Former Air Force Captain Robert Salas continues his decades-long campaign to bring attention to what he describes as a pivotal UAP incident that occurred at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana on March 16, 1967. Salas, a graduate of the Air Force Academy who served seven years of active duty, maintains that unidentified objects simultaneously disabled 16 nuclear missiles at two separate launch facilities while security personnel observed the craft hovering just 30 feet overhead. His recent media appearances on NewsNation and NewsMax represent the latest chapter in his sustained effort to publicize what he considers documented evidence of non-human intelligence interfering with America’s nuclear arsenal.
The significance of Salas’s testimony extends beyond the specifics of the 1967 incident. His account aligns with a broader pattern of UAP encounters at nuclear facilities that has emerged from military witnesses over the past several decades. These testimonies consistently describe objects demonstrating advanced capabilities near some of America’s most sensitive military installations, raising fundamental questions about both the nature of these phenomena and the implications for national security.
Salas claims to possess official documentation supporting his assertions, though the full extent of available records remains unclear due to classification protocols that have persisted for over five decades. His willingness to speak publicly, despite potential professional and personal costs, mirrors the courage shown by other military witnesses who have come forward with similar accounts of UAP encounters at nuclear facilities.
If foreign adversaries possessed technology capable of neutralizing America’s nuclear deterrent in 1967, why would they demonstrate this capability without following through on any strategic advantage it might have provided?
Source: UFOB | Your UAP Library
