A disc-shaped object hovered low over both U.S. and Soviet
nuclear weapons storage sites and shined a beam of light to the ground
level for unknown reasons, according to information released recently by
UFO-Nukes author and researcher Robert Hastings.
Hastings has written recently about other UFO-related comparisons between the nuclear programs of both countries. The current comparison of cases is between the UFO incident at a U.S. base in England, RAF Bentwaters in December 1980 and the UFO incident at Kapustin Yar’s nuclear warhead depot in the Soviet Union in July 1989.
In the Bentwaters case, the former Deputy Base Commander, retired USAF Col. Charles Halt, told reporters that he personally witnessed the UFO incident and watched the beams of light. During a May 1997 interview, Halt stated: "It was round—did not change shape—and at one point it appeared to come toward us at a very high speed. It stopped overhead and sent down a small pencil-like beam, sort of like a laser beam...It illuminated the ground about ten feet from us and we just stood there in awe wondering whether it was a signal, a warning, or what it was. We really didn’t know. It clicked-off as though someone threw a switch, and the object receded, back up into the sky. Then it moved back toward Bentwaters, and continued to send down beams of light, at one point near the weapons storage facility."
Hastings writes that researcher Don Berliner, Fund for UFO Research, discovered declassified documents recounting the 1989 case which became available after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. A KGB officer wrote a case summary, which in part includes: "After questioning the witnesses, it was determined that the reported characteristics of the observed UFOs are: disc 4-5 m. diameter, with a half-sphere on top, which is lit brightly. It moved sometimes abruptly, but noiselessly, at times coming down and hovering over ground at an altitude of 20-60 m. The command of [censored] called for a fighter... but it was not able to see it in detail, because the UFO did not let the aircraft come near it, evading it."
In both cases, witnesses described a beam of light moving to the ground level over nuclear weapons storage areas.
Hastings has written recently about other UFO-related comparisons between the nuclear programs of both countries. The current comparison of cases is between the UFO incident at a U.S. base in England, RAF Bentwaters in December 1980 and the UFO incident at Kapustin Yar’s nuclear warhead depot in the Soviet Union in July 1989.
In the Bentwaters case, the former Deputy Base Commander, retired USAF Col. Charles Halt, told reporters that he personally witnessed the UFO incident and watched the beams of light. During a May 1997 interview, Halt stated: "It was round—did not change shape—and at one point it appeared to come toward us at a very high speed. It stopped overhead and sent down a small pencil-like beam, sort of like a laser beam...It illuminated the ground about ten feet from us and we just stood there in awe wondering whether it was a signal, a warning, or what it was. We really didn’t know. It clicked-off as though someone threw a switch, and the object receded, back up into the sky. Then it moved back toward Bentwaters, and continued to send down beams of light, at one point near the weapons storage facility."
Hastings writes that researcher Don Berliner, Fund for UFO Research, discovered declassified documents recounting the 1989 case which became available after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. A KGB officer wrote a case summary, which in part includes: "After questioning the witnesses, it was determined that the reported characteristics of the observed UFOs are: disc 4-5 m. diameter, with a half-sphere on top, which is lit brightly. It moved sometimes abruptly, but noiselessly, at times coming down and hovering over ground at an altitude of 20-60 m. The command of [censored] called for a fighter... but it was not able to see it in detail, because the UFO did not let the aircraft come near it, evading it."
In both cases, witnesses described a beam of light moving to the ground level over nuclear weapons storage areas.
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