encourage
- collaborative scientific research into UFOs. Haines is also studying
- the difference between alien abductions reported in the United States
- and the former USSR. After hypnotizing a number of Russians in their
- native language, Haines has concluded that the "stories are basically
- the same over there, except that Russians tend to describe aliens
- taller than those in the West. "James Oberg, an expert on the Soviet
- space program and pundit on the UFO scene in the former USSR, however,
- takes a dim view of UFOlogy as practiced in Russia and the Commonwealth
- of Independent States. "They're often weirder than the weirdest
- American group," he comments, "because they've been living in an
- information vacuum for so long. "Stonehill, predictably, disagrees.
- Russian UFOlogists need help, not criticism, he states. A case in
- point: Russian researchers don't even have access to equipment for
- analyzing a film purported to depict a UFO hovering near Odessa last
- year. "Russian UFOlogists need state-of-the-art research tools,"
- Stonehill concludes. "They need more visits from their Western
- colleagues and fewer debunkers on their backs."
- --Sherry Baker Transmitted: 93-11-02 16:56:23 EST