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Moderate1985-01-01US Atlantic Command / Newfoundland Approach

Admiral Train Near-Nuclear UAP Incident

Four-star Admiral Harry Train, Commander in Chief of US Atlantic Command, experienced a UAP incursion that triggered a full Code Red/Code Zebra alert at the Atlantic Command center — the facility from which nuclear submarine operations worldwide would be directed during World War III. A UAP entered US airspace from the direction of Newfoundland. Train, who had never been briefed on UAP activity, assumed it was a Soviet incursion. He scrambled jets and fired on the object. Because he had no knowledge of UAP programs, his response could have escalated to a nuclear exchange. Whistleblowers who were present during the incident have spoken with Greer's team. The incident demonstrates the catastrophic security risk created by compartmentalizing UAP information away from the senior military commanders who control nuclear response protocols — the same vulnerability that existed at Malmstrom AFB when UAPs shut down ICBMs.

Military & IntelNuclear ProximitySuppression / Deaths
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#near-nuclear#atlantic-command#code-red#admiral-train#newfoundland#compartmentalization#ww3-risk#nuclear-submarines

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