Showing posts with label Shoot Down Orders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shoot Down Orders. Show all posts

Monday, August 08, 2016

USAF Considers Shooting Down a UFO with a Missile – 1952

USAF Considers Shooting Down a UFO with a Missile

Have we Visitors From Space – Life Magazine 1952

     Brigadier General William Garland in a 1952 Memorandum for Record (MFR) told a LIFE magazine researcher that the US Air Force had considered using a missile to shoot down a UFO.
By Jan L. Aldrich
Project 1947
8-7-16
Robert Powell, Scientific Director of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) found two MFR recording LIFE magazine researcher, Robert Ginna’s visit to the Pentagon in February 1952. Ginna met with a number of high ranking officers and intelligence officials gathering more research data for his article which was published in April. Among the general officers who helped him during his visit in addition to Brigadier General Garland were Brigadier Sory Smith, in charge of Public Information, and General Joseph F. Carroll, Deputy Inspector General and Director of Special Investigations. With their help, he was able to interview Lt. Col. Doyle Rees, for Commander of the 17th Air Force Office of Special Investigation, in New Mexico, and who had worked with Dr. Lincoln LaPaz, University of New Mexico expert on meteors. Both Dr. LaPaz and Lt. Col. Doyle Rees had investigated numerous UFO cases and green fire ball incidents in the southwest US. Also, involved in these meeting was Lt. Col. Dewitt Searles, public information UFO spokesman going back years, and a civilian Mrs. Helen Barber, managing editor of the classified internal publication, Air Intelligence Digest, who also figured in a number of Air Force Headquarters UFO investigations. General Garland arranged for a visit to the Air Technical Intelligence Center (ATIC) where Ginna could confer with Lieutenant Edward Ruppelt newly appointed chief of the USAF’s revitalized UFO investigative project which would shortly be renamed Project Blue Book. Read more at Project 1947….

Monday, April 11, 2016

Jets Ordered To Hunt Down Flying Saucers | UFO CHRONICLE – 1952

Jets Ordered To Hunt Down Flying Saucers - Daily News 7-28-1952
Jets Ordered To Hunt Down Flying Saucers (-cont) - Daily News 7-28-1952


     The Air Defense Command alerted jet pilots today to take off instantly in pursuit of any "Flying Saucers" sighted anywhere in the country.
By Daily News
7-28-1952

It acted after F-94 jets unsuccessfully chased "glowing white lights" seen in this area Saturday night.

The new batch of sacuer reports included unexplained appearances on radar screens, but the Air force remained skeptical. It said the reports have shown "no pattern which would indicate the objects are being controlled by a reasonable body."

Saturday, January 02, 2016

Air Force Issues 24 Hour Alert Against UFOs with 'Shoot Down Orders' | UFO CHRONICLE – 1952

Air Force Issues 24 Hour Alert Against UFOs with 'Shoot Down Orders'

     The Air Force disclosed today that jet pilots are under orders to maintain a nationwide 24-hour "alert" against "Flying Saucers" [UFOs] and to shoot them down if possible.

By Charleston Gazette
7-29-1952
[...]

... jet pilots are under standing orders to pursue all unidentified flying objects, especially on the eastern seaboard, and, if necessary force them to land. The alert is applicable to "Flying Saucers" [UFOs].

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

The Only Man to Ever Shoot at a UFO

The Only Man to Ever Shoot at a UFO

By Frank Chung
news.com.au
12-29-15

     Thirty-five years ago, fighter pilot Oscar Santa Maria Huerta had a real-life Independence Day moment when he attempted to shoot down a mysterious light-bulb shaped craft, in what to this day remains the only documented case of a military aircraft firing on a UFO.

It was early on the morning of April 11, 1980, and the 23-year-old Peruvian air force lieutenant was preparing for daily exercises along with around 1800 military personnel and civilians at the La Joya Air Force Base, 1000km south of the Peruvian capital.

Lt Huerta, a pilot with eight years’ experience who had been flying combat missions since 19, was ordered to take off in his Russian-made Sukhoi-22 fighter to intercept the strange silvery object that had been spotted floating near the end of the runway.

The object was five kilometres away, hanging in the air about 600 metres off the ground, and was not replying to any communications. [...]

Saturday, May 02, 2009

"The Pilot Eventually Spotted the UFO . . . He Armed His Rockets Waiting to Shoot . . ."

Maritime UFO Files By Don Ledger
Excerpt from Maritime UFO Files
By Don Ledger
5-1-09

     There is an epilogue of sorts to the [[a] radar case at Royal Canadian Naval Air Station [RCNAS], Dartmouth, Nova Scotia on June 30-July 1 1950 but it took the passage of 47 years before it could be told.

As is almost a given in the business of investigating UFO sightings, coincidence takes a hand. In November of 1997 I had occasion to be in Vancouver, British Columbia, my first trip to the west coast. It was necessary for me to lay over an extra day in order to take advantage of an Air Canada seat sale. I used that extra day to meet with a few of my UFO investigator counterparts associated with UFO BC. One of those was Graham Conway a Ufologist with many more years in this game than I. We spent many hours together that day discussing cases we were either involved in or aware of.

During the course of our talk he mentioned that he had an acquaintance there in BC who was stationed in Nova Scotia in the fifties with Royal Canadian Navy and that I should call him some time. Graham indicated that he might have some stories to tell me. Then we moved on to other topics. After an enjoyable day and evening I flew back to Nova Scotia the next day having completely forgotten to get the name and address of the man of which we had talked. A couple of days after I returned I received an email message from Dave Pengilly, a UFO BC investigator in British Columbia, informing me that Graham Conway was forwarding a message to me with the name and phone number of the Naval person we had discussed while I was out there.

The man’s name was Earl Cale and I phoned him at a time arranged through email. His first words, after the usual pleasantries, were about his being an Air Traffic Controller in the early fifties at the Base in Shearwater or Canadian Naval Air Station in Dartmouth. He stated that one evening base radar had picked up an object crossing the area at 1,000 miles per hour [1,670 kph], a speed unheard of at that time. After some discussion about the time frame we were able to determine that this would have been in 1950 or 1951. This most likely this case June 1950-UFOs on radar, RCNAS- Dartmouth NS; It is the only case or record I have of heavy radar involvement from that locale and date.

Cale explained that this type of thing went on for about a week by which time it was confirmed that this was something solid that the radar was tracking. As a result two propeller driven Sea Furies, [armed with rockets!] were placed on 24 hour standby along with the pilots to man them.

The Sea Furies were capable of 460 miles per hour in straight and level flight and were the only high speed aircraft available. Jets were unheard of in the Canadian Fleet Air Arm and in the RCAF. It would be nearly two years before they would make an appearance. Loaded as they were with their armament the Sea Furies were considerably slower than they would be when unencumbered.

The tactic paid off when one evening an object showed up on the screen heading towards the base. It over-flew the base while one of the Sea Furies was scrambled, taking after the object in hot pursuit. The UFO was headed toward Dartmouth a few miles to the northwest with the Sea Fury in pursuit. Using vectors supplied by the radar personnel at CNAS-Dartmouth the Sea Fury closed on the UFO. The pilot eventually spotted the UFO and, advancing throttle, bore in on it. He armed his rockets waiting to shoot. The Sea Fury got to within 2,000 feet below and 2 miles behind the object. To his amazement and that of the radar personnel, the UFO “took off like a shot” at an incredible speed leaving the Sea Fury pilot contemplating the inadequacy of his craft and the radar personnel scratching their heads.

After some discussion we were able to determine that Earl had been working ATC at the base in 1951, and recognized the names of Petty Officer Clarke and Able Seaman Connolly. He also remembered Doull, the Lt. Commander (Direction) who wrote the original report that resulted in the investigation Board being formed. Most importantly he remembered hearing of the “Board’s” investigation of the June/July sighting in 1950. He further informed me that the radar room was directly below the control tower and he would have known many of the personnel working there. A phone, naturally, linked the two rooms together. So there you have it, confirmation at least that more than two radar and base personnel had seen UFO targets on radar, and base involvement at higher authority levels than just the ranks. The latter is obvious if armed military aircraft are involved. In fact it probably went as high as the Chief of Air Staff in Trenton, a must if you are planning on firing rockets tipped with warheads over a populated area.