ID | #1606481801 |
Added | Fri, 27/11/2020 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Research
|
Initial data
A huge UFO of perfect geometric shape and a diameter of 900 meters hovered over the nearest base of ballistic missiles. Numerous eyewitnesses confirmed this observation.
So did rocket engineer Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Plantonev. According to him, the UFO was a silent aircraft in the shape of a disk. There were no portholes, and the surface was perfectly flat. It made turns like a plane.
The missile silo at the base contained a nuclear warhead aimed at the United States. Plantonev was in the bunker on that fateful day in 1982. The room contained dual missile control panels, each of which was connected to Moscow.
As the UFO hovered overhead, warning lights suddenly lit up on both control panels for a short period of time. The lights showed that the missiles were preparing to launch. Moscow could have initiated such a launch, but there was no order from Moscow, and no one at the base pressed any buttons.
For 15 long seconds, the base simply lost control of its nuclear weapons.
Original news
Date: October 4 1982
Location: Soviet Ukraine
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Summary: A huge UFO of perfect geometrical shape and 900 meters in diameter hovered over a nearby ballistic missile base. Numerous eyewitnesses confirmed the sighting. So did Lt. Colonel Vladimir Plantonev, a missile engineer. According to him the UFO was a noiseless, disc-shaped craft; it had no portholes, its surface completely even. It made turns, like an airplane would. The missile silo at the base contained a nuclear warhead pointed at the United States. Plantonev was in the bunker that fateful day in 1982. The room contained dual control panels for the missile, each of them hooked to Moscow. As the UFO hovered overhead, signal lights on both the control panels suddenly turned on, for a short period of time. The lights indicated that the missiles were preparing for launch. Moscow could have initiated such launch, by its transmission of special orders, but no order came from Moscow, and no one at the base pushed any buttons. For 15 long seconds the base simply lost control of its nuclear weapons.
Source: Robert Hastings; ABC News
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