Declassified UFO / UAP Document

ITOGI on Korzhakov's Analytic Center

🏛 FBIS 📄 Intelligence report/translation

Ever wanted to host your own late-night paranormal radio show?

Across the Airwaves · Narrative Sim · Windows · $2.95

You're on the air. Callers bring Mothman, Fresno Nightcrawlers, UFO sightings, reptilian autopsies, and whispers about AATIP and Project Blue Book. Every reply shapes how the night goes.

UFO & UAP Cryptids Paranormal Government Secrets Classified Files High Strangeness Strange Creatures
The night is long. The lines are open →

AI-Generated Summary

TL;DR

This document is an intelligence translation of a Russian television report detailing the rise of Aleksandr Korzhakov to the position of the second most influential politician in Russia by January 1995. It tracks his political ranking progression from October 1994 to January 1995.

This document is a Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) translation of a segment from the Russian NTV program 'Itogi,' aired on January 29, 1995. The report focuses on the increasing political prominence of Aleksandr Korzhakov, the Chief of the President of Russia's Security Service. According to the broadcast, experts ranked Korzhakov as the second most influential politician in Russia as of January 1995, placing him behind only the President and the Prime Minister. The text traces his ascent through the political ranks, noting that in October 1994, he was ranked seventh among the top 10 most influential politicians. By December 1994, he had moved to fourth place, and by January 1995, he reached second place. The report highlights this shift as a significant political development, noting that his rise in influence could have been predicted based on his increased activity on the political scene starting in October 1994.

IN OTHER WORDS, EXPERTS RANKED HIM THIRD IN INFLUENCE IN THE COUNTRY AFTER THE PRESIDENT AND THE PRIME MINISTER.

Official Assessment

The document details the rising political influence of Aleksandr Korzhakov, Chief of the Russian President's Security Service, as assessed by experts between October 1994 and January 1995.

Key Persons