Malmstrom Officers Report UFO Shut Down ICBMs
Nukes Inexplicably Disabled During Dramatic 1967 Incident
BY JIM KLOTZ & ROBERT SALAS
What follows is the story of
extraordinary events that happened in 1967 to U.S. Air Force Strategic
Air Command Missile Combat Officers and other enlisted personnel,
missileers assigned at facilities in Montana to operate, maintain, and
protect the Minuteman Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles, an essential
part of America's Cold War strategic nuclear deterrent.
In central
Montana, on a March morning in 1967, Strategic Air Command Missile
Combat Officers Captain Eric Carlson and First Lieutenant Walt Figel,
of the Echo-Flight Missile Combat Crew, were below ground in the
E-Flight Launch Control Center between Winfred and Hilger, fifteen
miles north of Lewistown.
Missile
maintenance crews and security teams had camped out at two of the
launch facilities, having performed work there the previous day and
then stayed overnight. During the early morning hours, more than one
report came in from security patrols and maintenance crews that they
had seen UFOs. A UFO was, in fact, reported directly above one of the
E-Flight silos. At least one security policeman, it later turned out,
was so affected by this encounter that he never again returned to
missile security duty.
Around 8:30
a.m., Deputy Crew Commander Figel was briefing Carlson, the Crew
Commander, on the “flight status” when the alarm horn sounded. One of
the Minuteman missiles they supervised had strangely gone off alert—it
became inoperable. The off alert occurred at one of the two sites where
maintenance crews had camped out on site. Upset, thinking maintenance
personnel had failed to notify him that the missile was going to off
alert status, as required when maintenance work is done on a missile,
Figel immediately called the missile site.
When Figel
spoke with the on-site security guard, the guard reported that
maintenance had not yet been performed that morning. He also stated
that a UFO had been hovering over the site. Figel recalled thinking the
guard “must have been drinking something.” However, incredibly, now
other missiles started to go off alert in rapid succession. Within
seconds, the entire flight of ten ICBMs was down. All of the missiles
reported a No-Go condition. One by one, across the board, each missile
had became inoperable.
When the
checklist procedure had been completed for each missile site, it was
discovered that each of the missiles had gone to off alert status due
to a guidance and control system fault. Power had not been lost to the
sites; the missiles simply were not operational because, for some
unexplainable reason, each of their guidance and control systems had
malfunctioned.
Two Security
Alert Teams (SAT or strike teams) were dispatched from Echo to those
sites where the maintenance crews were present. Figel had not informed
the strike teams that one of the on-site guards had reported a UFO. On
arrival at the launch facilities, though, the SAT reported that all of
the maintenance and security personnel present at each site had seen
UFOs hovering over each of the two sites.
Captain Don Crawford's crew relieved the Echo Flight
crew later that morning. Crawford recalls that both Carlson and Figel
were still visibly shaken by what had occurred.
rawford also recalled that the
maintenance crews worked on the missiles the entire day and late into
the night during his shift to bring them all back to alert status. Not
only had missiles been lost to our deterrent forces, but they had
remained out of service for an entire day.
Because of
this unique incident, as an ex-Missileer describes it: "All hell broke
loose." Among the many calls to and from the E-Flight Launch Control
Center, one was to the Crew Commander of Oscar-Flight, located a mile
or two south of the town of Roy, about 20 miles southeast of
Echo-Flight, where that same morning another equally dramatic story
unfolded at an ICBM launch center.
Oscar Flight
In the following account, Robert Salas, the Deputy Crew Commander in
Oscar-Flight, recalls the events of that unusual morning:
My
recollection, reports Robert Salas, Oscar-Flight’s Deputy Crew
Commander, is that I was on duty as a Deputy Missile Combat Crew
Commander below ground in the LCC [Launch Control Center] during the
morning hours, the probable date being March 24, 1967.
Outside, above
the subterranean LCC capsule, it was a typical clear, cold Montana
night sky; there were a few inches of snow on the ground, and no city
lights to detract from the spectacular array of stars, the kind of
night when it was not uncommon to see shooting stars. Montana isn’t
called “Big Sky Country” for no reason, and airmen on duty topside
probably spent some of their time outside looking up at the beautiful
night sky. It was one of those airmen who first saw what appeared to be
a star zig-zag across the sky. Then he saw another light do the same
thing, but this time it was larger and closer. He asked his Flight
Security Controller (FSC, the Non-Commissioned Officer in charge of
Launch Control Center site security) to come and take a look. They both
stood there watching the lights streak directly above them, stop,
change directions at high speed and return overhead. The NCO ran into
the building and phoned me at my station in the underground capsule. He
reported to me that they had been seeing lights making strange
maneuvers over the facility, and that they weren't aircraft. I replied:
"Great. You just keep watching them and let me know if they get any
closer."
I did not take this report
seriously and directed him to report back if anything more significant
happened. At the time, I believed this first call to be a joke. Still,
that sort of behavior was definitely out of character for air security
policemen whose communications with us were usually very professional.
A few minutes
later, the security NCO called again. This time he was clearly
frightened and was shouting his words:
"Sir, there's one hovering outside the front gate!"
"One what?"
"A UFO! It's just sitting there. We're all just looking at it. What do you want us to do?"
"What? What does it look like?"
"I can't really describe it. It's glowing red. What are we supposed to do?"
"Make sure the site is secure and I'll phone the Command Post."
"Sir, I have to go now, one of the guys just got injured."
Before I could ask about the injury, he was off the
line. I immediately went over to my commander, Lt. Fred Meiwald, who
was on a scheduled sleep period. I woke him and began to brief him
about the phone calls and what was going on topside. In the middle of
this conversation, we both heard the first alarm klaxon resound through
the confined space of the capsule, and both immediately looked over at
the panel of annunciator lights at the Commander's station. A 'No-Go'
light and two red security lights were lit indicating problems at one
of our missile sites. Fred jumped up to query the system to determine
the cause of the problem. Before he could do so, another alarm went off
at another site, then another and another simultaneously. "Within the
next few seconds, we had lost eight to ten missiles to a 'No-Go'
[inoperable] condition.
After
reporting this incident to the Command Post, I phoned my security
guard. He said that the man who had approached the UFO had not been
injured seriously but was being evacuated by helicopter to the base.
Once topside, I spoke directly with the security guard about the UFOs.
He added that the UFO had a red glow and appeared to be saucer shaped.
He repeated that it had been immediately outside the front gate,
hovering silently.
We sent a
security patrol to check our LFs (launch facilities) after the
shutdown, and they reported sighting another UFO during that patrol.
They also lost radio contact with our site immediately after reporting
the UFO.
When we were
relieved by our scheduled replacement crew later that morning, the
missiles had still not been brought on line by on-site maintenance
teams.
Again, UFOs
had been sighted by security personnel at or about the time Minuteman
Strategic missiles shutdown.
The Investigation
An in-depth post incident investigation of the E-Flight incident was
undertaken. Full scale on-site and laboratory tests at the Boeing
Company's Seattle plant were conducted. Declassified Strategic Missile
Wing documents and interviews with ex-Boeing engineers who conducted
tests following the E-Flight Incident investigation confirm that no
cause for the missile shutdowns was ever found.
Robert
Kaminski was the Boeing Company engineering team leader for this
investigation. Kaminski stated that after all tests were done: “There
were no significant failures, engineering data, or findings that would
explain how ten missiles were knocked off alert,” and “…there was no
technical explanation that could explain the event.”
The most that
could be done was to reproduce the effects by introducing a 10 volt
pulse onto a data line. Another Boeing Company engineer on the team,
Robert Rigert, came up with this pulse that repeated the shutdown
effects 80 percent of the time, but only when directly injected at the
logic coupler. No explanation could be found for a source of such a
pulse or "noise" occurring in the field and getting inside the shielded
missile system equipment.
Others on the
engineering team checked other possibilities. Lightning and problems in
the commercial power system were acquitted as the source of the
problem. William Dutton, another Boeing Company engineer, checked
commercial power interruptions and transients, and stated: “No anomalies
were found in this area.”
Several
military activities and other engineering firms participated in the
investigation, but no positive cause for the shutdowns was ever found,
despite extensive and concentrated effort. One conclusion was that the
only way a pulse or noise could be sent in from outside the shielded
system was through an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) from an unknown
source. The technology of the day made generating an EMP of sufficient
magnitude to enter the shielded system a very difficult proposition,
requiring large, heavy, bulky equipment. The source of the actual pulse
that caused the missile shutdowns remains a mystery to this day.
Other Sightings
According to articles from the Great Falls Tribune on February 8,
1967, Louis DeLeon saw two strange objects in the sky which did not
look like airplanes and they glowed an orange and red color while
driving east of Chester, Montana. Later, ten miles east of Chester,
Jake Walkman was awakened by a bright light at his home. From his back
yard he sighted a "flying saucer" shaped object. The next evening,
George Kawanishi, a foreman for the Great Northern Railroad, saw a
bright ball of light in the sky directly above the Chester train depot.
These are but a few of the sightings which preceded the missile
shutdown incidents in March.
It was during this same time period, according to
Col. Don Crawford (USAF ret.), that a two person strike team assigned
to Echo Flight was performing a routine check of the missile launch
facilities a few miles north of Lewistown. As they approached one of
the launch facilities, an astonishing sight caused the driver to slam
on his brakes. Stunned in amazement, they watched as about 300 feet
ahead a very large glowing object silently hovered directly over the
launch facility.
One of them picked up his VHF hand
microphone and called then Captain Don Crawford who was the Deputy
Crew Commander on duty that evening.
“Sir, you wouldn’t believe what I’m looking at,” he said.
He described
what they were seeing. Crawford didn’t believe him at first but the
young airman insisted he was telling the truth, his voice revealing his
emotional state. Eventually Crawford took him seriously enough to
call the Command Post to report it. The officer on duty at the Command
Post refused to accept the report and simply stated, “We no longer
record those kinds of reports,” indicating he didn’t want to hear about
the UFO. Crawford, unsure of what to tell his shaken security guard,
decided to give the guard his permission to fire his weapon at the
object if it seemed hostile.
“Thanks, sir, but I really don’t think it would do any good,”
A few seconds later the object silently flew away.
Several other
sightings occurred in the area before and after the missile shutdown
incidents by military personnel and civilians.
National Security
During March 1967, UFOs were sighted by security
personnel at the Oscar Flight LCC and at one O-Flight Launch Facility,
and by other security and maintenance personnel at Echo-Flight Launch
Facility. These sightings were reported separately to the capsule crews
at both Launch Control Centers at or about the same time Minuteman
Strategic missiles shut down at both sites. USAF has confirmed that all
of Echo flights' missiles shutdown within seconds of each other and
that no cause for this could be found.
For many
years, the Air Force has maintained that no reported UFO incident has
ever affected national security. It is established fact that a large
number of Air Force personnel reported sighting UFOs at the time many
of our strategic missiles became unlaunchable. The incidents described
above clearly had national security implications. In one previously
classified message, SAC Headquarters described the E-Flight incident as:
loss of strategic alert of all ten missiles within ten seconds of each
other for no apparent reason and a "…cause for grave concern…[to SAC
headquarters]."
A great
discrepancy exists between the United States Air Force's public
position relative to UFOs and national security, and the estab-lished
facts of this case. We urge the Secretary of the Air Force to search
for, declassify, and release all information on this case.
Robert Salas,
co-author with James Klotz of Faded Giant, the story of the 1967
nuclear missile related UFO incidents in central Montana, served as a
Missile Launch Officer in the Minuteman Missile Program at Malmstrom
Air Force Base from 1965 through 1967. He is a graduate of the United
States Air Force Academy, and served for seven years before going on to
earn his Masters degree in Aerospace Engineering from the Air Force
Institute of Technology. Salas also worked briefly as an engineer for
Martin-Marietta Aerospace and Rockwell International and then with the
Federal Aviation Administration until his retirement in 1995. He
currently teaches high school mathematics.
James Klotz, a
life-long resident of the Puget Sound area of Washington, is the
Computer UFO Network Information Director. A staunch advocate of
openness in government, Klotz has filed more than two-thousand Freedom
of Information Act requests on behalf of CUFON and others.
Reprinted with permission from cufon.org
Note: Sci-Fi Channel's Sightings
taped a segment dealing with this incident that aired originally in
1997 and several times afterward. Robert Salas first spoke publicly
about the Oscar incident on the Art Bell show Dreamland on November 24,
1996. Since then he has spoken many times on various radio and
television programs and at UFO conferences. On February 17, 2009, Robert
Hastings, author of UFOs and Nukes, Extraordinary Encoun-ters at
Nuclear Weapons Sites, was interviewed on Coast to Coast AM,
chronicling the ongoing sightings of UFOs at or near Montana’s
Malmstrom Air Force Base. He has interviewed over 90 people entrusted
by the U.S. government with guarding, operating, or launching nuclear
weapons, several who were station-ed at Malmstrom AFB, including
Robert Salas, who say UFOs have monitored and occasionally shut down
nuclear weapons systems in the United States. Hastings has interviewed
eyewitnesses who reported having seen UFOs related to Malmstrom after
1967 and as recently as 2006. For a more detailed summary of this
documentation, including quotes from the airmen involved, see
ufohastings.com.
http://www.mtpioneer.com/March-Malstrom-UFOs.htmlhttp://www.mtpioneer.com/March-Malstrom-UFOs.html