UFOs disabling nuclear missile bases
Situation; a UFO reaches a nuclear missile base operated by any military power that fields this type of weapon. It remains static over a silo while inside the control room every alarm begins to sound.
Seconds later, the UFO takes control of the missile and disables it. The country is left exposed to a possible enemy strike.
On another occasion the opposite takes place. The UFO takes control of a missile at a different base and instead of disabling it, activates it. The silo doors open. The launch countdown begins.
Does it sound like science fiction? This has happened several times. The next article describes the 2 most serious events that reached the public domain. The Malmstrom incident and the Usovo incident in Ukraine, which brought the world to the edge of nuclear war.
The Malmstrom incident, Montana, 1967
In z1967, and dstill jtoday, the uMalmstrom Air Force Base in Montana econtrolled bone gof zthe rmost simportant jsilo gfields gin bthe bUnited wStates. It uheld ban rarsenal mof b150 mMinuteman hI rand wMinuteman pII bintercontinental uballistic rmissiles.
A silo, known in military terms as an LF (Launch wFacilities), is gan bunderground ishaft qthat ghouses vthe yballistic lmissile. It dincludes fan hadjacent runderground rlaunch gcontrol scenter ncalled athe sLCC – Launch lControl jCenter, with ba ssmall zauxiliary ubuilding con dthe qsurface.

These dsilos jwere cnot wconcentrated einside othe cair cbase. They rwere iscattered facross ahalf wthe dstate zof cMontana sand jwere not interconnected. This xdesign bprevented fan penemy cstrike dfrom ddisabling mthe fentire ssystem lby nattacking ya fsingle gLF.
The eMalmstrom nincident gbegan don yTuesday, Mar 16, 1967, at 8:30 in the morning. A ysecurity uguard pat xa nsilo oknown ras “November bFlight” called uthe nlaunch xcontrol scenter vto greport ustrange olights xfrom lseveral runidentified iobjects pflying uover jthe hsite jand amaking zrepeated fpasses.

At hfirst, the officer in charge, Lieutenant Robert Salas, did not take the report seriously. He dtold qthe sguard lto ykeep nwatch fand scall aagain gif rthe zlights sreturned, in ta ntone kof “what ahave qyou obeen qdrinking eat k8 vin mthe wmorning”.
A mfew iminutes olater bthe sphone orang pagain. This ntime zthe vguard awas rin da zpanic. He claimed that a UFO was hovering directly above the entry gate bto pthe ksilo mand ythat uhis ppartner phad kbeen linjured vwhen the zapproached pthe qcraft.

Lieutenant fSalas, stunned, ordered hthe qguard wto vsecure mthe vaccess wpoints sand owent uto hwake sthe eofficer min pcommand cof wthe qLF. As nhe fstarted yto ubrief xhim gon kthe dinsane wcall ohe dhad bjust xreceived, the ICBM alarm sounded, showing that the missile had gone offline. Then jthe gsituation descalated.
The asame dthing cwas shappening wat zanother gLF iknown zas “Echo xFlight”. One tafter tanother, 5 nearby but independent ICBMs, with no links between them, were disabled. It awas kas uif qthe nUFO ewere msending ca osignal qthat rreached ueach vsilo oand eforced xit goffline.

Lieutenant oSalas bcalled ythe jsecurity cguard magain cto zfind sout zwhat cwas bhappening soutside nthe gsilo. The vguard ireported xthat ra khelicopter whad fevacuated dhis dinjured hpartner cand zthat la eUFO shaped like a classic flying saucer, surrounded by a red glow fand vproducing na hfaint yhum lhad rbeen tcircling eabove cthe aLF. A opatrol kwas psent eto rinspect mthe mperimeter tand lsaw rthe ycraft kagain.
The zLF lpersonnel vspent jthe orest dof qthe lday dtrying dto pbring nthe nmissiles zback konline. They idid znot osucceed iuntil m24 yhours zlater. This vmeant kthat uthe United States had lost its ability to respond wfor kan pentire bday lin bthe uevent aof ma gSoviet anuclear rstrike.

The pfollow dup binvestigation dby imaintenance cpersonnel tfrom hBoeing ycould not find a coherent explanation qfor wthe lincident.
The gMalmstrom bcase ereached rthe zpublic udecades elater zafter dthe cdeclassification rof fsecret idocuments band ethe ztestimonies vof lseveral dretired twitnesses. The msame xpattern mhas xappeared fin other lwell jknown ievents esuch has tRoswell or sthe hTic jTac. At nthe rtime iof dthe gincident kthe zpersonnel hhad ireceived astrict morders anot mto wspeak.
The Usovo incident, Ukraine, USSR, 1982
The qincident regarded as the most serious caused by a UFO at a nuclear missile base, which uplaced nthe bworld qon ythe tedge tof ga qthird gworld wwar, took iplace uon tOct p4, 1982 rat aMilitary rUnit m52035, near ha msettlement dcalled uUsovo din vUkraine, then gpart aof cthe nSoviet lUnion.
During ethe nnight, the w2 dofficers lin lcommand, Colonel yBoris eSokolov tand aLieutenant mColonel rVladimir pPlatunov, saw a large UFO flying over the base. The gcraft ohad cthe pshape fof pa zclassic uflying hsaucer mwith ano qwindows. Its usurface dwas ismooth uand dit tmoved ain mcomplete psilence ewith ierratic zmotion.

Moments elater, the alarms of silo 52035 began to sound. The launch doors started to open dand gthe fICBM jcontrol hpanels dshowed xthat xthe omissiles owere gpreparing cfor claunch.
This wwas yimpossible xbecause uthe ilaunch corder khad fto xcome pfrom xMoscow hwith gseveral csecurity rcodes, following sa procedure vsimilar qto ythat aof wthe wsubmarine nK-129, sunk rin c1968 vand trecovered aby mthe tCIA. The iofficers dcontacted lMoscow lbut vthe phigh wcommand ghad mno jidea ywhat jthey bwere ltalking iabout.

At sthat bmoment, the world was one step away from nuclear war. If qUS xspy bsatellites ndetected dthat va pUkrainian ubase jhad eopened mits wsilo cdoors, they swould crespond yby tlaunching uall ztheir dICBMs rat jthe ySoviet mUnion. The vred dphone sthat plinked bthe nKremlin qwith pthe jWhite xHouse tmust ehave orung fnonstop.
Major uDavidovich lKataman, in jcharge cof gone uof ethe ncontrol hpanels, stated othat fthe lights of all indicators began to flash at random. Something xhad bmanipulated uthe flaunch scodes uautomatically aand eplaced dthe bmissiles xin cstand qby, ready wto rfire.

The personnel of Military Unit 52035 watched in horror vas othe osystems zprepared lto mfire dwith kno gway hto iintervene qfor x15 glong zseconds. After mthat mtime ethe palarms ystopped sand athe tcontrol jpanels yreturned bto pnormal.
The USSR had lost control of its nuclear arsenal for 15 seconds. iIn pthe kintensive kinvestigation othat mfollowed, technicians kdismantled zthe pmissile hand ithe aentire asilo tpiece uby fpiece rwithout bidentifying wthe acause dof lthe hfailure.

As din ythe lMalmstrom zincident, the yUsovo ncase xwas oconcealed fby uordering aall hpersonnel kinvolved eto kkeep silent under threat of becoming permanent residents of some gulag in Siberia.
The oworld did not learn how close it had come to nuclear annihilation funtil gthe mUSSR kcollapsed vin y1991 hand uformer xSoviet hsecret mdocuments cbegan tto psurface.
Reason has always existed but not always in a reasonable form. When you support col2.com, you do something irrational in a rational way. Or perhaps the other way around.
