HomeSample Page

Sample Page Title


Hennadii Fil, 65, former deputy Commander of the 309th Missile Regiment near Soviet air defense missile at the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces on Dec. 5, 2025.

Hennadiy Vladimirovitch Fil, 65, former deputy commander of the Soviet Union’s 309th Missile Regiment, stands close to an outdated Soviet air protection missile on the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces, the place he’s now a information, on Dec. 5.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

POBUZKE, Ukraine — In the midst of huge farm fields in southern Ukraine, you may discover what was as soon as a secret Soviet intercontinental ballistic missile launch website. In the present day it is the Museum of Strategic Missile Forces.

Apart from chronicling the Chilly Struggle arms race between the Soviet Union and United States, the museum tells the story of how Ukraine dismantled its nuclear weapons arsenal — with assurances from the U.S., Britain and Russia that its sovereignty can be revered — shortly after turning into an impartial nation in 1991.

In the present day most Ukrainians imagine that call to surrender nukes was a fateful mistake. For them, this museum is a bitter reminder of what they are saying was their “naivety” and “betrayal.”

On this chilly, blustery December day, there aren’t many guests, however Ihor Volodin and Inna Kravchuk have come from the neighboring Cherkasy area.

“I feel it is part of our historical past and it is essential to find out about it,” says Kravchuk. However she says it additionally makes her offended: “If we had saved these weapons, in all probability Russia wouldn’t have attacked. The nuclear weapons had been our insurance coverage.”

Ihor Volodin, 31, National Guard serviceman. Before army was designer of 3D printable radio controlled tanks.

Ihor Volodin, 31, a latest customer on the museum, is a Nationwide Guard service member who additionally designs 3D-printable radio-controlled tanks.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

Hennadiy Vladimirovitch Fil, a 65-year-old information, as soon as served as a lieutenant colonel within the elite rocket forces right here. He attributes his youthful complexion to on a regular basis he spent in an underground silo on the website.

Fil says hardly anybody of a sure age leaves the museum with out cursing.

However earlier than that betrayal, there have been 4 many years of the Chilly Struggle arms race, and this museum plunges guests deep into that period on the Soviet aspect. Black-and-white portraits of Soviet commanders sporting stern appears and chests filled with medals stare down from the partitions, whereas outdated rotary telephones and antiquated Sixties management panels assist re-create the gloomy environment of the epoch. The place is directly creepy, fascinating and at instances overwhelming with element. 

Fil makes use of a protracted pointer to spotlight wall maps and charts that chronicle the arms race and deliberate mutual destruction between the U.S. and USSR. He says the ten intercontinental ballistic missiles as soon as primarily based right here might have reached the U.S. East Coast inside 25 minutes of launch. Every might carry 10 nuclear warheads with a destruction capability of 200,000 sq. kilometers or 77,000 sq. miles — roughly the realm of Nebraska.

Hennadii Fil, former deputy Commander of the 309th Missile Regiment, shows the locations of the launch sites of the 309th Missile Regiment at the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces in Mykolaiv region.

Hennadiy Vladimirovitch Fil reveals launch website areas on a map on the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

When the us broke aside in 1991, Ukraine was left with the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal, after the U.S. and Russia. In January 1994, then-President Invoice Clinton stopped over in Kyiv on his technique to Moscow, for talks with Ukraine’s first democratically elected president, Leonid Kravchuk. Later that 12 months, a deal was reached for Ukraine to surrender its nuclear weapons.

That settlement, generally known as the Budapest Memorandum, was signed in Hungary by Ukraine, Russia, the U.S. and Britain. Ukraine’s three co-signers promised its territorial integrity can be revered.

A newsreel enjoying within the museum reveals how Ukraine’s nuclear missiles had been destroyed within the mid-Nineteen Nineties. Jets able to carrying nuclear warheads had been additionally dismantled. The ten silos that after held missiles had been full of concrete — besides one which has been saved as an exhibit on the museum grounds, the place guests can see the large, decommissioned missile nesting inside a silo.

Upper section of an intercontinental ballistic missile launch silo of the 309th Missile Regiment at the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces.

Higher part of an intercontinental ballistic missile launch silo of the 309th Missile Regiment on the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

There’s additionally an unlimited show of {hardware} from totally different Soviet and Russian wars: World Struggle II, Afghanistan within the Nineteen Eighties, and destroyed Russian tanks from the present Ukraine warfare. There’s additionally one of many missiles the Soviets pointed on the U.S. from Cuba in the course of the 1962 Cuban Missile Disaster — identified right here because the “Caribbean Disaster.”

Fil notes bitterly that Ukraine additionally ended up giving a number of jets to Russia in cost for pure fuel money owed just a few years later.

“Now,” he says, “Russia is bombing us with our personal planes.”

Denmark’s Ambassador to Kyiv Thomas Lund-Sorensen can be visiting the museum on this present day. He says whereas lowering the variety of international locations holding nuclear weapons is at all times a constructive factor, he agrees that what occurred to Ukraine was “a shame.”

“They gave them up with the guarantees of the three powers, and clearly the ensures given from Russia on the time weren’t well worth the paper they had been written on,” says Lund-Sorensen.

Soviet missile lounching vehicles on the former 309th Missile Regiment in Mykolaiv region.

Soviet missile launching automobiles of the previous 309th Missile Regiment on the museum grounds.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

Even Clinton has expressed his remorse in regards to the Budapest Memorandum. In an interview with Irish broadcaster RTE within the 12 months following Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Clinton stated, “I really feel horrible about it… and I really feel a private stake as a result of I obtained them to agree to surrender their nuclear weapons. And none of them imagine that Russia would have pulled this stunt if Ukraine nonetheless had their weapons.”

This museum is a painful reminder of what occurred, and underlines why Ukraine insists that ironclad safety ensures be a part of any peace take care of Russia at present.

Fil takes guests alongside an underground hall the size of two soccer fields earlier than opening a door weighing 2,000 kilos, which results in a tiny elevator.

The NPR crew crams in to descend 150 ft in an underground silo. The doorways open to a tiny dwelling area with three slab bunks, a bathroom, a hotplate and rancid, strange-smelling air. Fil says that is the place a launch crew might stay for as much as 45 days in case of a nuclear warfare. A wall ladder by way of a gap within the ceiling results in a launch room above.

Hennadii Fil, 65, former deputy Commander of the 309th Missile Regiment inside the protected command post of the central position.

Hennadiy Vladimirovitch Fil, a information on the museum, sits contained in the protected command publish 140 ft underground on the backside of a missile silo.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

We climb by way of. After seating us within the two high commander seats – that are bolted to the ground and have harnesses to strap you in (Fil says a direct nuclear hit from America would have brought on an explosion equal to an earthquake measuring 12 factors on the Richter scale) – Fil flips a swap. The traditional-looking management board lights up. He locations our fingers on a button and a key for a simulation of a nuclear missile launch.

It takes two individuals making two gestures to launch the missiles. As he provides the launch order, we press the button and switch the important thing. A loud alarm begins to sound. On a display screen above, we watch a simulation of the ballistic missiles rising from their silos and launching one after the other in a ball of fireplace.

Hennadii Fil former deputy Commander of the 309th Missile Regiment pushing the launch button inside the protected command post of the central position on 5 December 2025 Images: @shtukaanton - Anton Shtuka/NPR

Hennadiy Vladimirovitch Fil pushes the launch button on the management panel inside what was the protected command publish of the central place.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

Regardless of Russia’s latest threats, Fil says he does not imagine Russian President Vladimir Putin would dare use a nuclear weapon.

“They’re too unpredictable,” he says. He provides that Russia additionally is aware of it could face harsh penalties for such an act.

We watch the missiles within the simulation journey by way of area. Quickly they start hitting their targets.

The view from area on our display screen reveals mushroom clouds blossoming throughout the planet and a narrator describes a series response depleting all oxygen from the environment and thus ending life on our planet.

Fil says he is grateful it by no means got here to that. However he nonetheless regrets that Ukraine gave up its nuclear deterrence.

Visualization of a nuclear strike at the command post of the 309th Missile Regiment. Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces in Mykolaiv region on 5 December 2025 Images: @shtukaanton - Anton Shtuka/NPR

Museum guests can watch a visualization of a nuclear strike and see what would have occurred if there had been a nuclear missile launch.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


cover caption

toggle caption

Anton Shtuka for NPR

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest Articles