The Disclosure Project documents critical on-record nuclear-UAP testimony predating and corroborating our full corpus. PROF. ROBERT JACOBS (USAF Lt., 1964 Vandenberg AFB): Filming a Minuteman I missile test with optical instrumentation at 60 miles altitude. On film: a disc-shaped UFO “like two saucers cupped together with a ping-pong ball on top” flew into frame, fired a beam of light at the warhead from four different angles, causing it to tumble out of space. Civilians in gray suits (not CIA per Major Mansmann) confiscated the film, cut out the UFO portion with scissors and walked away. Jacobs was told: “If anyone ever asks, say it was laser tracking strikes. Never speak of this again.” 18 years of subsequent harassment. COLONEL ROSS DEDRICKSON (USAF/AEC): Nuclear weapon inventory officer for the Atomic Energy Commission in the 1950s. ETVs were regularly seen at nuclear storage facilities. On at least two occasions, ETVs destroyed nuclear weapons being sent to space — including one heading toward the Moon for a test detonation. “Nuclear weapons in space were not acceptable to the extraterrestrials.” FAA DIVISION CHIEF JOHN CALLAHAN (1986 Japan Airlines incident): A 747 was followed by a UFO “like four times the size of a 747” for 31 minutes over Alaska, tracked on multiple radar systems. Reagan’s Scientific Study Team, FBI, and CIA were all briefed. CIA told everyone: “This never happened — we never had this meeting.” Callahan kept his own copy of the video tape. “This is the first time they ever had 30 minutes of radar data on a UFO. And they are all itching to get their hands onto the data.” LT. COL. DWYNNE ARNESON (USAF, SCI-TK clearance, Wright-Patterson logistics director): Received classified message: “A UFO had crashed in Spitsbergen, Norway.” Also received message at Malmstrom that a metallic circular UFO was hovering over missile silos — all missiles went offline. SALAS CORROBORATION: Captain Salas testimony on Oscar Flight (March 16, 1967) — investigation ordered stopped. “Stop the investigation; do no more on this and in addition do not write a final report.”
