The Nuclear-UAP Pattern (1945-Present)
Researcher Robert Hastings documented over 150 incidents of UAP activity at nuclear weapons facilities spanning from the first atomic test (Trinity, 1945) to the present. Sites include Los Alamos, Oak Ridge, Hanford, Savannah River, Malmstrom, Minot, F.E. Warren, Ellsworth, and Whiteman Air Force Bases. At the 2010 National Press Club, seven former USAF officers testified about UAP encounters at nuclear missile sites. The pattern: UAP arrived immediately after the first nuclear detonation in 1945 and have maintained persistent surveillance of nuclear weapons ever since. Multiple incidents involve missiles being disabled or activated. Rendlesham Forest (1980) occurred adjacent to a nuclear weapons storage facility. The 1952 Washington D.C. flap occurred weeks after nuclear tests. The implication is unavoidable — non-human intelligence is monitoring humanity's nuclear capability and has demonstrated the ability to neutralize it at will.
Key Figures
Evidence
Malmstrom AFB Nuclear Shutdown — Robert Salas Testimony
Former USAF Captain Robert Salas testifies that on March 24, 1967, a glowing red UAP hovered over the front gate of Malmstrom AFB's Oscar Flight facility while 10 Minuteman ICBMs simultaneously went offline — an event the Air Force determined had no conventional explanation. A separate incident at Echo Flight disabled another 10 missiles the same week. Salas has testified under oath multiple times. Multiple security guards confirmed the UAP sighting. USAF documents confirm the missile shutdowns occurred.