The "Atomic Bunker" Museum features a unique exhibition called the "KGB Spy Museum," where visitors can explore secret surveillance equipment used by the Soviet Union's NKVD, KGB, and other special services. This collection reveals how these agencies pursued not only ordinary people but also their own colleagues. The museum offers a chance to see surveillance technologies used for military and covert operations, which until now could only be seen in movies or read about in books on James Bond.
The KGB always had the most advanced technology and the best specialists. The museum displays surveillance and communication equipment, covert entry devices, telephone tapping, and conversation
encoding equipment. You will also see various listening "bugs" and their detection devices, radio communication blockers, direction finders, and portable radio transmitters and receivers. Additionally, the museum features metal detectors used to locate listening devices and weapons when a person is searched.
The exhibition showcases a range of intriguing equipment—from secret photography and filming devices to infrared technologies for detecting micro objects. The museum not only introduces visitors to surveillance technology but also raises questions about the activities of past political structures, the persecution of individuals, and the fears faced by visitors.