Three mystical secrets from the declassified archives of the KGB. How to open a .KGB file? KGB secret files

- The extension (format) is the characters at the end of the file after the last dot.
- The computer determines the file type precisely by extension.
- By Windows default does not show filename extensions.
- Some characters cannot be used in the file name and extension.
- Not all formats are related to the same program.
- Below are all the programs with which you can open the KGB file.

Universal Extractor is a handy utility for extracting various archives, as well as some additional file types. This program, first of all, suitable for those users who create archives on a computer, but only download various archives from the Internet, and then unpack them. The Universal Extractor utility copes with this task quite well. It allows you to unpack all known archives, as well as dll files, exe, mdi and other types of files. In fact, the program can serve, to some extent, as a kind of program installer, because. it allows you to unpack some of the installers and then run...

KGB Archiver is a convenient archiver with a fairly high compression ratio, as well as an understandable user interface. The KGB Archiver program allows you to work with Zip archives, and also allows you to create archives of your own KGB format. It is possible to create self-extracting archives with the necessary comments and parameters. Distinctive feature of this program is that when encrypting an archive, the program uses one of the most reliable encryption algorithms with a 256-bit key, which practically excludes the possibility of decrypting it without knowing the password. Another feature of this program is multilingual and...

On March 13, 1954, the Chekists were removed from the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR, a new department was formed: the State Security Committee of the CCCP - the KGB. The new structure was in charge of intelligence, operational-investigative activities and the protection of the state border. In addition, the task of the KGB was to provide the Central Committee of the CPSU with information affecting state security. The concept is broad, to be sure: it includes both the personal life of dissidents and the study of unidentified flying objects.


Separating truth from fiction, recognizing misinformation intended for "controlled leakage" is now almost unrealistic. So, to believe or not to believe in the truth of the declassified secrets and mysteries of the KGB archives is everyone's personal right.

The current Chekists, who worked in the structure during its heyday, some with a smile, some with irritation dismiss: no secret developments were carried out, nothing paranormal was studied. But, like any other closed organization that has an influence on the fate of people, the KGB could not avoid mystification.

The activities of the committee are overgrown with rumors and legends, and even partial declassification of the archives cannot dispel them. Moreover, the archives of the former KGB underwent a serious purge in the mid-1950s. In addition, the wave of declassification that began in 1991-1992 quickly subsided, and now the release of data is going on at an almost imperceptible pace.

Hitler: died or escaped?

Disputes about the circumstances of Hitler's death have not subsided since May 1945. Did he commit suicide or was the body of a doppelgänger found in the bunker? What happened to the Fuhrer's remains?

In February 1962, in the TsGAOR of the USSR (modern State Archive Russian Federation) trophy documents of the Second World War were transferred for storage. And along with them - fragments of the skull and the armrest of the sofa with traces of blood.

Vasily Khristoforov, head of the FSB registration and archival funds department, told Interfax that the remains were found during an investigation into the circumstances of the disappearance of the former Reich President of Germany in 1946. The forensic examination identified the partially charred remains found as fragments of the parietal bones and the occipital bone of an adult. The act dated May 8, 1945 states: the discovered pieces of the skull, "probably fell off the corpse, seized from the pit on May 5, 1945."

"Documentary materials with the results of the re-investigation were combined into a case with the symbolic name "Mif". The materials of the named case, as well as the materials of the investigation into the circumstances of the Fuhrer's death in 1945, stored in the Central Archive of the FSB of Russia, were declassified in the 90s of the last century and became available to the general public," the source said.

What was left of the top of the Nazi elite and did not end up in the KGB archives did not immediately find rest: the bones were repeatedly reburied, and on March 13, 1970, Andropov ordered the remains of Hitler, Brown and the Goebbels to be removed and destroyed. This is how the plan for the secret event "Archive" was born, carried out by the operational group of the Special Department of the KGB of the 3rd Army of the GSVG. Two acts were drawn up. The latter reads: "The destruction of the remains was carried out by burning them on a fire in a wasteland near the city of Schönebeck, 11 kilometers from Magdeburg. The remains burned out, crushed into ashes together with coal, collected and thrown into the Biederitz River."

It is difficult to say what Andropov was guided by when giving such an order. Most likely, he feared - and not without reason - that even after a while the fascist regime would find followers, and the burial place of the ideologist of the dictatorship would become a place of pilgrimage.

By the way, in 2002, the Americans announced that they had X-rays that were kept by a dentist, SS Oberführer Hugo Blaschke. A reconciliation with the fragments available in the archives of the Russian Federation once again confirmed the authenticity of parts of Hitler's jaw.

But despite the seemingly indisputable evidence, the version that the Fuhrer managed to leave Germany, occupied by Soviet troops, does not leave modern researchers alone. Looking for it, as a rule, in Patagonia. Indeed, post-World War II Argentina harbored many Nazis who tried to elude justice. There were even witnesses that Hitler, along with other fugitives, appeared here in 1947. It is hard to believe: even the official radio of Nazi Germany on that memorable day announced the death of the Fuhrer in an unequal struggle against Bolshevism.

Marshal Georgy Zhukov was the first to question Hitler's suicide. A month after the victory, he said: "The situation is very mysterious. We did not find the identified corpse of Hitler. I cannot say anything affirmatively about the fate of Hitler. At the very last minute, he could fly away from Berlin, since the runways made it possible." It was June 10th. And the body was found on May 5, the autopsy report is dated May 8. ... Why did the question of the authenticity of the Fuhrer's body arise only a month later?

The official version of Soviet historians is as follows: on April 30, 1945, Hitler and his wife Eva Braun committed suicide by taking potassium cyanide. At the same time, according to eyewitnesses, the Fuhrer shot himself. By the way, during the autopsy, glass was found in the oral cavity, which speaks in favor of the version with poison.

Unidentified flying objects

Anton Pervushin, in his author's investigation, cites one demonstrative story that characterizes the attitude of the KGB to the phenomenon. Igor Sinitsyn, a writer and assistant to the chairman of the committee, who worked for Yuri Andropov from 1973 to 1979, once loved to tell this story.

“Somehow, while looking through the foreign press, I came across a series of articles about unidentified flying objects - UFOs ... I dictated a summary of them to the stenographer in Russian and carried them to the chairman along with the magazines .... He quickly flipped through the materials. After thinking a little, he suddenly took out some kind of thin folder from the drawer of his desk. The folder contained a report from one of the officers of the 3rd directorate, that is, military counterintelligence," Sinitsyn recalled.

The information given to Andropov could very well become the plot of a science fiction film: an officer, while on a night fishing trip with his friends, watched one of the stars approach the Earth and take the form of an aircraft. The navigator estimated the size and location of the object by eye: diameter - about 50 meters, height - about five hundred meters above sea level.

“He saw two bright beams come out of the center of the UFO. One of the beams stood vertically to the surface of the water and rested on it. The other beam, like a searchlight, searched the space of waters around the boat. Suddenly it stopped, illuminating the boat. seconds, the beam went out. Together with it, the second, vertical beam went out," Sinitsyn quoted the report of counterintelligence officer.

According to his own testimony, these materials later came to Kirilenko and, over time, seemed to be lost in the archives. This is roughly what skeptics reduce the probable interest of the KGB to the UFO problem to: pretend that it is interesting, but in fact bury the materials in the archives as potentially insignificant.

In November 1969, almost 60 years after the fall of the Tunguska meteorite (which, according to some researchers, was not a fragment of a celestial body, but a crashed spaceship), there was a message about another fall of an unidentified object on the territory of the Soviet Union. Not far from the village of Berezovsky in the Sverdlovsk region, several luminous balls were seen in the sky, one of which began to lose altitude, fell, then a strong explosion followed. In the late 1990s, a number of media outlets came across a film that allegedly depicted the work of investigators and scientists at the site of an alleged UFO crash in the Urals. The work was supervised by "a man who looked like a KGB officer."

“Our family lived in Sverdlovsk at that time, and my relatives even worked in the regional party committee. However, even there almost no one knew the whole truth about the incident. In Berezovsky, where our friends lived, everyone accepted the legend of the exploded granary ; those who saw the UFO preferred not to spread. The disk was taken out, presumably, in the dark, in order to avoid unnecessary witnesses, "contemporaries of the events recalled.

It is noteworthy that even the ufologists themselves, people who were initially inclined to believe in stories about UFOs, criticized these videos: the uniform of Russian soldiers, their manner of holding weapons, cars flashing in the frame - all this did not inspire confidence even among susceptible people. True, the denial of one particular video does not mean that adherents of the belief in UFOs give up their beliefs.

Vladimir Azhazha, an ufologist and an acoustic engineer by education, said this: “Does the state hide any information about UFOs from the public, it must be assumed that yes. On what basis? On the basis of a list of information constituting state and military secrets. Indeed, in In 1993, the State Security Committee of the Russian Federation, at the written request of the then president of the UFO Association, pilot-cosmonaut Pavel Popovich, handed over to the UFO center headed by me about 1,300 documents related to UFOs. These were reports from official bodies, commanders of military units, and messages from private individuals."

Occult interests

In the 1920s and 30s, a prominent figure in the Cheka/OGPU/NKVD (the forerunner of the KGB) Gleb Bokiy, the one who created laboratories for the development of drugs to influence the minds of those arrested, became interested in studying extrasensory perception and even searched for the legendary Shambhala.

After his execution in 1937, the folders with the results of the experiments supposedly ended up in the secret archives of the KGB. After Stalin's death, part of the documents was irretrievably lost, the rest settled in the cellars of the committee. Under Khrushchev, the work continued: America was worried about rumors periodically reaching from across the ocean about the invention of biogenerators, mechanisms that control thinking.

Separately, it is worth mentioning another object of close attention of the Soviet security forces - the famous mentalist Wolf Messing. Despite the fact that he himself, and later his biographers, willingly shared intriguing stories about the outstanding abilities of the hypnotist, the KGB archives did not retain any documentary evidence of the "miracles" performed by Messing. In particular, neither Soviet nor German documents contain information that Messing fled Germany after he predicted the fall of fascism, and Hitler put a reward on his head. It is also impossible to either confirm or deny the data that Messing personally met with Stalin and that he tested his outstanding abilities, forcing him to perform certain tasks.

On the other hand, about Ninel Kulagina, who in 1968 attracted the attention of law enforcement agencies with her extraordinary abilities, the data has been preserved. The abilities of this woman (or their lack?) are still controversial: among fans of the supernatural, she is revered as a pioneer, and among the learned fraternity, her achievements cause at least an ironic smile.

Meanwhile, the video chronicle of those years recorded how Kulagina, without the help of her hand or any devices, rotates the compass needle, moves small objects, such as a matchbox. The woman complained during the experiments of back pain, and her pulse was 180 beats per minute. Its secret was, allegedly, that the energy field of the hands, due to the super-concentration of the test subject, could move objects that fell into the zone of its influence.

It is also known that after the end of World War II, a unique device made by Hitler’s personal order came to the Soviet Union as a trophy: it served for astrological predictions of a military-political nature. The device was out of order, but Soviet engineers restored it, and it was transferred to the astronomical station near Kislovodsk.

Knowledgeable people it was said that Major General of the FSB Georgy Rogozin (in 1992-1996 former first Deputy Chief of the Presidential Security Service and who received the nickname "Nostradamus in uniform" for his studies in astrology and telekinesis) used SS trophy archives related to the occult sciences in his research.

If your computer has antivirus program can scan all files on the computer, as well as each file individually. You can scan any file by right-clicking on the file and selecting the appropriate option to scan the file for viruses.

For example, in this figure, file my-file.kgb, then you need to right-click on this file, and in the file menu select the option "scan with AVG". Selecting this option will open AVG Antivirus which will check given file for the presence of viruses.


Sometimes an error can result from incorrect installation software , which may be due to a problem that occurred during the installation process. It may interfere with your operating system associate your KGB file with the correct application software tool , influencing the so-called "file extension associations".

Sometimes simple reinstalling Kremlin Encrypt can solve your problem by correctly linking KGB to Kremlin Encrypt. In other cases, file association problems may result from bad software programming developer, and you may need to contact the developer for additional help.


Advice: Try updating Kremlin Encrypt to latest version to make sure the latest patches and updates are installed.


This may seem too obvious, but often the KGB file itself may be causing the problem. If you received a file via an attachment Email or downloaded it from a website and the download process was interrupted (such as a power outage or other reason), the file may be corrupted. If possible, try to get a fresh copy of the KGB file and try to open it again.


Carefully: A corrupted file may cause collateral damage to a previous or existing malware on your PC, so it is very important that you have an up-to-date antivirus running on your computer at all times.


If your KGB file associated with the hardware on your computer to open the file you may need update device drivers associated with this equipment.

This problem usually associated with media file types, which depend on the successful opening of the hardware inside the computer, for example, sound card or video cards. For example, if you are trying to open an audio file but cannot open it, you may need to update sound card drivers.


Advice: If when you try to open a KGB file you get .SYS file related error message, the problem could probably be associated with corrupted or outdated device drivers that need to be updated. This process can be alleviated by using driver update software such as DriverDoc.


If the steps didn't solve the problem and you are still having problems opening KGB files, this may be due to lack of available system resources. Some versions of KGB files may require a significant amount of resources (eg. memory/RAM, processing power) to open properly on your computer. This problem occurs quite often if you are using a fairly old computer. Hardware and at the same time a much newer operating system.

This problem can occur when the computer is having a hard time completing a task because operating system(and other services running in the background) can consume too many resources to open KGB file. Try closing all applications on your PC before opening Kremlin Encrypt File. By freeing up all available resources on your computer, you will ensure the best conditions for trying to open the KGB file.


If you completed all the above steps and your KGB file still won't open, you may need to run hardware upgrade. In most cases, even with older hardware versions, the processing power can still be more than enough for most user applications (unless you're doing a lot of CPU-intensive work like 3D rendering, financial/science modeling, or media-intensive work) . Thus, it is likely that your computer does not have enough memory(more commonly referred to as "RAM", or RAM) to perform the file open task.