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10 Best place to visit in Pervomaysk Russia

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Przycisk, który miał zniszczyć świat

Wszystkie odcinki chronologicznie:
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Jedno z najtajniejszych miejsc w czasach ZSRR - baza międzykontynentalnych pocisków balistycznych w Pierwomajsku

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Tłumaczenie na język rosyjski: Andrii Nehaffian

Czas akcji:
Sierpień 2019r.
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Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Pobuzke

I got to press the launching button! Awesome experience! Never thought that I would get to see this.....25km north of Pervomaysk, lies one of Ukraine’s coolest museums. Better known as the Nuclear Missile Museum, this was formerly a nuclear-missile launch facility. The highlight is the journey taking you 12 storeys underground in a Brezhnev-era elevator to the control room (extra 200uah).
Here you can sit at the desk of doom, pretend to take that fateful call on an old Soviet phone, and press the button that once would have ended civilisation as we know it. These days it sets off lights and alarms, but thankfully no missiles are launched. The facility housed 10 missiles, each of which lay hidden in subterranean silos near the control room, with an additional 75 missiles or so floating around the region and administered by this facility.

On the grounds of the museum are four huge decommissioned intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), including a 75ft SS-18 Satan rocket, the Soviets' largest ICBM (it's an import from Baikanor, Kazakhstan). Many more rockets and pieces of military hardware are scattered around the grounds. The excellent museum proper documents milestones of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras, including the decommissioning of this facility with US assistance.
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РОСІЯ ВКРАЛА НАШУ ЯДЕРНУ ЗБРОЮ/ВІДМОВА УКРАЇНИ ВІД НАТО/ЯК ЗБИТИ ЯДЕРНУ РАКЕТУ/ENG SUB

#СлаваУкраїні????????

«Чому Україна втратила ядерну зброю?» Тема, яка обросла міфами та легендами. Одні кажуть, що в Україні лишився ядерний брухт, який міг призвести до катастрофи. Інші, що США та росія нас обманули, і все це була операція КДБ. Пройшов - 31 рік, а суперечки не вщухають досі. Сергій Пейчев поговорив з дійовими особами ядерного роззброєння України і дізнався, як все було насправді.

????????Оформити автоцивілку онлайн:
Промокод: PRESSING10 та отримуй знижку 10%

✅У випуску побачите:

✅Чи напала б росія, якби в Україні була ядерна зброя?
✅Чи можливо збити ядерну ракету?
✅Покажемо ядерні ракети, які були на території України
✅Скільки мільярдів Україна втратила на роззброєнні?

Наш Patreon -

????Моя інста -

Допомога волонтерам -

00:00 Початок
01:39 Ядерне роззброєння це план кремля
3:05 Чи могла Україна зберегти ядерну зброю?
4:16 Україна віддала ядерну зброю бо це був мотлох?
8:50 Чи можливо збити ядерну ракету?
12:49 На кого були направленні ядерні ракети України?
15:30 Сатана - найстрашніша ракета Радянського Союзу
17:50 Чим знищити ядерну ракету?
19:15 Чи були напади диверсантів на ядерні шахти
20:50 Наскільки можливо саботувати запуск ядерної ракети
26:15 Як часто запускали ядерні ракети з території України
28:17 Як СРСР перевіряв ядерну бомбу на власних солдатах
29:29 «Кубинська ракета», яка могла знищити світ
32:12 Випадок коли активували ядерну валізу
34:57 Чому Україна передала боєголовки росії?
40:04 Скільки мільярдів коштувало ядерне розброєння?
44:04 Якби лишилася 1 ядерна шахта - війни не було б
46:18 Кравчук казав: «А якщо ядерна боєголовка вибухне?»
49:20 США в 1992 році кликали Україну в НАТО
52:02 Чи правда, що українські ракети запускалися з москви?
55:37 Перший президент України відмовився від 100 млд $
1:01:10 США попереджало, що Будапештський меморандум не захист
1:08:10 Як запускалася ядерна ракета
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Strategic Missile Forces Museum and Sofiyivka Park Tour

- Strategic Missile Forces Museum and Sofiyivka Park Tour from Kiev, Ukraine. Museum of Strategic Missile Forces includes a unified command post, silo-based missile launcher, SS-18 Satan, ground facilities providing combat duty. Sofiyivka Park was founded in 1796 and built by order of magnate Schenski Potocki in honor of his wife Sophia Potocki by Belgian engineer Metzel and landscape gardener Zaremba and Ferre
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Visit a NUCLEAR MISSILE BASE || Ukraine's COLD WAR Missile Site (YOU CAN PUSH THE BUTTON!)

Ukraine is one of the few places in the world where you can visit a nuclear missile base. When the Soviet Union collapsed, about a third of its nuclear arsenal was inside Ukrainian territory. While Ukraine agreed to give up the warheads and decommission its sites, in the middle of the country in the sleepy little town of Pervomaysk one of the bases was turned into a museum -- and at the Strategic Missile Forces Museum, you can actually go into this Cold War missile base and push the nuclear launch button! This was a wild experience, and I feel like it really brought a lot of gravity to history I've only ever heard about. I definitely recommend this as one of the best things to do in Ukraine. You can do it as a day trip from Kyiv, or you can go to Pervomaysk yourself and arrange a tour of the nuclear missile base.

Elena was our tour guide, and I 1000% recommend her. She was knowledgeable, enthusiastic, and incredibly helpful. You can reach her via WhatsApp/Viber at +380952007578 or via Facebook:

You can read more about visiting the Ukrainian nuclear missile base on my friends' blog:
Read more about my Ukrainian adventures and travel advice on my blog:
See more on Instagram:
Right before this we went to visit the largest island in the Black Sea, Dzharylhach:
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Like and subscribe to see all my Ukraine adventures! New videos every week.

Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Pobuzke

I got to press the launching button! Awesome experience! Never thought that I would get to see this.....25km north of Pervomaysk, lies one of Ukraine’s coolest museums. Better known as the Nuclear Missile Museum, this was formerly a nuclear-missile launch facility. The highlight is the journey taking you 12 storeys underground in a Brezhnev-era elevator to the control room (extra 200uah).
Here you can sit at the desk of doom, pretend to take that fateful call on an old Soviet phone, and press the button that once would have ended civilisation as we know it. These days it sets off lights and alarms, but thankfully no missiles are launched. The facility housed 10 missiles, each of which lay hidden in subterranean silos near the control room, with an additional 75 missiles or so floating around the region and administered by this facility.
On the grounds of the museum are four huge decommissioned intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), including a 75ft SS-18 Satan rocket, the Soviets' largest ICBM (it's an import from Baikanor, Kazakhstan). Many more rockets and pieces of military hardware are scattered around the grounds. The excellent museum proper documents milestones of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras, including the decommissioning of this facility with US assistance.

Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Ukraine

After booking a tour to Chernobyl and the next day to a Nuclear Missile Base with UkranianWEB and being left hanging due to their lack of organization, I made it by bus and marshrutka to the site.
My buddies ended up with Chernobyl Tours with a last minute tour group.
Was afraid I was not going to have enough time to get there, and visit the missile site, but all worked alright.
The personnel, even though did not speak fully English, were very friendly and tried their best to explain to me everything.
It was a great experience; I never even imagine I would be able to visit this kind of sites in what used to be the USSR.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine held about one third of the Soviet nuclear arsenal, the third largest in the world at the time, as well as significant means of its design and production.[1] 130 UR-100N/RS-18 intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM) with six warheads each, 46 RT-23 Molodets ICBMs with ten warheads apiece, as well as 33 heavy bombers, totalling approximately 1,700 warheads remained on Ukrainian territory.[2] In 1994 Ukraine agreed to destroy the weapons, and to join the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).

40 of the underground launch silos for the RT-23 ICBMs had been installed around the city of Pervomaisk in the Mykolaiv Oblast, the home of the 46th Rocket Division of the 43rd Rocket Army of the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces. The individual silos were scattered across the general area and often located on fields, surrounded by a fence and guarded. A group of nine or ten silos was connected to a common, underground Unified Command Post manned by several military officers.

After the Declaration of Independence of Ukraine, the country opted for denuclearization. Between 1994 and 1997 all of the silos near Pervomaisk were de-alerted and the missiles returned to Russia. 30 of the 40 silos were destroyed with the help of foreign experts through the Nunn–Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction program.[5] One of the former Unified Command Posts near the town of Pobuzke was converted into the Strategic Missile Forces Museum on October 30, 2001 and is now part of the National Military History Museum in Kiev.

Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Pobuzke

The Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Ukraine (Музей ракетних військ стратегічного призначення) is a military museum located near the town of Pobuzke (Побузьке) in Ukraine, about 250 kilometres (160 mi) south of Kiev. It was built around the remains of a former underground Unified Command Post (UPC) for RT-23/SS-24 Molodets ICBM rockets.
I got to press the launching button! Awesome experience! Never thought that I would get to see this.....25km north of Pervomaysk, lies one of Ukraine’s coolest museums. Better known as the Nuclear Missile Museum, this was formerly a nuclear-missile launch facility. The highlight is the journey taking you 12 storeys underground in a Brezhnev-era elevator to the control room (extra 200uah).
Here you can sit at the desk of doom, pretend to take that fateful call on an old Soviet phone, and press the button that once would have ended civilisation as we know it. These days it sets off lights and alarms, but thankfully no missiles are launched. The facility housed 10 missiles, each of which lay hidden in subterranean silos near the control room, with an additional 75 missiles or so floating around the region and administered by this facility.
On the grounds of the museum are four huge decommissioned intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), including a 75ft SS-18 Satan rocket, the Soviets' largest ICBM (it's an import from Baikanor, Kazakhstan). Many more rockets and pieces of military hardware are scattered around the grounds. The excellent museum proper documents milestones of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras, including the decommissioning of this facility with US assistance.

The Ukrainian Missile Museum

A visit to the Ukrainian Strategic Missile Museum (1970) where you visit the last of the Cold War Silo command posts which would have once sent ICMs toward the US and Europe. An insight into the tensions of the Cold war.

Exploring a top secret Soviet missile base in Belarus.

Myself and one of my Belarusian subscribers, Viktor decided to take a trip to an old abandoned #Soviet missile base deep in a forest in Western #Belarus. The base we discovered was the home of the 638th Missile Regiment of the Soviet #Army. The base was abandoned sometime around the early 1990s. We discovered numerous buildings, many in very bad condition.
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Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Pobuzke

The Strategic Missile Forces Museum in Ukraine (Музей ракетних військ стратегічного призначення) is a military museum located near the town of Pobuzke (Побузьке) in Ukraine, about 250 kilometres (160 mi) south of Kiev. It was built around the remains of a former underground Unified Command Post (UPC) for RT-23/SS-24 Molodets ICBM rockets.
I got to press the launching button! Awesome experience! Never thought that I would get to see this.....25km north of Pervomaysk, lies one of Ukraine’s coolest museums. Better known as the Nuclear Missile Museum, this was formerly a nuclear-missile launch facility. The highlight is the journey taking you 12 storeys underground in a Brezhnev-era elevator to the control room (extra 200uah).
Here you can sit at the desk of doom, pretend to take that fateful call on an old Soviet phone, and press the button that once would have ended civilisation as we know it. These days it sets off lights and alarms, but thankfully no missiles are launched. The facility housed 10 missiles, each of which lay hidden in subterranean silos near the control room, with an additional 75 missiles or so floating around the region and administered by this facility.
On the grounds of the museum are four huge decommissioned intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), including a 75ft SS-18 Satan rocket, the Soviets' largest ICBM (it's an import from Baikanor, Kazakhstan). Many more rockets and pieces of military hardware are scattered around the grounds. The excellent museum proper documents milestones of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras, including the decommissioning of this facility with US assistance.

Soviet nuclear missile center: Cold War/Red button/Russia's dead hand

Where was the red button and how the Russia's dead hand looked like?
Tours In Ukraine.
The only one in the world nuclear missile center museum. Cold war heritage remained in Ukraine after 1996.
Real rockets mines, control pannels, red button , soviet devil rocket Satan in its real size and shape in the nuclear missile command center of Strategic Missile Troops.
If you are still wondering what to do in Ukraine - that's definately one of TOP10 things to do in the post soviet Eastern European country.
Soviet nuclear missile center which we've seen is one of 90 excisted in the USSR history, including bases in Ukraine, Khazakstan and Russia.
The museum is open 7 days a week and operated by the real officers who used to work on shifts while this danger of the world used to be the military base! They are the 10 tour guides now who are taking groups of tourists via all the secret underground world of the cold war corridors and underground nuclear rockets mines!
the whole world 35 meters deep underground!
Come and see it ...

Ukrainian Strategic Missile Forces Museum - 45 metres underground!

We visited a missile silo museum in Ukraine. They even let us simulate a launch! ** FILMED PRE-COVID **

I found this tour company via expedia.com, and both our trips booked with them went extremely well.

Follow me in other places for other things!
IG: @ericaamber
TikTok: @ericaamb

Soviet nuclear missile base

this park is in plunge lithuania realy awesome place.no atomic rokets didnt fly throw the silos.

World War 2 Museum - Ukraine Travel Video

National Museum of the History of the Great Patriotic War (World War 2) is a memorial complex commemorating the German-Soviet War. It is one of the largest museums in Ukraine centered on the now famous 62-meter tall Motherland statue, which has become one of the best recognized landmarks of Kiev.
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Ukraine - Nuclear Missile Silo - Exploring Ukraine

I drove hundreds of miles across the countryside to see a Soviet nuclear missile silo, where I had the opportunity to learn about the different nuclear warheads the Soviets had.

Follow along on the Jim Kitchen journey to all 193 UN Recognized countries by subscribing to my channel or following me on Instagram!

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#travel #travelvlog #vlog #worldtraveler #sovietunion #ukraine #nuclearmissile #nuclear

Former Soviet SS-24 Nuclear Missile Base in Ukraine - 11 April 2017

About a 3 hour+ drive from Kiev is a former Soviet nuclear missile site. I have an English speaking cute guide to show me around, both inside and outside the facility and silo. The SS-24 Strategic Missile Forces museum is located on the border of Kirovohradska and Mykolayivska oblasts.
Additional info:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_missile_forces_museum_in_Ukraine
wow.com/wiki/Strategic_missile_forces_museum_in_Ukraine

Museum of strategic rocket forces, Ukraine

An excellent piece of Soviet history in the middle of nowhere in Ukraine.

위키세계기행 - 우크라이나(Ukraine, Україна)

동유럽 국가로 남쪽과 남동쪽으로는 흑해와 아조프해, 동쪽과 북동쪽으로는 러시아, 북쪽과 북서쪽으로는 벨라루스, 서쪽으로는 폴란드, 슬로바키아, 헝가리, 남서쪽으로는 루마니아, 몰도바와 접한다. 동유럽 평원과 이어져 있으며 기후는 비교적 온화한 편이다. 법적 공용어는 우크라이나어이고, 인구 대부분은 우크라이나어를 사용하지만, 대부분 동부 인구(주로 동부 및 동남부와 오데사 지역)는 러시아어 사용자이기도 하다. 주요 도시로는 키이우, 도네츠크, 드니프로, 하르키우, 르비우, 오데사, 자포리자가 있다. 2014년 러시아가 크림반도를 합병함에 따라 크림반도는 러시아가 실효 지배하고 있다.

수도 : 키이우(키예프) (297만명,2019)
인구 : 4160만명 (2021)
면적 : 60만 3500㎢ (남한의 6배)
언어 : 우크라이나어(러시아어 상용)
종교 : 우크라이나정교(67%), 가톨릭(12%), 개신교(2.5%) 등
민족 : 우크라이나계(78%), 러시아계(17%), 기타(5%)

* 우크라이나의 국기는 스텝 지방의 금빛 밀밭 위 푸른 하늘의 모습을 상징한다고 한다. 청색과 황색은 우크라이나인들이 전통적으로 깃발에 많이 쓰던 색이다.

지하 자원이 풍부하여 도네츠 탄전의 석탄, 크리보이로그의 철광석, 카르파티아 유전과 천연가스, 그 밖에 망간, 우라늄, 식염, 칼리염, 석회석 등을 산출하며, 풍부한 수력 전기를 이용하여 기계 제조 공업·화학 공업이 발달하였다. 또한 우크라이나의 경지율은 약 70%에 이르고 있어, 밀·옥수수·보리·사탕무·해바라기·포도 등의 농산물을 생산하는 곡창이다. 온난한 크림 반도 남단과 광천이 솟는 카르파트 지방은 중요한 관광·보양지다.

* 역사
동슬라브족 국가(후의 우크라이나, 벨라루스, 러시아등) 정체성 형성의 모태가 된 루스국 (9세기~13세기, 키예프공국)이 키이우를 중심으로 한 현 우크라이나에 존재하다가 몽골제국에 망하고, 17세기 중반에는 우크라이나 중부에 카자크국이 세워기도 했으나 자립이 어려워 모스크바대공국에 의탁하다가 결국은 폴란드와 러시아에 의해 분할되었다. 그 후 18세기 후반의 폴란드 분할을 통해 우크라이나의 중부와 동부는 러시아 제국에, 서부는 오스트리아-헝가리 제국에 합병되었다.

1917년 러시아 혁명 이후 잠시 독립국을 세우기도 하였으나, 1921년 소련의 한 구성국이 되었다가 1991년에 독립.

오렌지혁명(2004년)과 유로마이단혁명(2014년)

독립 이후 우크라이나 정치권의 무능과 정쟁의 일상화, 만연한 부정부패, 만성적인 경제위기, 고질적인 동서 지역갈등, 미국과 러시아의 간접적 영향 등으로 10년 간격으로 두번의 시민혁명이 발생. 정권이 교체되었고, 특히 2014년 유혈의 마이단혁명으로 친러성향의 야누코비치 정부가 붕괴하자, 친러 성향이 강했던 크림 반도의 크림 자치 공화국이 주민 투표를 거쳐 러시아와 합병하였고, 러시아인이 많이 사는 도네츠크와 루한스크 등이 우크라이나에서 독립을 선언하고 러시아의 지원을 받아 전쟁을 벌였고, 결국 2022년 2월 24일에 러시아의 선전포고로 러시아와 우크라이나의 전쟁이 일어나고 말았다.

1. Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kiev
2. St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral in Kyiv
3. Kyiv
4. The Cabinet of Ministers building
5. Kyiv, the financial centre of Ukraine
6. Kamianets-Podilskyi Castle, one of the Seven Wonders of Ukraine
7. A collection of traditional Ukrainian Easter eggs
8. Rushnyk, Ukraine embroidered decorative towels
9. Relief map of Ukraine
10. Topographic map of Ukraine
11. Flag of Ukraine
12. Zaporozhian Cossacks
13. Morning first day of Orange Revolution, 2004
14. 2014 Euromaidan protests in Kyiv
15. War in Donbas, Pervomaisk City, July 2014
16. 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
17. Volodymyr Zelensky Official portrait
18. President Zelenskyy with members of the Ukrainian army on 18 June 2022
19. Polish troops enter Kyiv during the Polish–Soviet War, 1920
20. Kyiv suffered significant damage during World War II

키이우 또는 키예프 (Kyiv)

키이우 또는 키예프는 우크라이나의 최대 도시이자 수도로 드니프로강의 북쪽 중앙에 위치하고 있다. 인구는 296만명(2021).

21~35. Kyiv Pechersk Lavra complex 외

* 크림반도

1954년 소련 수상 흐루시초프가 우크라이나와 러시아의 우애를 과시하기 위해 우크라이나에 의해 러시아 본토와 단절되어 있던 크림 반도를 우크라이나에 할양. 이는 우크라이나 독립 후 양국 간의 분쟁 소지가 된다. 2013년 반정부 시위로 친러성향의 정부가 무너지자, 친러 성향이 강했던 크림 반도의 크림 자치 공화국이 우크라이나로부터 독립선언과 함께 러시아로의 편입을 추진하였으며, 그 후 합병을 위한 주민 투표가 실시되었고 2014년 3월 합병 조약이 체결되어 러시아가 실효 지배하고 있다.

크림 대교 (Crimean Bridge)

케르치 해협을 건너 러시아 본토의 타만 반도와 크림 반도를 연결하는 다리. 2014년 크림 위기 이후 러시아에서 적극 건설을 추진. 2015년 5월 건설 공사가 시작되어 도로 부분은 2018년 5월, 철도 부분은 2019년 12월에 개통되었다. 러시아가 지금까지 건설한 다리 중 최장이고, 유럽에서 가장 긴 다리(철도교 18.1km, 도로교 16.9km)이다.

2022년 10월 8일 새벽 러시아 본토에서 크림반도 방향으로 도로교를 통과하는 트럭이 폭발했다.이에 따라 도로변 일부가 붕괴됐고 병행하는 철도교를 통과 중인 연료수송열차의 탱크 차량 7량도 폭발염에 휩싸여 양측 다리가 불통됐다.

36~42. Crimean Bridge

- 세바스토폴 (Sevastopol)

크림 반도 남서부에 위치한 항구 도시. 면적은 864㎢, 인구는 418,987명(2016)으로 크림 반도 최대의 도시. 러시아의 흑해 함대(黑海艦隊)가 주둔하고 있다. 겨울이 온화하고 여름은 온난하여 유명한 해안 휴양 도시이자, 해양생물학의 중요한 거점이기도 하다.

43~57. Monument to the Sunken Ships, Sevastopol Bay 외


얄타 (Yalta)

크림 반도 남부 흑해 연안과 접한 휴양지. 19세기에는 러시아의 귀족, 상류층 사이에서 휴양지로 널리 알려졌다. 톨스토이는 이 곳에 여름 별장을 세웠으며 안톤 체호프는 1898년부터 1902년까지 얄타에 살았다. 제2차 세계 대전 중이던 1945년에는 얄타 회담이 열려 전후 세계질서와 우리나라에 큰 영향을 미친 결정이 이루어진 곳이다.

58~64. View of the city from the ship. Yalta 외

오데사 (Odessa)

우크라이나 남부에 위치한 오데사주의 주도이며 흑해에 접한 항만 도시.

65~75. Potemkin Stairs, 영화 'Battleship Potemkin (1925)'으로 유명한 계단. (길이 142m) 외

Nature in Ukraine

76~88

Ausstellung der Militärtechnik | Museum der Geschichte der Ukraine im Zweiten Weltkrieg

Ausstellung der Militärtechnik auf dem Gelände des Nationalen Museum der Geschichte der Ukraine im Zweiten Weltkrieg.

Aufgenommen von Pavlo Miadzel am 17. April 2017.

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