UFO nuclear weapon mystery goes global: Indian newspaper reports planes fly over nuclear power stations ‘every few days’

Senior law enforcement officials in India investigated and videotaped eerie UFO sightings over nuclear power plants in the Asian country last year, a local news report revealed.

One witness, a police sub-inspector and an engineer by training, said he was “100 percent certain” that the object he recorded, with its rapid “zigzag movements”, could not be explained by human technology.

India’s brush with mysterious objects curious about nuclear weapons follows years of growing attention to the issue in Washington DC – as Pentagon insiders, military veterans and Capitol Hill lawmakers have pursued ominous UFO incursions dating back to the Cold War.

In February of this year, UFO researchers dropped the bombshell that a former Pentagon UFO researcher had privately briefed Congress on a stunning 1964 incident in which a UFO shot an Atlas missile with a dummy warhead out of the sky.

But reports of these incidents in India in 2023 were reportedly less hostile.

One witness, police sub-inspector and engineer by training, Syed Abdul Kader, said he was “100 percent certain” that the object he recorded, with its rapid “zigzag movements”, could not be explained by human technology. Above is a still from one of Kader’s encounters with the UFO

Police sub-inspector Syed Abdul Kader (right), assigned to the technical wing of the Tirunelveli office, an hour's drive north of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant, told UFO expert Sabir Hussain (left) that he had taken two videos of the unusual aerial phenomena.

Police sub-inspector Syed Abdul Kader (right), assigned to the technical wing of the Tirunelveli office, an hour’s drive north of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant, told UFO expert Sabir Hussain (left) that he had taken two videos of the unusual aerial phenomena.

The dozen or so incidents all involved apparent vessels loitering strangely near the Kudankulam nuclear power plant at the southern tip of the subcontinent and the Madras nuclear power plant at Kalpakkam along the country’s east coast.

Police sub-inspector Syed Abdul Kader, assigned to the technical wing of the agency’s Tirunelveli office, an hour’s drive north of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant, told UFO expert Sabir Hussain that he had taken two videos of unusual aerial phenomena.

“The way he stood still, the way he zigzagged and the speed at which he disappeared,” Kader told reporters at the English-language Indian daily DT Next‘they were all different.’

Confirming his conversations with Hussain, Kader told DT Next that he had personally seen UFOs near the southern coastal town of Kudankulam since 2020.

“After meeting and talking to UFO tracker Sabir,” he told the newspaper, “I am more than 100 percent certain that what I saw were UFOs.”

The dozen or so incidents all involved apparent craft loitering strangely near the Kudankulam nuclear power plant (pictured above) on the southern tip of the subcontinent and the Madras nuclear power plant (not pictured) near Kalpakkam along the country's east coast.

The dozen or so incidents all involved apparent craft loitering strangely near the Kudankulam nuclear power plant (pictured above) on the southern tip of the subcontinent and the Madras nuclear power plant (not pictured) near Kalpakkam along the country’s east coast.

In February this year, US UFO researchers dropped the bombshell that an ex-Pentagon UFO researcher had privately briefed Congress on a stunning 1964 incident in which a UFO shot an Atlas missile with a dummy warhead out of the sky ( graphical reconstruction above)

In February this year, US UFO researchers dropped the bombshell that an ex-Pentagon UFO researcher had privately briefed Congress on a stunning 1964 incident in which a UFO shot an Atlas missile with a dummy warhead out of the sky ( graphical reconstruction above)

Kader’s 2023 observations in the south overlapped with weeks of observations in July and August along the eastern coast along the Neelankarai-Mahabalipuram coastline.

That region, near the bustling city of Chennai, is home to the Madras Atomic Power Station (MAPS) in Kalpakkam.

Kader’s videotaped sightings, Hussain told DT Next, “happened just 10 days after former DGP (director general of police) Prateep V. Philip took photographs of a UFO on (the) Muttukadu coast near Chennai.”

Philip’s rank of DGP is the highest position attainable in the Indian Police Service.

Despite an official Pentagon UFO report to Congress this year that attempted to debunk whistleblowers’ allegations of a secret and illegal UFO crash retrieval program, leading members of the U.S. Senate continue to pursue their subpoena power to investigate the matter .

The Pentagon report, prepared by the Defense Department’s UFO-hunting All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), was preceded by a largely failed attempt by lawmakers to pass a sweeping UFO “disclosure” amendment take – intended to grant authority to an independent panel. who would then be tasked with sifting through deeply hidden clandestine information in search of the truth about UFOs.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who sponsored the bill, said The New York Times: ‘It is truly a shame that the House of Representatives did not cooperate with us in adopting our proposal for a review committee.

β€œIt means that the declassification of UAP records will largely be up to the same entities that have blocked and covered up their disclosure for decades.”

‘We have been scammed. We got completely snowed under. They took every piece out of it,” said Congressman Tim Burchett, one of the House lawmakers most outspoken on the issue of UFO disclosure.

While the watered-down version of the bill has allowed the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies to determine what information about these mysterious sightings can be kept secret for the time being, Congress plans to take a serious look at the issue again later this year.

β€œIt’s just a matter of priorities at this point,” Senator Mike Rounds, who co-sponsored the bill with Senator Schumer, told Capitol Hill reporter Matt Laslo this March. ‘We have an interest in pursuing something like this.’