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Shaitan Mazar — 'Grave of the Devil' Crash, Kyrgyzstan

Aug 28, 1991

Shaitan Mazar Gorge, Tien Shan, Kyrgyzstan

Cold War
  • DateAug 28, 1991
  • LocationShaitan Mazar Gorge, Tien Shan, Kyrgyzstan
  • Witnesses4
  • ShapeCigar
  • Credibility★★☆☆☆
Same eraCold War
  1. 1990Kara Bogaz Bay Spindle and Spheres — Turkmenistan, 1990
  2. 1991Sasovo Explosion — Ryazan Oblast, Russia, 1991
  3. 1991Shaitan Mazar — 'Grave of the Devil' Crash, Kyrgyzstan

Credibility Audit

4 factors
  1. Military Witness+3
  2. Pilot Witness+3
  3. Radar Corroborated+3
  4. Official Report+1
Raw total10
Final tier★★★☆☆Moderate
Thresholds
  • ★0–3
  • ★★4–7
  • ★★★8–11
  • ★★★★12–16
  • ★★★★★17+

DoD Observables

2 of 5
  • Instantaneous Acceleration
  • Hypersonic Velocity
  • Low Observability
  • Trans-Medium Travel
  • Anti-Gravity Lift

Event Description

Observed Shape
Cigar

Craft morphology

In August 1991, an extraordinary sequence of events reportedly unfolded across thousands of miles of Soviet territory, beginning with radar detection of a massive unidentified object and culminating in a ground recovery operation in the remote Tien Shan mountains of Kyrgyzstan. The case, which became known in Russian UAP research circles as the Shaitan Mazar incident — 'Grave of the Devil' being the local name for the crash area — is among the most dramatic and controversial events in post-Soviet UAP history.

Soviet air defence radar on the Mangyshlak peninsula in Kazakhstan reportedly tracked an object of anomalous size crossing the Caspian Sea at approximately 960 kilometers per hour. The object's radar return was estimated by operators to correspond to a vehicle approximately 600 meters in length — far beyond the dimensions of any known aircraft, spacecraft, or airship. Two MiG-29 interceptors were scrambled but were unable to achieve a visual contact or weapons lock before the object's trajectory carried it out of their operational range.

The object's flight path, if the radar data was accurate, took it over Central Asian Soviet territory and into the high-altitude terrain of the Tien Shan range in Kyrgyzstan near the Chinese border. A Soviet military search and recovery team was subsequently dispatched to the reported crash coordinates, a location in extremely remote high-altitude terrain that required substantial logistical effort to reach. The recovery team reportedly found wreckage of a large object and, according to accounts that surfaced after the Soviet Union's dissolution, encountered a scene that defied explanation in terms of any known vehicle type.

The accounts of what the recovery team found are inconsistent across different sources, which is typical of high-classification crash retrieval cases where information is fragmented, partially compartmentalized, and transmitted through unofficial channels. Some accounts describe metallic material with unusual properties; others describe structural configurations inconsistent with any Soviet, American, or Chinese aerospace vehicle of the period.

The Shaitan Mazar case is assessed cautiously in the UAP research community because the primary documentation comes from post-Soviet Russian sources whose reliability is difficult to verify, and because the remote location and classified handling of Soviet military operations in that period create an evidentiary gap that may never be fully closed. However, the case is considered significant because the initial radar detection involved trained Soviet air defence operators working on standard military systems, and the dispatch of a recovery team — if confirmed — would represent an extraordinary official response to an unidentified phenomenon.

Sources

  1. [1]mediaBradt Guides — The Strange Tale of the Shaitan Mazar UFO
  2. [2]mediaUFO Case Book — 1991 Russian Crash, Grave of the Devil