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Around the New Year of 1993, the Khabarovsk City Television Station in Siberia broadcast almost every day a disturbing search notice: a major in an architectural unit under the command of the Far Eastern Military District

author:Caesar Historic House

Around the New Year of 1993, the Khabarovsk City Television Station in Siberia broadcast an uneasy search notice almost every day: Ivan Kislov, a major officer of a construction unit under the command of the Far Eastern Military District, disappeared on December 24, 1992.

Major Kislov was 33 years old and came from an intellectual family. In the army, he is an excellent expert, strictly disciplined and has a strong sense of responsibility. His relationship with his comrades-in-arms was also very harmonious, but he frowned all day long, repeating over and over again that "life has become more and more unbearable" and "the country is gradually moving towards the end of the road.".

Kislov disappeared without a weapon, so people are more worried about whether the impulsive major is out there "seeing righteousness", and as a result, he is entangled in trouble by the underworld. The local military procuratorate also filed a case in this regard, and a special person was responsible for searching for it. However, his attentive wife noticed something unusual: the family's 11,000 rubles were left with nothing, and his razor and toiletries were missing. But she didn't and couldn't think more than pain and worry.

In fact, Major Kislov is not missing. By this time he had appeared on the streets of Moscow, carrying two homemade bombs filled with small steel balls and a dagger, searching for his target like a hunter.

In his heart, he has always believed that the current economic crisis and ethnic conflicts in Russia are "entirely caused by President Yeltsin". As a result, he decided to murder President Yeltsin in order to fulfill his "civic duties."

On December 24, 1992, After careful planning, Major Kislov quietly bid farewell to the cold Far East and boarded a train for several nights of bumps, crossing the Ural Mountains to the capital Moscow. I don't know whether it was because of the fear of trouble, or because of the lack of money in his pocket, Major Kislov came to Moscow and stayed like a tramp at the Kazan railway station on the Komsomol Square.

A few days later, a group of hooligans from the Caucasus took the bomb-laden major out of his territory. The impulsive major did not get angry this time, but took the subway and transferred to the Belorusskaya railway station in the city center.

Kislov has not forgotten his "mission". Carrying a bomb in his arms, he left early and returned late, doing everything he could to penetrate President Yeltsin's address. The questioner is intentional, the answerer is unintentional. I don't know which "well-informed person" who lacked a sense of secrecy revealed the truth.

After the Major successfully found the President's house, he began to look for the President's country house. I don't know whether the concept of the suburbs is too big, or the countrymen do not like to talk much, and Kislov's reconnaissance ended in failure.

But he was not discouraged, but he was annoyed that in the process of reconnaissance, he accidentally scrapped the secret weapon. It was January 15, 1993, and it was raining and snowing in Moscow. Kislov's coat was poured through, and the two bombs in his arms were soaked. It was too late for such a careless repentance, and the major had no choice but to endure the pain of cutting love and throwing away the two indisputable bombs casually. There was only one way left for him, and that was to find a way to get close to President Yeltsin and "solve the problem" with a dagger.

After completing the initial reconnaissance, Major Kislov began a closer look. Hiding in a corner of President Yeltsin's mansion like a spy in the movie, he quickly recognized many of the faces that often appeared on television in the crowds coming in and out, and figured out the code on the locks.

At 2 p.m. on January 17, Kislov sneaked into the building. The security guards came out to inquire, and the trained major looked at himself and said that someone had told him that this was a hotel and that he wanted to stay here for the night. The well-meaning security guards did not hesitate, but told him in detail the location of the real hotel nearby. There was no danger, and Kislov took the opportunity to slip away.

After several more dangerous stepping points, the Major painfully discovered that President Yeltsin's Gil bulletproof vehicle had driven into the interior of the building through a special tunnel underground. Here he could not have approached the president in any way. On a whim, he decided to sneak into the government building with a static brake and wait for the president's arrival.

The government building is not far from Red Square, which was originally the central building of the CPSU. Although it is called a building, it is actually a huge complex, and the interior is like a labyrinth. Every time the reporters who went inside to interview were picked up and sent out by the security guards. They did so out of safety concerns, but the reporters welcomed it from the bottom of their hearts, because there was no one to pick them up, and they couldn't find their way home anyway.

Major Kislov, however, was extraordinary; he quickly figured out the internal layout and security system of the government building, and concluded that President Yeltsin's motorcade drove directly into a small courtyard inside the building each time. He had to sneak into the courtyard and wait for President Yeltsin to get out of the car and rush forward and draw his dagger...

However, it was not easy to blend into the courtyard, and the Major was sad about it for several days. Fortunately, one day he suddenly found that a building adjacent to the government building was being repaired, and the house was full of scaffolding. So he decided to pretend to be a maintenance worker and take the opportunity to sneak into the small courtyard where President Yeltsin parked.

At 5:30 a.m. on January 27, Major Kislov climbed scaffolding to the top of the building under repair and broke the window into the attic. He waited nervously and excitedly for the arrival of the workers. At 7 o'clock, there was a sound of footsteps downstairs, but it was not the maintenance workers, but the government security guards.

Kislov claimed to be a snowplow worker. The security guards ordered him to show his papers, and the horse's feet were suddenly exposed, and Kislov had to change his mouth, saying that he did not want to serve in the army, and deserted to Moscow.

Kislov was sent to the Military Prosecutor's Office of the Moscow Garrison District on the same day. At first he avoided answering during the interrogation, but the dagger on his body had shown that he was not driving an ordinary "errand".

On January 30, Kislov finally confessed to the above-mentioned astonishing criminal process.

On January 31, the Case of Kislov was made public, and a strong news storm was immediately set off on Russian television, radio, and the press. The whole country is boiling over, and people are talking about it, and there is no consensus.

After the investigation, the forensic doctor of the military procuratorate determined that the former major of the construction army was insane and diagnosed with schizophrenia. The Moscow Garrison District Court sent Kislov to the Khabarovsk Special Hospital for compulsory treatment, and the case was over! #战争风云 #

Around the New Year of 1993, the Khabarovsk City Television Station in Siberia broadcast almost every day a disturbing search notice: a major in an architectural unit under the command of the Far Eastern Military District

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