Massachusetts: Twinkle head warns of UFO threat
Anthony O. Mirarchi, head of Project Twinkle, stated UFOs exhibit maneuvered motion unlike natural phenomena and urged investigation into potential enemy experiments. He criticized government secrecy and Navy reports as misleading.
Background
Event Details
On February 25, 1951, Anthony O. Mirarchi, chemist and head of Project Twinkle at the USAF Cambridge Research Laboratory in Massachusetts, spoke to the Associated Press. He rejected claims that unidentified flying objects were merely balloons, highlighting their controlled movements not typical of weather or natural events.
Key Statements
Mirarchi warned these sightings might represent tests by a foreign adversary targeting U.S. sites like Los Alamos in New Mexico. He dismissed a Navy assessment as false reassurance and accused authorities of dangerous secrecy policies that endangered national security, likening risks to a severe attack.
Reactions and Context
The FBI and Air Force considered legal action against him for breaching regulations (AFR 205-1). His comments responded to an impending article by Liddel and tied into ongoing concerns over aerial phenomena near sensitive installations.
Connections
References
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