UFOs and Nuclear Missile Shutdowns: Declassified Military Incidents
Did UFOs really disable nuclear weapons? Declassified military reports suggest something strange is going on. From Montana to Ukraine, unexplained aerial phenomena have interfered with missile systems. Here's what the military doesn't want you to know about UFOs and global security.
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In 1967, at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana, 10 nuclear missiles suddenly went offline.
The cause?
Unidentified flying objects were reported hovering above the facility.
Former Air Force officers testified that security teams saw glowing red orbs in the sky.
These weren’t just radar glitches—something physically interfered with the launch systems.
This wasn’t an isolated case.
In 1980, at a Soviet missile base in Ukraine, a UFO reportedly hovered for over an hour.
Suddenly, the launch sequence for several ICBMs activated without command.
The system was only stopped manually.
Soviet officers later confirmed the incident, and declassified documents show the Kremlin took it seriously.
Why would UFOs target nuclear sites?
Some experts believe these craft are monitoring humanity’s most destructive weapons.
Others suggest it’s a warning.
The U.S.
and Russia both documented dozens of similar incidents, often during heightened global tensions.
These aren’t just stories—they’re backed by radar data, eyewitnesses, and official military reports.
The Pentagon’s 2021 UAP report admitted over 140 unexplained aerial encounters, many near sensitive military sites.
While no direct link to nuclear shutdowns was confirmed, the pattern is hard to ignore.
If these craft can disable our most secure weapons, what does that mean for global security—and who, or
what, is behind them?
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