In Ukraine, a radioactive nuclear ghost town near Chernobyl is a hot destination – Washington Post
By Cheryl L. Reed By Cheryl L. Reed July 27 at 4:02 PM
The button that could have started a nuclear holocaust is gray not red.
I learned this after climbing into a nuclear rocket command silo, 12 floors below ground, and sitting in the same green chair at the same yellow, metal console at which former Soviet officers once presided. Here, they practiced entering secret codes into their gray keyboards, pushing the launch button and turning a key all within seven seconds to fire up to 10 ballistic missiles. The officers never knew what day their practice codes might become real, nor did they know their targets.
This base in Pervomaysk, Ukraine about a four-hour drive from Kiev once had 86 intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of destroying cities in Europe and the United States. Though the nuclear warheads have been removed, the command silo with much of its equipment, giant trucks that carried the rockets to the base and an empty silo were preserved so that people could see what had been secretly going on at nuclear missile bases in the former Soviet Union. The museums collection includes the R-12/SS-4 Sandal missile similar to those involved in the Cuban missile crisis and the RS-20A/SS-18 Satan, the versions of which had several hundred times the destructive power of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
This is what the tourists come to see, said Igor Bodnarchuk, a tour guide for Solo East Travel, a Kiev company that specializes in tours of Soviet ruins. What else do we have to offer?
Tourists go to Paris to marvel at the majesty of the Eiffel Tower, to Rome to stroll the cobbled streets of the Vatican, to Moscow to behold the magnificent domes of Red Square. And while Ukraine has its own plethora of domed cathedrals, including monasteries with underground caves, thousands of tourists are trekking to this country for a uniquely Soviet experience. Here, they stand outside an exploded nuclear reactor at Chernobyl and rifle through the remains of a nearby abandoned city Geiger counter in hand. In Chernobyls shadow, they marvel at the giant Moscow Eye, an anti-ballistic-missile detector that rises 50 stories high and looks like a giant roller coaster.
Every day, a handful of travel companies ferry mostly foreigners to Chernobyls 19-mile exclusion zone. In 2016, Solo East Travel hauled 7,500 people there, up from only one trip in 2000.
It used to be sort of extreme travel, said Sergei Ivanchuk of Solo East Travel. You were very brave to go to Chernobyl in 2000. Now, not so much.
Ivanchuk insists that people who go to Chernobyl are not morbid. They are intelligent people who want to learn something new, and are often interested in nuclear power, he said.
Likewise, people who venture to the missile base at Pervomaysk are interested in the Cold War. Its a place to remember like the Holocaust about a dangerous time in history and what it means to have nuclear weapons, he said.
Earlier this year, Russia deployed a new cruise missile, apparently violating its 1987 arms-control treaty with the United States. In light of that event, the Soviet ruins in Ukraine seem all the more relevant.
The day I visited the former 46th Rocket Division in Pervomaysk, silver engines gleamed in the sunlight as the temperature edged up to 22 degrees. Sticking out of the snow were missiles reminiscent of the one Major T.J. King Kong rode like a rodeo cowboy in the movie Dr. Strangelove. Nearby was a surface-to-air missile similar to the one that brought down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine in July 2014.
The museum tour guides are all former Soviet officers who once worked at the missile base. Ours, Gennadiy Fil, once manned the nuclear controls. When American tourists dallied, snapping photos of the rockets above ground, he barked: Ledz go!
Then he darted through a heavy door of a squat building, down a series of winding stairs and through an underground tunnel, navigating by memory through the narrow, 500-foot-long passageway to the control center in a silo. The narrow cylinder is suspended from the ground theoretically, to withstand the shock of a counterattack.
In six-hour shifts, Fil and another officer would descend in a tiny elevator (maximum capacity: three people) to the bottom of the silo. Stationed at metal consoles in an 11-by-11 control room, they would read secret codes from Moscow that flashed on a computer screen, then quickly tap them into a dingy yellow monitor. Then, they pressed a small, gray button and turned a key on the opposite side of the terminal to launch up to 10 nuclear rockets at once.
You dont launch just one missile, because the other side is going to shoot back and destroy you, explained Elena Smerichevskaya, our Ukrainian interpreter. An intercontinental ballistic rocket fired at New York, she explained, would take about 25 minutes to hit its target.
Fil, 55, said he never knew when he would be ordered to input real codes. It was his job, he said and shrugged. He said he had no moral objections to pushing the button. Launching nuclear missiles was a political decision, something that people on top of the ground decided, not him.
He admitted that he was scared about the possibility of nuclear war. Youd have to be crazy in the head not to be scared, he said.
But just in case Fil or a fellow officer (two officers were required to launch a rocket) refused to push their buttons, reserve officers could be called up from a compartment beneath the control center.
For officers like Fil, there were both mental and physical challenges. The compartments were hermetically sealed, and Fil said there was immense pressure on their ears. There were also concerns about the psychological impact of being isolated in the chambers. While the Soviets kept enough food and water on hand for 45 days, some men started to become batty after only two or three days inside the silo bunker, Smerichevskaya said.
While Fil is glad the world didnt implode under his watch, he said he is sad to have lost his job behind the missile controls.
In 1994, three years after Ukraine became independent, it joined the Non-Proliferation Treaty and agreed to dismantle its 1,900 Soviet missiles. At the time, Ukraine boasted the worlds third-largest stockpile of nuclear warheads after Russia and the United States. Ukraine shipped its nuclear warheads to Russia and dismantled its silos, often blowing them up or filling them with cement. The control silo at Pervomaysk was the only one spared so it could become a museum. The 46th Rocket Division, part of the 43rd Rocket Army, was disbanded in 2001.
As a child growing up in the Cold War who was taught to hide under her school desk in case of a nuclear attack, I found it surreal to meet a man who at the same time had his fingers on the triggers of the Soviet Unions nuclear warheads.
Fil shakes his head at how things have changed. I never thought Id be standing here talking to an American, he said, his eyes wide with amazement. I never thought Id be having my picture taken. That was absolutely forbidden. And now ... its okay.
The museum claims that its silos are very similar to those still in operation in Russia. The Satan missile is still part of Russias weaponry, although an improved version is set to be operational in 2018. Before Russia invaded Crimea and backed the separatists war on Ukraines eastern front, Russian soldiers frequently took their families to Pervomaysk to show them what they did at work, museum tour guides say. The missile sites in Russia remain secret.
The city of Pripyat was once a secret Soviet city, closed to anyone but workers of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor and their families. Now the city, an hour-and-a-half drive from Kiev, is a nuclear ghost town. Forty-nine thousand people were forced to evacuate the day after Chernobyls Reactor No. 4 exploded on April 26, 1986.
Nearly all the first responders and soldiers died from radiation poisoning while trying to contain the graphite fire and the radioactive particles spewing from the destroyed reactor, explained Bodnarchuk, our tour guide. Officially, only 31 firemen and soldiers were killed. But some believe that the disaster claimed at least 10,000 lives as wind carried radioactive material into Belarus and Northern Europe.
Even though critics have said that the designs of Chernobyl are outmoded and inherently unsafe, Russia reportedly is still using 11 similar nuclear reactors.
Today, visitors can stand across the street from the damaged reactor at Chernobyl, which recently was covered by a huge, $2.3 billion shield. But the highlight of the tour is, by far, the crumbling city of Pripyat. Though tour operators are warned to stay out of Pripyats buildings, tourists routinely stomp through the city, including the hospital where dying first responders were taken.
Tourists stick their Geiger counters against tatters of clothing in the hospital lobby and watch their machines shoot up to shockingly high levels 85 microsieverts per hour. The normal range is .09 to .30 microsieverts per hour, according to the tour company. Most guides carry their own Geiger counters; many tourists come with their own.
Tour operators claim that a visit to Chernobyl is no more dangerous now than a flight from Ukraine to North America. This calculation includes spending 10 minutes in front of the burned-out reactor and no more than two hours in Pripyat.
Solo East Travel has a video that shows how it came up with such math. Those calculations, however, dont factor in hovering over a firefighters highly radioactive clothing that has been dug up from deep in the hospital. Nor do they specifically include driving through the red forest near the Chernobyl reactor where the radiation burned up all the trees, which were then bulldozed and buried. Our Geiger counters went crazy as we drove through the new-growth forest, registering 26 sieverts per hour.
Our guide tried to calm fears about our exposure to radiation by assuring us that any high levels on our body would be detected by the machines we had to pass through on the way out of Chernobyls exclusion zone. Those machines old Soviet steel contraptions that look like retro airport metal detectors hardly inspire confidence.
To amplify tourists shock, guides have embellished some of the Pripyat remains: Amid hundreds of crumbling gas masks spread over the floor of an elementary school, a baby doll has been placed on a chair wearing a gas mask. A hospital nursery has been outfitted with plastic dolls, placed in cribs with blankets, to make the scene appear even more macabre. Outside a village school building, old toys are scattered about. One-eyed teddy bears and dolls with missing limbs sit on bed springs at a village orphanage. Tables are set with plates and pots.
The most eerie scenes include an abandoned amusement park with its empty, lonely-looking Ferris wheel and bumper cars filled with leaves; a swimming pool with cracked tiles, its deep end filled with trash and an old shopping cart; school hallways cluttered with books; school desks laid out with science experiments; posters of Lenin and other Soviet leaders adorning classroom walls; and a broken baby carriage abandoned in a decaying community center.
Visitors are exhausted by the time their tour bus leaves Pripyat and turns down a one-lane road through a thick forest. Hiding there is the Moscow Eye, also known as the Russian Woodpecker, an enormous metal structure silhouetted against the sky like a vertical Stonehenge.
Using over-the-horizon radar, the Moscow Eye was the receiver for a powerful radio broadcast sent from elsewhere in Ukraine. Some said that the signals short, repetitive tapping noise sounded like a bird thus the woodpecker moniker. Others say it sounded more like a machine gun. From 1976, until it went off the air in 1989, the unexplained radio signal interfered with many broadcasts. Listeners speculated that it was a method of Soviet mind control. Only in the past three years have tourists discovered its sublime metal architecture rising from the forest floor near Chernobyl, an anachronistic remnant from a not-so-distant era.
Reed is a writer based in Syracuse. Her website is Cherylreed.net. Find her on Twitter: @JournoReed.
More from Travel:
A solo trip through northern Europe
Overlooked by guidebooks, Slovakia is a worthy European destination without the crowds
In Berlin, the past and present collide on a mother-son trip
Excerpt from:
In Ukraine, a radioactive nuclear ghost town near Chernobyl is a hot destination - Washington Post
- US Army general who oversaw Ukraine left classified maps on train, overindulged in alcohol: IG report - Fox News - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Zelenskyy: Ukraine has thwarted Russian offensive operation planned for March - - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- IMF Raises Alarm Over Aid to Ukraine With Parliament in Gridlock - Bloomberg.com - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Opinion | I traveled to Ukraine to teach sociology. It left me amazed. - The Washington Post - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Sean Penn skipped the Oscars to meet with Zelenskyy in Ukraine - San Francisco Chronicle - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Ukraine's anti-drone tech is in high demand as Iran attacks its neighbors - NBC News - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Ukraine worries about losing the Americans as global attention shifts to the war in the Middle East - CNN - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Ukraine had a brutal plan to bankrupt Putin with his own war dead until Trumps oil U-turn wrecked it - The Independent - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Russia and Ukraine both claim front-line progress with US-brokered talks on hold - AP News - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Lessons from Ukraine for Defending Gulf Airspace from Shaheds - War on the Rocks - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Exclusive: Ukraine's Naftogaz in talks with Romania's OMV Petrom to develop Black Sea gas find, sources say - Reuters - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- US Army general who oversaw Ukraine left classified maps on train, overindulged in alcohol: IG report - Yahoo - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Kenya and Russia agree no Kenyans will be recruited for Ukraine war - Al Jazeera - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Ukraine war briefing: War in the Middle East is bad news for Ukraine, says Zelenskyy - The Guardian - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Sean Penn Seen in Ukraine After Skipping His Third Oscar Win - People.com - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Kremlin dismisses FT report that Ukraine peace process is fizzling out - Reuters - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Exclusive | Ukraine ready to jump in to help US as other American allies drag feet, Zelensky tells Post - New York Post - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Working group set up in Ukraine to focus on reopening airports - - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- President Zelenskyy thanks Oscars no-show Sean Penn for visit: 'We know what a true friend of Ukraine is' - Entertainment Weekly - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- After bashing allies, Trump now wants their help except from Ukraine - The Kyiv Independent - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Best Supporting Actor Winner Sean Penn Skipped the Oscars Because Hes in Ukraine - Consequence of Sound - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Russia scoffs at US-Israeli 'miscalculation' in Iran, years after failing to take Ukraine in days - The Kyiv Independent - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Russian military loses another 760 soldiers in war against Ukraine - Ukrinform - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Reznikov: "Ukraine and Israel must confront the axis of evil together" - Ukrainian Jewish Encounter - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Trump v Nato: from tariffs to Ukraine, how will the US respond? - The Times - March 17th, 2026 [March 17th, 2026]
- Elon Musk Moves Against the Russians in Ukraine - The Atlantic - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine war has claimed lives of 55 Ghanaians, foreign minister says - Reuters - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ghana says at least 55 of its people killed after Russia lured them to fight Ukraine - The Guardian - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Hungarys Viktor Orbn seeking to drum up votes by doing down Ukraine - The Guardian - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- 4 years into Russias full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a look at the war by the numbers - AP News - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Russia's war on Ukraine puts women off having children and that could spell economic disaster - CNBC - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine Eliminates Shahed Drone Relay Stations Operating From Belarus - UNITED24 Media - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- As Ukraine war enters fifth year, Zelenskyy says Russia failing at its goals and Kremlin agrees - CBS News - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine: Use every diplomatic tool to end this war, top UN official tells Security Council - UN News - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Germany supplies Ukraine with natural gas for the first time - Euronews.com - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine: 'The war could still last for years and paradoxically, time is not on the Kremlin's side' - Le Monde.fr - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Were experts on the Ukraine war. Heres what we think will happen next - The Independent - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine ups target to 50,000 Russian casualties a month with The Post seeing the killer drones of war - New York Post - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- How Ukraine Hunted Down and Crippled a Russian Surveillance Ship - The National Interest - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine war latest: Putin may escalate if he doesn't get 'the only thing that can save him' - expert - Sky News - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine war today: Tens of thousands without power in Russia after missile attack - The Independent - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Death, glory and a soldiers stipend lures Colombians to Ukraine - The Times - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Russia-Ukraine War in 10 Charts - CSIS | Center for Strategic and International Studies - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Ukraine and Russia to meet for second round of talks as fourth anniversary of war looms - The Guardian - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Kremlin says main Ukraine issues will be discussed in Geneva talks, including territory - Reuters - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Peace talks round three: Ukraine-US-Russia Geneva meeting's key topics - Euronews.com - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Ukraine war briefing: Drone attack on Russian port sparks fires ahead of fresh peace talks - The Guardian - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- North Korea opens a housing district for families of its soldiers killed in Russia-Ukraine war - NPR - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Kim Jong-un unveils housing for families of North Koreans killed in Ukraine war - The Guardian - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Zelenskyy says Ukraine, not Russia, is facing pressure to make concessions to end war - NBC News - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Ukraine's Zelenskiy says allies to provide new energy and military aid within 10 days - Reuters - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Ukraine Says U.S. Is Increasing Pressure for a Deal as the Midterms Loom - The New York Times - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Expectations are low for the latest US-brokered talks between Russia and Ukraine - Sentinel Colorado - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- What next for Greenland and Ukraine? Questions after the Munich security conference - The Guardian - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Ukraine Exploits a Russian Stumble - by Cathy Young - The Bulwark - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Trump Kabuki Theater In Ukraine: Nothing Of Substance Gets Resolved OpEd - Eurasia Review - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Ukraine war today: Hundreds of drones attack Russian energy infrastructure - The Independent - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Expectations are low for the latest US-brokered talks between Russia and Ukraine - AP News - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Ukraine War Is Killing Russia Rutte to MT - The Moscow Times - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- How a Berlin Afterparty for Charli XCX Leads Back to Russian Operations in Occupied Ukraine - UNITED24 Media - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Perspective - Russia using Africans as 'cannon fodder' in Ukraine: INPACT/All Eyes on Wagner - France 24 - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Zelenskyy warns of logistics terror as Russia hits Ukraine railway - Al Jazeera - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine war latest: Trump unveils trade deal that will help 'END' Ukraine war - Sky News - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine may get more than Gripen jets Europe's top air-to-air missile is also on the table - Business Insider - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine live: Moscow says foreign troops in Ukraine would be targets in new threat - The Independent - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- US-brokered talks on Russias war on Ukraine will resume in Abu Dhabi - AP News - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Trump says Putin agreed to pause attacks on Ukraine for a week - Anadolu Ajans - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Kenyan job seekers were lured to Russia, then sent to die in Ukraine - The Washington Post - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- In response to released Epstein files, Russia's envoy says 'satanist cabal' exploited situation in Ukraine - Anadolu Ajans - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine war briefing: Kyiv reschedules peace talks as battered power grid strains in -15C - The Guardian - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Greek joint venture will supply US LNG to Ukraine in March - Reuters - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- History of the word "zhyd" in Ukraine: From widespread use to marginalization - Ukrainian Jewish Encounter - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine gets $235 million boost from DOD with long-term F-16 maintenance deal - Stars and Stripes - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine war latest: Russian forces trying to 'bypass and infiltrate' Vovchansk in Kharkiv Oblast, military says - The Kyiv Independent - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine Is Winning The Economics Battle Against Russian Geran Drones - Forbes - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Tuesday, February 2. Russias War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine - Forbes - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- US-brokered talks on Russias war on Ukraine will resume in Abu Dhabi - Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Ukraine's Zelenskiy says dignified, lasting peace realistic, ahead of talks - Reuters - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- Trkiye marks 34 years of diplomatic ties with Ukraine - Trkiye Today - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]
- First U.S. LNG Sale Agreement Signed with Ukraine - Shipping Telegraph - February 2nd, 2026 [February 2nd, 2026]