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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
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Mr. Ali Diaz. Diaz was aboard a DC-3 plane carrying vacation-
ists on a tour to view the beautiful scenery. Dr. Ladonko and
Gonzalez Ganteaume notified NICAP, interviewed Diaz, and en-
couraged analysis of the film.
During June 1963 a Spanish speaking NICAP member from
New York City, Mr. Jose A. Cecin, flew to Caracas and borrowed
the original film. Analysis of it currently is being arranged by
NICAP. [See Section VIII]. Viewed at the NICAP office by the staff
and several members, the movie shows an eerie, brilliant yellow,
tear-drop shaped light rising from the base of Auyantepuy Moun-
tain, oscillating back and forth as it accelerates across the
mountain, blue sky and clouds.
(During his visit to Caracas, Mr. Cecin was told of an in-
cident in which a prominent citizen was driving through a rural
area when he saw a large disc hovering over a field where
several peasants were working. He excitedly called their at-
tention to it. ‘‘We know about it,’’ they replied casually. ‘‘It
comes here every day. It doesn’t bother anyone.’’)
Venezuela also has a history of sightings by airline pilots
and other experienced observers. An orange light closed in on
a Venezuelan airliner at 6:45 p.m., January 2, 1955, in the
vicinity of Punta San Juan, When the UFO was at close range,
a bright light from it shone into the cockpit of the plane inter-
mittently. [28]
A month later, February 2, an Aeropost Airlines plane was
bound for Merida from Maiquetia. At the controls was Capt.
Dario Celis; co-pilot was B.J. Cortes. About 11:15 a.m.,a
round, glowing green ‘‘apparatus’’ approached the plane, rotating
counter-clockwise. Around its center was a reddish ring which
emitted flashes of brilliant light. Above andbelowthe ring, mark-
ings like portholes were visible. Capt. Celis banked his plane
toward the UFO. Instantly, the object whirled downward, levelled
off, and sped away. During the sighting, Capt. Celis attempted to
report the object by radio, but his communication was cut off.
29
| ay 2, 1960, near Maiquetia, a Venezuelan Airlines Super-
Constellation was arriving from Spain about 3:00 a.m. Flying at
10,000 feet about 20 degrees N, 68 degrees W (near Puerto Rico),
the pilot and crew noticed a bright luminous object angling toward
the plane at about their altitude. After paralleling the plane for
several minutes, the object suddenly shot away at terrific speed.
The pilot reported the sighting to the press upon landing. [80]
A Professor of Engineering, Central University, reported a
UFO September 15, 1960. Prof. German Alvarez, in Carrizales,
Miranda State, watched a luminous object sweep across the sky
for about three minutes, after 7:30 p.m. The UFO accelerated
in a curved course. Before disappearing behind mountains, it
appeared as two objects. [31]
Formations of UFOs, about 16 objects in all, passing from
east to west between 4:00 and 6:00 p.m. were witnessed by many
people in the Parque del Este, Caracas, February 11, 1962. One
witness, Sr. Emiro Ayesta, ran to the Humboldt Planetarium in
the park where Sr. Carlos Pineda of the Planetarium staff
witnessed one of the UFOs. Sr. Pineda described it as ‘‘a body
giving off a brilliant light, moving at great altitude as if towards
the moon.’’ [32]
B. EASTERN HEMISPHERE
Scandinavia
The earliest well-publicized UFO reports from Scandinavia
were the so-called ‘‘ghost rockets’’ observed in Sweden during
the summer and fall of 1946. Military authorities adopted secrecy
reminiscent of wartime in dealing with reports of the objects,
banning publication of the location of sightings, and requiring
newspapers to use the dateline ‘‘somewhere in Sweden.”’ [33]
Mysterious fireballs and cigar-shaped UFOs were observed
all summer. [34] Finally, in October the defense ministry an-
nounced that it had been unable to discover the origin or nature of
the ‘‘ghost rockets.’’ Of 1000 reports studied, about 80% were
attributed to ‘‘celestial phenomena.’’ But, the report continued,
radar detected some ‘‘which cannot be the phenomena of nature
or products of imagination, nor be referred to as Swedish
planes...”’ [35]
In May 1954, Mutual news commentator Frank Edwards (now
a NICAP Board Member) reported an item from Stockholm:
“Swedish military authorities sent special crews into north
Sweden where scores of residents have reported strange glowing
objects maneuvering over forests at low altitude during the week
of May 10...Military men who have seen the things say they
were not planes of any type.’’
After the crew of a Swedish airliner reported a wingless
circular UFO over southern Sweden December 17, 1953, the
defense department ordered a full scale investigation. Capt. Ulf
Christiernsson, former RAF pilot, said: ‘It was an entirely
unorthodox, metallic, symmetrical and circular object.’’ The
UFO was seen speeding over the town of Haessleholm in the main
commercial airlane between Stockholm and Copenhagen. [36]
In 1961 Mr. Sven Schalin, aeronautical engineer in Linkoping,
became NICAP Adviser for Sweden. In his acceptance letter, Mr.
Schalin stated: ‘“‘UFOs very definitely have been sighted also in
this country. A ‘flap’ seemed to occur around January 1959,
the whole period starting perhaps in July 1958 and ending about
June 1959. Obviously the Swedish Intelligence Center in Stock-
holm knows what is going on but the usual debunking policy is
strictly followed.’’
During Operation Mainbrace, extensive naval maneuvers in
the North Sea on and about September 20, 1952, UFOs were
sighted in the vicinity on several occasions. [See Section XII;
Operation Mainbrace Chronology] On the 20th, a silvery disc of
metallic appearance was observed passing swiftly over the Allied
fleet. Wallace Litwin, an American newsman on board the air-
craft carrier ‘‘Franklin Roosevelt,’’ took, three color photo-
graphs of the UFO. As far as is known, the pictures have never
been published and no explanation of the incident was offered.
Norway, Finland and Denmark also have had their share of
UFO sightings. During an aerial expedition to take photographs
of a solar eclipse, June 30, 1954, Norwegian scientists and others
on board three planes observed and photographed two ‘‘enormous’”’
silvery discs which gave a metallic glint. [Section I]
In 1958, replying to a NICAP query, the Norwegian Embassy
stated: “Our Air Force’s UFO material is mainly of security
graded nature and cannot be put to the disposal of NICAP.”’ [37]
During the winter of 1958, observers on the Finnish-Soviet
border reported circular and cigar-shaped luminous objects
maneuvering over Soviet territory near the Arctic Circle. Bril-
liantly glowing spherical ‘‘missiles,’’ some of which moved ver-
tically up and down, also were reported. [38]
While ‘‘Operation Mainbrace’’ was in full swing nearby in
the North Sea during September 1952, a shining apparently metal-
lic disc was seen on the 20th by three Danish Air Force officers.
About 7:30 p.m., the UFO sped over Karup Airfield, Denmark,
disappearing in clouds to the east.
On November 20, 1957, during the rash of UFO sightings in
the Western hemisphere [see Section XI] Air Force officers and
many civilians near Bernholm, Denmark, saw a UFO flashing red
and green lights as it swooped low above the water and over the
island. At times the object hovered motionless. No sound could
be heard. The Danish newspaper ‘‘Familie-blad’’ reported the
sightings.
September 11, 1956: Allied intelligence experts were re-
ported to be investigating radar sightings of ‘‘mysterious ob-
jects’? which had been tracked for three weeks over the Baltic
Sea by a NATO radar station on Bernholm Island, Denmark.
The UFOs followed a curved course traveling about 2000-2500
m.p.h. [See Section VIII; Radar]
England
The policy of the British Air Ministry has been identical to
that of the U.S. Although claiming their investigations have
proved that almost all UFO sightings have mundane explanations,
the Air Ministry firmly refuses to release the case histories.
When NICAP requested information about specific cases in 1957,
the Air Ministry replied: ‘‘We regret that we are unable to re-
lease any information on the radar sighting at West Freugh in
Scotland on 4th April...We cannot release any information on
the B.O.A.C. or the Fit. Lt. Salandin sightings. Air Ministry
policy has not changed since those sightings were made.” (39]
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