Wednesday 12 April 2017

UFO News Article:
“ ‘Ghost ships’ still puzzle experts at missile base”


17 July 1974
(The Star-Phoenix, Saskatoon, Canada)

Source: The UFO Chronicles, 30 November 2016

The whole article:
“Experts at a missile base here say they are puzzled about strange ‘ghost ships’ picked up by powerful radar scanners in the Pacific during a tracking exercise last year.

There has been little official comment on what the scientists found. But Major Dallas van Hoose, the army’s base spokesman, confirmed that ‘some unexplained aerial phenomena’ were observed last August (1973).

Scientists, many of whom are reluctant to be named in interviews because of general public skepticism concerning unidentified flying objects, say privately they have been unable to find any explanation for the ‘ghost ships.’

‘We have never seen anything precisely like this before,’ said one ballistic missile defense expert who works for an army agency here and is familiar with the advanced radar used to test missiles and warheads.

Huntsville houses the army’s ballistic missile defense systems command, which analyses results of missile test (tests) in the Kwajalein Atoll region of the Marshall Island Trust Territory held by the United States.

Last August, the air force launched a Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) from Vandenberg Air Force Base aimed for the Kwajalein missile range, used by the army, air force, and navy.

When the ICBM was screaming toward the Pacific test site, it bagan its descent on a normal, ballistic trajectory, scientists said.

The nose cone had separated from the third stage of the missile and was entering the atmosphere at 22,000 feet a second.

Radar scanners at Kwajalein and Meck Islands were tracking the nose cone routinely.

At about 400,000 feet, the radar experts in the Pacific found they were also tracking an unidentified flying object next to the ICBM’s nose cone.

Radar picked up an inverted saucer-shaped object to the right and above the descending nose cone and watched it cross the warhead’s trajectory to a point which was below and to the left of it before the phantom disappeared.

The ghost ship was described as being 10 feet high and 40 feet long.

So far, none of the experts here believe the ghost ship was a natural phenomenon caused by freak weather conditions or echoes commonly seen on radar screens.”

This news article is also presented (Page 69) in the book, The UFO Cover-Up (Fawcett, Greenwood).


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Map of Kwajalein Atoll, Pacific Ocean (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org image)