Former Air Force missile officer claims UFOs disabled nuclear arsenal at Montana base during Cold War

A retired US Air Force launch officer claims UFOs disabled multiple nuclear missiles when they appeared around the Montana base where he was stationed decades ago.Robert Salas claims a mysterious force paralyzed the military’s ability to control 10 Minuteman I intercontinental ballistic missiles equipped with nuclear warheads at Malmstrom Air Force Base in 1967, the 85-year-old veteran said on the Danny Jones Podcast Saturday.Salas — whose job was to launch and monitor nuclear missiles “if given the order” during the Cold War — and his partner were at the controls underground around 10 p.m.on March 24 of that year when panicked guards called from above about another unidentified craft.“The main guard calls down, says, ‘Sir, we’ve been seeing some strange lights in the sky, flying directly overhead,’” Salas said.Salas said guards insisted the crafts weren’t Soviet airplanes, pointing to bizarre lights as they zipped through the sky before suddenly stopping over the underground ICBMs.He initially brushed off the report, thinking it was a prank — but five minutes later, the guard called back, “screaming into the phone.”“He’s yelling.
He’s babbling.He’s frightened,” Salas recalled.After calming down, the guard told Salas his men had their weapons pointed at the crafts hovering above the base’s front gate, emitting a “pulsating reddish light.”Salas said the panicked guard asked what to do next, and he told him, “Do whatever you have to do.”The guard then said one of his men had just “got injured” before hanging up.Salas said he then went to wake his partner, who was resting, when “all of a sudden” a loud horn sounded at the controls, signaling something was wrong with the missiles.“We looked at the board, and sure enough, one of them went from green to red.
No ability to launch,” Salas said.“Then, very quickly thereafter, bing bing bing bing, all 10 of them went down.
They all went red.”They jumped up and...