Ping. UFO/drone issue in Wyoming.
Per Grok:
Wyoming's F.E. Warren Air Force Base (AFB) in Cheyenne oversees about 150 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) silos spread across southeastern Wyoming, western Nebraska, and northern Colorado. These sites have drawn persistent UFO/UAP reports since the 1960s, often described as anomalous lights, discs, or large craft hovering near or over silos, sometimes coinciding with equipment malfunctions. Below is a chronological summary of key documented incidents from news archives, declassified documents, and witness accounts, focusing on those tied directly to the Warren missile field.1965: Mass Sightings at Missile Sites
A declassified U.S. Air Force memo from Col. Donald W. Johnson detailed 148 unidentified objects reported by 143 personnel across F.E. Warren's missile sites over several days in late July and early August. Witnesses, including security teams and launch officers like John F. Earnshaw, described the objects as oblong or disc-shaped, glowing red or orange, and maneuvering erratically. Earnshaw noted Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) debriefings, suggesting an official cover-up effort. This wave occurred amid early ICBM deployments and predated similar flaps at other bases like Malmstrom AFB in Montana.
1975: "Flap" of Chases Near SilosSecurity personnel at F.E.
Warren reported repeated pursuits of anomalous lights near missile silos and weapons storage areas throughout the year. Teams chased glowing objects in vehicles but failed to intercept them, with sightings concentrated around launch facilities in rural Wyoming and Nebraska. These events were part of a broader "UFO flap" documented by researcher Robert Hastings, who interviewed former base personnel; no official explanations were issued, though some were later dismissed as experimental aircraft.
October 23, 2010: Cigar-Shaped Craft During Missile Comms Failure
Fifty Minuteman III missiles under the 319th Missile Squadron (Alpha through Echo facilities) lost communication with the base for about an hour, rendering them unresponsive to launch commands—a one-ninth slice of the U.S. ICBM arsenal. President Obama was briefed on the incident. Three anonymous missile maintenance technicians later told Hastings they saw a massive cigar-shaped object (estimated 100-200 feet long) slowly flying low over the missile field during the outage, with no sound or lights. Additional civilian and law enforcement witnesses reported similar craft in the area from September 2010 to April 2011, including spherical and triangular objects hovering directly over silos in Banner and Kimball Counties, Nebraska.
2019-2020: "Drone" Swarms and Mothership Over Midwest Silos
Amid a regional wave of mysterious "drone" sightings across Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas, F.E. Warren staff reported a 6-foot-diameter "mothership" orb flanked by 10 smaller objects (some fixed-wing, others spherical) maneuvering over the base and nearby silos. Locals described formations buzzing critical infrastructure, including the Jim Bridger power plant near missile fields. The Pentagon attributed most to misidentifications, but witnesses noted synchronized, silent flight defying commercial drone capabilities.
Ongoing and Recent Trends (2024-2025)
Cheyenne leads Wyoming with 50 UFO reports since 1995 per the National UFO Reporting Center, many clustered over F.E. Warren and its silos—far exceeding rural areas like Devils Tower. A 2024-2025 spike in "drone-like" sightings in Niobrara County (near silo fields) prompted base officials to cite "operational security" without details, echoing 2010 concerns. Social media buzz, including veteran accounts of orbs at Warren in the early 2000s and a 2025 Google Trends surge for "Tic Tac UFO" searches in Cheyenne, suggests continued activity tied to the base's nuclear role.
These cases align with a decades-long pattern of UAP interest in U.S. nuclear sites, as chronicled by Hastings in over 200 veteran interviews—often involving temporary disruptions to missile systems without evidence of human tech. Official responses range from denials to classifications, fueling speculation about surveillance or interference motives. No peer-reviewed explanations exist, and recent congressional pushes for UAP transparency (e.g., 2025 NDAA provisions) may yield more declassifications.
I don’t think most of the people on FR believe that there are UFO/UAP craft and that it’s all some big fraud exercise that they will make jokes about. Mostly these are some of the smartest people on the internet IMO but for whatever their reasons are they refuse to accept that there is non-human intelligence interacting with our planet. Today’s sensor technology proves these craft exist, no 4K pictures are required for proof. Our Gov knows they are there and I think enough have come forward now that there is no doubt. Watch The Age of Disclosure now even in our Gov at the highest levels key leaders are openly talking about this. It’s not a question anymore and it’s not a joke.
The drones never left NJ. They’re still there every night.