Experts reveal the REAL reason UFOs ‘target high-speed planes and warheads’
The Internet is filled with videos showing UFOs flying near fast aircraft, nuclear warheads and even nuclear reactors. Experts have an alarming theory about why these locations are chosen as targets.
In 1976, British Airways aired an advertisement for their Concorde flight in which a spherical UFO hurtles toward the plane at incredibly high speed, apparently analyzing the aircraft and then flying away.
The unconfirmed UFO sighting – which resurfaced on Reddit’s UFO subchannelwhere alleged videos of vessels are shared, debunked or upvoted if deemed legitimate, is one of many that shows the strange, almost curious behavior of these unknown objects.
In June 2022, the longest-reigning royal monarch was honoured during the Queen’s Jubilee by a group of nine fighter jets spewing clouds of smoke in the red, white and blue colours of the Union Jack, and by one unidentified disc.
Although it has been circulating in the media, there has never been a clear answer to the question of what exactly it entails.
In 1976, British Airways aired an advertisement for their Concorde flight in which a spherical UFO shoots towards the plane at an incredibly high speed, apparently analyses the aircraft and then flies away
In June 2022, the longest-serving royal monarch was honoured during the Queen’s Jubilee by a cadre of nine fighter jets spewing clouds of smoke in the red, white and blue colours of the Union Jack – and one unidentified disc
Even more remarkable are the nearly dozens of UFOs that appeared over Japan’s Fukushima laboratory after the 2011 nuclear disaster. Witnesses told the Netflix documentary series Encounters that the UFOs saved them by lowering radioactivity levels.
Local media saw several shiny white balls above the plant – very similar to previous times – entering the laboratory and then coming out again, in a kind of assembly line.
In pop culture, the History Channel’s The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch has featured dozens of similar UFOs over its five-season run. Many of these UFOs appear after scientists fire a rocket into the sky.
There are a whole host of possible explanations for these various occurrences, offered by skeptics, from insects to balloons. But for researchers who have dedicated their lives to this phenomenon, there is much more to these videos than meets the eye.
The question is: Do UFOs approach fast aircraft because they fear they may have nuclear capabilities?
Experts in the field have already analyzed similar behavior as evidence that whatever is up there is concerned about us, especially when it comes to the prospect of blowing ourselves up with nuclear weapons.
A dozen UFOs appeared over Japan’s Fukushima nuclear lab after the 2011 nuclear disaster. Witnesses told the Netflix docuseries Encounters that the UFOs saved them by lowering radioactivity levels
UFO sightings over the US nuclear arsenal appeared to shift their interest from bomb production to silos and bomber bases as the Cold War arms race intensified (above)
UFO activity and nuclear weapons and locations have been intertwined since the invention of the atomic bomb in 1945. The phenomenon has been witnessed by both civilians and military personnel.
“All the nuclear facilities — Los Alamos, Livermore, Sandia, Savannah River — all had dramatic incidents where these unknown craft appeared over the facilities and no one knew where they came from or what they were doing there,” investigative journalist George Knapp said. History.com.
Former director of the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, Lue Elizondo, agreed that there “appears to be a lot of connection” between UFO sightings and nuclear sites.
And independent researcher Robert Hastings, who advocates for full government disclosure of UAP activities, said in 2010: “Declassified U.S. government documents and witness statements from former or retired U.S. military personnel confirm beyond any doubt the reality of ongoing UFO incursions into nuclear weapons sites.”
Now there is new research – in the form of three studies led by a retired US Air Force sergeant, Larry Hancockand a data analyst associated with Harvard’s Galileo Project for UFO hunting, Ian Porritt — shows that not only has there been unusual activity surrounding nuclear weapons and facilities, but that it has also changed over the years.
At first it seemed that UFOs were mainly interested in the production of nuclear weapons. Later, however, more and more UFOs appeared around storage sites and bomber bases.
“You saw this interest” in the silos when they were installed, before “the activity tapered off,” Porritt previously told DailyMail.com.
Independent researcher Robert Hastings (pictured), who advocates for full government disclosure of UAP activities, said in 2010: “Declassified U.S. government documents and witness statements from former or retired U.S. military personnel conclusively confirm the reality of ongoing UFO incursions into nuclear weapons sites.”
These patterns in historical UFO records were also accompanied by another clear trend, the researchers said: As UFOs began appearing more frequently over armed and ready nuclear weapons sites, the apparent craft also began appearing more often at night (above).
And as a new arsenal of ICBMs was built in the 1960s, UFOs became “much more intrusive” in their approach to ICBM bases, Porritt said. “They are at very low altitudes and penetrate the security perimeter of the base.”
Two Air Force veterans previously told DailyMail.com that they testified at the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) in June 2023 that UFOs disabled their nuclear warheads.
In addition, Robert Salas, a former ICBM launch officer with the U.S. Air Force, said the AARO contacted him by email to gather information after he testified that he had destroyed 10 nuclear warheads with an orange flying disc at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana in 1967.
Despite a thorough investigation by the military, no conclusion was reached, but not before Salas said he was forced to sign a nondisclosure agreement on the matter by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations.
This is reminiscent of what former U.S. Air Force First Lieutenant Robert Jacobs said happened in 1964, when a UFO “deactivated” an unarmed nuclear warhead.
Retired USAF First Lieutenant Robert Jacobs, pictured in the center of the bottom row, with his crew
“Now think about it, all this stuff is flying at thousands of miles an hour. So this thing fires a beam of light at the warhead, hits it, and then it goes up… fires another beam of light… goes down and fires another beam of light, and then flies out the way it came in. And the warhead goes tumbling out of space,” he said in a 2000 interview.
Jacobs said he was later told “never to speak about this meeting again.”
Eerily similar to these encounters are the cases of UAPs chasing fighter jets revealed by the UAP Task Force. One example is the “giant Tic Tac” UFO seen by veteran Navy pilot Commander David Fravor in 2004.
As with the other aircraft in the photo above, Fravor’s co-pilot Chad Underwood witnessed the “perfectly white,” wingless, elongated craft captured on video from his cockpit.
Given the similarities, there seems to be a connection between the behavior of UFOs toward aircraft and nuclear weapons. And it may be for the same reason.