(wikimedia.org photo)
Thursday, 31 January 2019
U.S. Government UFO Document:
“AIR INTELLIGENCE INFORMATION
REPORT – REPORT NO. IR-23-52 –
PAGE 4 OF 16 PAGES”
Unknown date
(Project Blue Book , U.S. Air Force, Washington , D.C. )
Source: NICAP.org
The document pertains to 1st Lieutenant David C. Brigham’s
UFO encounter over Misawa , Japan , on 29 March 1952. Brigham
flew a T-6 trainer airplane.
Quote from the document (the testimony of David C.
Brigham) (not written in U.S. Department of Defense document format) (Page 3):
“(1) At 1120 hours 29 March 52, I was flying a T-6
heading approximately due north at approximately 20 miles north of Misawa
over the coast. I was climbing at approximately 130 mph indicated airspeed,
altitude approximately 6000
feet . GCI was running an intercept on me with an F-84 flight
of two. Call sign of th F-84’s was Frosty Mike 3 and 4. I watched them close on
me from about 7:00 o’clock around to about 5:30 and Frosty Mike 3 overtook me
passing starboard approximately 100', and approximately 10' below me, taking my
number. As he pulled abreast of me at about my 3:00 o’clock position and 10 feet low, a flash of
reflected sunshine caught my eye at about 4 o’clock position. The object which
had reflected the sunshine was a small shiny disc-shaped object which was
making a pass on Mike 3. It closed from slightly above him from approximately 4
o’clock and flew an approximate pursuit curve, appearing to overtake him at
around 30 or 40 mph
over his airspeed, which I would estimate at approximately 150 to 160 mph . It closed rapidly
and just before flying into his fuselage it decelerated to his airspeed almost
instantaneously. In doing so it flipped up on its edge at approximately a 90°
bank. It then fluttered within 20
feet of his fuselage for perhaps 2 or 3 seconds, pulled
away and around his starboard wing, appearing to flip once as it hit the
slipstream behind his wing tip fuel tank. Then it passed him; crossed in front
of him and pulled up abruptly, appearing to accelerate and shot out of sight in
a steep, almost vertical climb.
It was about 8 inches
in diameter, very thin, round and as shiny as polished chromium; had no
apparent projections, and left no exhaust trails or vapor trails.
An unusual flight characteristic was a slow fluttering motion. It rocked
back and forth at approximately 40° banks, at approximately 1 second intervals
throughout its course. It was very thin and resembled a round piece of shiny
sheet metal.
The weather was very good. I do not remember any clouds that day.
Duration of sighting was approximately 10 seconds.
/s/ D. C. Brigham”
Project Blue Book listed
the case as “Unknown.”
Wikipedia article: “Misawa Air Base”:
Wikipedia article: “North
American T-6 Texan”:
Related posts:
(ufocasebook.com image)
Two U.S. Army Air Forces North American AT-6C-NT Texan trainers (s/n 42-43925, 42-43929) in flight near Luke Field, Arizona (USA ), in 1943. (text by Wikipedia) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)
(wikimedia.org photo)
(tageo.com photo)
UFO Case Directory
(SIGHTINGS FROM AIRCRAFT):
“Brigham/T-6 Case:
UFO Makes Pass At F-84 (BBU 1082)
March 29, 1952
Misawa, Japan”
(NICAP.org)
The whole UFO case report:
“11:20 local
Duration 10 secs? T-6 aircraft Japan |
Military,
USAF
1 observer No EMI No radar contact |
Fran Ridge:
This report is case #29, on the official clearance
list of 41 formerly classified Air Technical Intelligence UFO reports cleared
for Maj. Donald E. Keyhoe by Albert M. Chop, Air Force Press Desk. Throughout
UFO history; small discs have been reported from time to time that may be
remote-controlled devices. The estimates of size range from about eight inches
to a few feet in diameter.
Richard Hall:
March 29, 1952; Misawa ,
Japan
11:20 a.m. local. Lt. David C. Brigham, flying a T-6
as target plane for an intercept exercise by two F-84 jet fighters, saw a
small, shiny disc about eight inches in diameter make a pass at one of the
F-84s. It flew a pursuit curve and closed rapidly. Just as it would have flown
into Brigham’s fuselage it decelerated to his airspeed, almost instantaneously.
In doing so, it flipped up on its edge at an approximate 90-degree bank. It
fluttered within two feet of his fuselage for perhaps two or three seconds.
Then it pulled away around his starboard wing, appearing to flip once as it hit
the slipstream behind his wing-tip fuel tank. Then it passed him, crossed in front,
and pulled up abruptly appearing to accelerate, and shot out of sight in a
steep, almost vertical climb. An unusual flight characteristic was a slow,
fluttering motion. It rocked back and forth in 40-degree banks, at about
one-second intervals throughout its course. (10 secs?)
Dan Wilson:
This was a hot zone for the Russians were moving
bombers into China in 1952
(having to do with the Korean War) not far from Japan . It was in December of 1952,
that the US Fifth Air Force moved the 49th’s 9th Fighter-Bomber Squadron of
F-84Gs from Korea to Japan to train
its aircrews in the delivery of tactical atomic weapons.”
NICAP.org presents U.S. government (U.S. Air Force)
documents that pertain to the UFO case.
Wikipedia article: “Misawa Air Base”:
Wikipedia article: “North
American T-6 Texan”:
Related posts:
Two U.S. Army Air Forces North American AT-6C-NT Texan
trainers (s/n 42-43925, 42-43929) in flight near Luke Field, Arizona (USA ), in 1943.
(text by Wikipedia) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)
(wikimedia.org photo)
(tageo.com photo)
UFO News Article:
“US FIGHTER PILOTS TALK OF
HAVING CHASED SCORES OF UFOs”
6 September 1976
(Straits Echo, George
Town , Malaysia )
Sources: U.F.O. Newsclipping Service, Seattle , Washington
and AFU.se
The Straits Echo presents the UFO testimonies of
Kenneth Leland, a Lieutenant Colonel in the Minnesota Air National Guard, Ed
Simpson, a former U.S. Air Force radarman (served 20 years in the Air Force, 12
of them in radar operation) and Francis C. Sullivan, a retired U.S. Air Force
Master Sergeant (served 28 years in the Air Force, 18 of them in radar
operation).
It is tertimonies like these (by military personnel)
that prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that unknown objects operate in the
Earth’s airspace.
The whole article (Page 26):
“AIR FORCE fighters have been repeatedly sent up to
intercept – despite the refusal of the U.S. Air Force to admit that UFOs even
exist.
Former airmen – now free to talk – revealed that UFOs
have been sighted and officially reported, tracked on radar ‘by the hundreds’
and chased by Air Force planes sent after them.
‘I’m well aware of UFOs – we used to track them on
radar and run up interceptors against them,’ stated Ed Simpson, a former Air
Force radarman who is now a policeman in Phillips ,
Wisconsin , USA .
‘I tracked hundreds of UFOs on radar,’ said Francis C.
Sullivan, a retired Air Force Master Sergeant now living in Tucson , Ariz.
And Kenneth Leland, an elementary school principal in Superior , Wis. , who is
still a Lieutenant Colonel in the Minnesota Air National Guard, told us: ‘My
plane was ‘scrambled’ after a UFO that was actually over a radar site northeast
of Duluth , Minn. ’
‘Scrambling’ is an Air Force term for rapid or
emergency takeoff in response to an alert.
Patrolman Simpson spent 20 years in the Air Force, 12
of them in radar operation.
‘When I was stationed in the upper peninsula of Michigan ,
we had whole groups of UFOs. We tracked them on radar and scrambled jets after
them that chased them around the sky. Over a period of 12 years, I’d say I
tracked at least 50 UFOs.
Did the jets ever catch up with them? ‘No,’ Simpson
replied. ‘Our planes would go up to around 52,000 feet , their
normal limit, and the pilots would report the UFOs were 30,000 to 40,000 feet still
higher.’
Former Master Sgt. Sullivan spent 28 years in the Air
Force. For 18 of them he was a radar operator at air bases in Japan and the U.S.
‘I couldn’t give you the exact number of UFOs I
tracked on radar, but it must have been in the hundreds,’ he told us. ‘A lot of
times we’d scramble jets after them. But only once did a pilot succeed in
getting close to one – at an Air Force base near Masawa (Misawa), Japan , in 1951.
‘An officer pilot named Brigham was in the air and I was
in radio contact with him when he sighted something and went after it,’
Sullivan said. ‘He radioed, I’ve never seen such a thing! It’s round – I don’t
know what it is – when I started closing in on it, it must have – it’s gone,
Sully, it’s gone! Just gone!’ When he landed he reported the incident. The next
day they shipped him out of there.
‘But in 1968 I made a telephone call to Peterson
Field, and recognized the voice at the other end as Brigham’s.
‘I asked him what had happened after the incident in Japan .
‘He said, ‘I can’t talk about it. They took me to Washington and that’s all
I can tell you. I still can’t discuss it and l’m told not to.’ ”
Wikipedia article: “Minnesota Air National Guard”:
Wikipedia article: “Misawa Air Base”:
Related posts:
Aerial photo of Security Hill at Misawa AB , Japan taken some time during the
1990s. (text by Wikipedia) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)
Misawa F-16CJ Block 50 Flagships (text by Wikipedia)
(wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)
Wednesday, 30 January 2019
UFO Book Preview:
“UFOs: Myths, Conspiracies, and Realities”
By John B. Alexander, Ph.D.
Source: Google Books
The book was first published by Thomas Dunne Books (New York City ) in February
2011.
Related posts:
Dr. John B. Alexander, Colonel , U.S. Army (Ret.)
(irva.org photo)
(theufochronicles.com image)
Tuesday, 29 January 2019
UFO News Article:
“Skeptical professor now a believer in UFOs”
25 November 1977
(Arkansas Democrat, Little Rock , Arkansas )
Sources: U.F.O. Newsclipping Service, Plumerville , Arkansas
and AFU.se
The whole article (Page 10):
“The pursuit of ‘flying saucers’ can be a difficult
thing for a scientist, especially if he becomes convinced he has found what he
was looking for.
‘It’s changed my life completely,’ Dr. Harley D. Rutledge,
physics department chairman of Southeast
Missouri State
University in Cape Girardeau , said. Colleagues call him a
man not prone to exaggeration.
Rutledge began as a skeptic in 1973 when it was
suggested that he investigate a rash of sightings of unidentified flying
objects in southeast Missouri .
Now, after more than four years of firsthand research and observation, he has
reluctantly admitted he cannot debunk the stories.
The information gathered by Rutledge, including more
than 700 photographs, resulted from hundreds of nights spent in the air, in
fields and on hillsides, accompanied, always, by other observers and equipment
which includes telescopes, cameras and a spectrograph.
At 51, married, with five children, he is laying his
reputation and career on the line and saying that there really is something up
there that cannot be explained by conventional logic.
‘Now I know they are up there. What they are or where
they came from, I have no way of knowing. But they are there,’ he said in a
recent interview.
Rutledge himself has made more than 140 sightings, both
in broad daylight and at night. At least 25 of those sightings he labels as
‘incredible.’
Three of the most convincing sightings occurred within
two weeks of each other in May 1973. The first, from the air, involved what he
calls ‘a 45-second metamorphosis'’ involving 10 balls of light that had no
business being where they were, in the air near the small town of Piedmont , Mo.
The second and third sightings, which he believes to
be conclusive because he was so close to the objects, were made near Farmington , Mo. ,
about two weeks later. On the night of May 24 Rutledge and several other observers
spotted an object with a triangular shaped light pattern passing over them.
Rutledge tentatively labeled the object as an airplane, but said later evidence
discounted that possibility.
The next night, he said, he and his colleagues
observed a huge object that had nearly passed over them before they spotted it.
‘It had four lights, two red and two white,’ the
professor said . ‘It was dose enough that I could see parts of it through my 80-power
telescope. It had a metallic skin and I could make out a ribbed pattern in the
red lights.’
Because of the delicacy of his position, Rutledge said
he has been reluctant to talk about the phenomena. Now, he said, he believes he
can survive the scoffing he will hear — and he says he believes he has an
obligation to tell the public what he knows.
Rutledge’s colleagues point out that he is an intense
man, but rational and conservative.
‘Anything he does has lots of effort put into it,’
said Dr. Donald Fromsdorf, dean of the College of Sciences
at SEMO. ‘Everything is done professionally, scientifically.
‘I have no qualms about his professional integrity or
the way he goes about things. But he has taken on a momumental task.’
Much of the work has been funded through grants from
the university and a special grant from the St. Louis Globe-Denocrat [sic].
Rutledge reviews, but will not include in his research
data, reports from laymen. He also refuses to associate with amateur UFO clubs,
which he says he has learned are usually run by persons seeking no more than
cheap thrills or publicity.
‘I really didn’t ask for the position in which I now
find myself,’ Rutledge said . ‘But now if I am to perform a service, I suppose
it must be to prepare people for the various possibilities.’
The professor emphasizes that he does not know the
origin of the objects he has seen. But he does say he has documented evidence
that they have performed aerial gymnastics that seem far beyond what any known
manmade aircraft can do.
‘Not only have I seen strange vehicles and lights by
both day and night,’ he said, ‘but they appear to be intelligently controlled
and seem to interact with human beings.’
Have the experiences frightened him?
‘I don’t like the word frightened,’ he said. ‘They
have made me uneasy. When I returned from Piedmont
after the first conclusive sightings, I was in the dumps for about two weeks.
But I got a lot of support from the university and from my family and I was
finally able to say, ‘If this is the worst, well, then we’re all in it together.’
‘But it has changed my life. I have no social life to
speak of because of the time required for the research. But I guess I can’t
stop now. I feel I must try to make people gain a little better understanding of
it.’ ”
Related posts:
The late Dr. Harley D. Rutledge, U.S. Physicist & UFO Researcher
(kplcblogs.typepad.com photo)
UFO News Article:
“UFOs are studied by France”
8 October 1977
(Houston Chronicle, Texas )
Source: theufochronicles.com
The Houston Chronicle presents a Chicago Daily News
article.
The whole article:
“A French government agency has begun to study the
phenomenon of unidentified flying objects.
J. Allen Hynek, professor of astronomy at Northwestern University and director of the Center
for UFO Studies, said the study is the first of its kind to be funded by any
government.
The French
National Center
for Space Studies (CNES) has created a research group which has asked Hynek’s
organization for cooperation.
Hynek told reporters that CNES is equivalent to our
National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
‘The implications of this step taken by the French government
are farreaching,’ Hynek said. ‘It points up to the growing interest on an
official level and recognition of the serious nature of the UFO phenomenon,’ he
added.
Hynek has been studying UFO reports since 1948.
‘There will now be an official government group –
unfortunately in another country – that is going to take this thing seriously,’
he said.
‘All of our data is available to them. We have
computer data on 60,000 cases. The great difference between our work and what
the French will be doing is they will be properly funded.
Hynek hedged when asked if he personally believes the
Earth has been visited by beings from other worlds.
‘It is possible,’ he said.”
Related posts:
(CNES image)
Dr. J. Allen Hynek, U.S. Astronomer,
the U.S. Air Force's Scientific
Consultant on UFOs (1948-1969), UFO Author, Lecturer & Researcher
(4.bp.blogspot.com photo)
Monday, 28 January 2019
U.S. Government AATIP Document (FOIA):
A List of 38 Advanced Aerospace Threat
Identification Program Research Paper Titles
Released: 16 January 2019
(Defense
Intelligence Agency , Washington ,
D.C.)
Source: Federation of American Scientists (FAS), Washington , D.C.
The document was released thanks to the efforts of
accountability advocate Steven Aftergood and former UK Ministry of Defence
official Nick Pope.
Wikipedia article: “Defense Intelligence Agency”:
Related posts:
realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=AATIP
realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=Advanced+Aerospace+Weapon+System+Applications+Program
UFO Article (Blog):
“More Light on Black Program to Track UFOs”
By Steven Aftergood, 17 January 2019
(Secrecy News, Federation of American Scientists
(FAS), Washington , D.C. )
The article reports on
the U.S. Department of Defense’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification
Program (AATIP).
NOTE: Dr. John B. Alexander has posted two very
interesting replies to the article.
Related posts:
The Pentagon (2008),
(wikimedia.org photo)
UFO News Article (Blog):
“Thinking we need a bit more info”
By Billy Cox, 23 January 2019
(De Void, Sarasota Herald-Tribune , Florida )
Billy Cox reports on the newly released (16 January
2019) Defense Intelligence Agency FOIA document.
The document is a five-page briefing document on the
DIA’s sponsorship of the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program
(AATIP).
It was released thanks to the efforts of accountability
advocate Steven Aftergood and former UK Ministry of Defence official Nick Pope.
Related posts:
The Pentagon (2008),
(wikimedia.org photo)
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