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- Code Name "DREAMLAND"
- Authorized by: Col. [BLACKED OUT], USAF
- : Lt. Col. H.G. Bennett, USAF
- Code clearance "Majic Q"
- 4 01-20-89 11:42pse
- (complete write thru _ reports of fires in arkansas)
-
- COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (UPI) _ A streaking object, probably a
- Soviet rocket body re-entering the atmosphere, left a fiery trail
- across the night sky Friday, and falling debris may have caused two
- fires in Arkansas, authorities said.
- The object, which prompted thousands of calls in several states,
- entered the atmosphere across the central United States shortly after
- 7p.m. MST, going from southwest to northeast, officials at the North
- American Aerospace Defense Command said. There were reports from people
- in Texas, Missouri, Tennessee and Arkansas who had seen the flaming
- object.
- "Our best estimation is that it was the re-entry of a Soviet
- rocket body associated with a launch that took place last year," said
- Commander Dugald Gillis, a NORAD spokesman. (Cover Story)
- Authorities in rural northwestern Arkansas reported two
- mysterious fires possibly caused by the space debris, and some
- Washington County sheriff's deputies reported the object passed over
- their heads.
- "We didn't locate any actual debris," said Sheriff's Sgt. James
- Cantrell, who did not see the object, but collected reports on it. "We
- had a couple of fires mysteriously started, but it being dark, we
- didn't locate anything. We'll probably go out tomorrow morning and look
- over the area."
- Sheriff's officers and volunteer firefighters rushed to the
- fires to check out reports of a possible small plane crash in the rural
- area about 4 miles southwest of the town of West Fork, Cantrell said.
- "Some of the deputies reported seeing it, so did some of the
- firemen and ambulance personnel. While they were standing around, this
- object went over," Cantrell said. Reports of the distance varied with
- some deputies and firefighters saying the burning object came as close
- as 200 yards and others saying it appeared to be a couple of miles
- above the ground.
- "Everybody said it looked like a rocket and had a blue-green
- fire from the tail of it," Cantrell said of the 10 to 15 sightings
- reported to his department. "They could tell it was a rocket. They knew
- it wasn't a meteor or something. It had a cone or cigar shape."
- The debris apparently started two small fires in the rural area,
- each about 100 square yards in size, Cantrell said. The nearest house
- was about a half-mile away.
- In Texas, thousands of people telephoned radio and television
- stations after sighting the object flash across the northeastern sky.
- A control tower operator at a Dallas airport, Love Field, said a pilot
- sitting in his plane on the ground informed the tower he had seen the
- object and that it resembled a meteor fireball.
- The North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) is charged
- with the responsibility for the protection of the North American
- continent from air attack. This is done through continuous monitoring
- of the skies with sophisticated radar systems designed to detect any
- foreign objects in or approaching our airspace. When an unidentified
- aircraft is sighted by radar, NORAD attempts to communicate with it for
- identification purposes. If this is not successful, it becomes
- necessary to "scramble" interceptors to identify the craft visually.
- According to NORAD, this happens about fifteen times per month.
- Usually the aircraft are identified. Sometimes they are not identified.
- These reports would be classified as UFOs or, as NORAD terms them,
- "Uncorrelated Observations." Two types of uncorrelated observations
- have been noted in NORAD data. One type involves the atmospheric
- detection of unknown aerial objects, and the other involves the space
- detection of unknown orbiting objects.
- Space observations are recorded by the NORAD Space Detection and
- Tracking System (SPADATS) and a Navy counterpart, the Naval Space
- Surveillance System (NAVSPASUR). These systems track and maintain
- element sets on approximately 5,000 man-made, catalogued objects in
- space. Approximately 25,000 observations are sent to the NORAD Space
- Defense Center each day from the sensor systems. Most of these
- observations are directly correlated to catalogued objects. The ones
- that are not correlated are not necessarily all genuine UFOs. A great
- majority are either satellites too small to track or debris from
- satellite break-ups.
- Estimates vary, but several hundred catalogued objects are orbiting
- the earth at present. These objects and the continuous need to update
- the element sets of catalogued objects due to natural phenomena are the
- largest contributors of uncorrelated observations. A certain percentage
- are never correlated with known objects and can literally be called
- unidentified flying objects or, in this case, "unidentified orbiting
- objects."
- According to NORAD, between SPADATS and NAVSPASUR approximately ten
- million uncorrelated observations have been collected over the last
- twenty years. If we were to take the usual estimates of the percentage
- of true unknowns from all UFO reports sent to various sources (ninety
- five percent, give or take a few percent), we are left with roughly
- five percent being UFOs. This agrees well with the government's
- figures.
-
- =========================================================
- ADDITIONAL VERIFICATION THAT NORAD HAS MONITORED UFOS.
-
- November 7, 1975 at Malmstrom Air Force Base. UFO penetrates
- missile silo....It began to rise, and at about 1,000 feet, NORAD picked
- up the UFO on radar. Two F-106 jet interceptors were launched from
- Great Falls, Montana, and headed toward the K-7 area. The UFO
- continued to rise. At about 200,000 feet, it disappeared from NORAD's
- radar.
- AND
- ...An additional bit of information surfaced later. In a National
- Military Command Center "Memorandum for Record" dated November 8, 1975,
- 6 a.m. EST, the following statement appeared in reference to Malmstrom:
- At 405 EST, SAC Site L-5 observed one object accelerate, and climb
- rapidly to a point in altitude where it became indistinguishable from
- the stars. NORAD will carry this incident as a FADE remaining UNKNOWN
- at 320 EST since after that time only visual sightings occurred.
- =========================================================
- During October and November 1975, several major Air Force bases
- were easily penetrated by UFOs. Through a leak by a Pentagon source,
- enough specific data was learned about the incidents to demand and
- receive edited government documents about them via the Freedom of
- Information Act. The reader will note the sometime use of the terms
- unidentified, helicopters, aircraft, and targets by the reporting Air
- Force bases. It's quite apparent that such terminology was the product
- of ignorance concerning the objects' identity. In reality, the USAF
- was dealing with the unknown! The following summaries are directly
- from the logs of NORAD which I have on file.
-
- 9 October/0630Z: Command Director called by Air Force Operations
- Center concerning an unknown helicopter landing in the munitions
- storage area at Loring Air Force Base, Maine. Apparently this was the
- second night in a row for the occurrence. There was also an indication,
- but not confirmed, that Canadian bases had been overflown by a
- helicopter.
-
- 31 October/0445Z: Report from Wurtsmith Air Force Base through Ops
- Center--incident at 0355Z. Helicopter hovered over SAC Weapons storage
- area, then departed area. Tanker flying at 2,700 feet made both visual
- sighting and radar skin paint. Tracked object 35 nautical miles
- southeast over Lake Huron where contact was lost.
-
- 01 November/0920Z: Received as info message from Loring Air Force
- Base, Maine, citing probable helicopter overflight of base.
-
- 08 November/0753Z: 24th NORAD Region unknown track J330, heading SSW,
- 12,000 feet. 1 to 7 objects, 46.46N 109.23W.
-
- Two F-106 scrambled out of Great Falls at 0745Z . SAC reported visual
- sighting from Sabotage Alert Teams (SAT) K1, K3, L1 and L6 (lights and
- jet sounds). Weather section states no anomalous propagation or
- northern lights. 0853Z SAC SAT Teams K3 and L4 report target at 300
- feet altitude and L4 reports target at 5 miles. Contact lost at 0820Z.
-
- F-106s returned to base at 0850Z with negative results.
-
- 0905Z Great Falls radar search and height had intermittent contact.
-
- 0910Z SAC teams again had visual (Site C-1, 10 miles SE Stanford,
- Montana).
-
- 0920Z SAC CP reported that when F-106s were in area, targets would turn
- out lights, and when F-106s left, targets would turn lights on...This
- same type of activity has been reported in the Malmstrom area for
- several days....The track will be carried as a remaining unknown.
-
- All of these Air Force bases belonged to the Strategic Air Command
- (SAC). The Malmstrom and Grand Forks bases house Minuteman missile
- sites. K1, K3, L1, etc., are missile locations. These visitations
- become more intriguing as we now turn to the 24th NORAD Region senior
- director's log(Malmstrom AFB, Montana).
-
- 07 November/1035Z: Received a call from the 341st Strategic Air
- Command Post (SAC CP) saying that the following missile locations
- reported seeing a large red to orange to yellow object: M1, L-3, LIMA
- and L-6. The general object location would be 10 miles south of Moore,
- Montana, and 20 miles east of Buffalo, Montana. Commander and Deputy
- for Operations (DO) informed.
-
- 07 November/1203Z: SAC advised that the Launch Control Facility at
- Harlowton, Montana, observed an object which emitted a light which
- illuminated the site driveway.
-
- 07 November/1319Z: SAC advised K-1 says very bright object to their
- east is now southeast of them and they are looking at it with 10 x 50
- binoculars. Object seems to have lights (several) on it, but no
- distinct pattern. The orange/gold object overhead also has small
- lights on it. SAC also advises female civilian reports having seen an
- object bearing south from her position six miles west of Lewistown.
-
- 07 November/1327Z: L-1 reports that the object to their northeast
- seems to be issuing a black object from it, tubular in shape. In all
- this time, surveillance has not been able to detect any sort of track
- except for known traffic.
-
- 08 November/0635Z: A security camper team at K-4 reported a UFO with
- white lights, one red light 50 yeards behind white light. Personnel at
- K-1 seeing same object.
-
- 08 November/0645Z: Height personnel picked up objects 10-13,000
- feet...Objects as many as seven.
-
- 08 November/0753Z: Unknown...Stationary/seven knots/12,000...
- Two F-106...notified.
-
- 08 November/0820Z: Lost radar contact, fighters broken off.
-
- 08 November/0905Z: L-sites had fighters and objects (in view); fighters
- did not get down to objects.
-
- 08 November/0915Z: From SAC Command Post: From four different
- points: Observed objects and fighters; When fighters arrived in the
- area, the lights went out; when fighters departed, the lights came back
- on.
-
- 09 November/0305Z: SAC Command Post called and advised SAC crews at
- Sites L-1, L-6 and M-1 observing UFO. Object yellowish bright around
- light 20 miles north of Harlowton, 2 to 4,000 feet.
-
- 10 November/1125Z: UFO sighting reported by Minot Air Force Station
- ...moving east, about the size of a car...the object passed over the
- radar station, 1,000 feet to 2,000 feet high, no noise heard. Three
- people from the site or local area saw the object.
-
- The above excerpts from official Air Force logs. The Air Force also
- refused to declassify some of the documents requested, saying that the
- contents of such were "exempt from disclosure" under the FOIA. Under
- TOP SECRET and encoded is what else happened at these SAC bases on
- those eventful nights?
-