Gross 1972 The Ghost Rockets
Gross 1972 The Ghost Rockets
Gross 1972 The Ghost Rockets
Histor y
1946:
Tile Gllosf Bot:ke ls
UFO'S A HISTCRY: 1946: 11-IE GHa:iT ROCKETS
(Previous title: The ~1ystery of the Ghost Rockets)
by
Loren E. Gross
Privately Published
Fremont, Califomia
Aside fran the need to replenish depleted stock, additional new data
of import:mce has cane to the author's attention. Impressive efforts
by Thanas Bullard* has resulted in the collection and translation of
numerws 1946 newstories taken fran issues of the Swedish newspapers
Svenska ~bladet and the~orgon-Tidningen, both avid reporters of the
11 ghost bC:iitb11 activity. ese two swrces prOV"ide considerable depth
to wr understanding of what really happened in Scandinavian skies in
the year 1946.
Another reason for a third edition is the nE!ed to make the work more
useful to UFO researchers by adding an index, sanething that was lack-
ing fran both earlier editions. '
Finally, an ambitioos research endeavor by P.uropean liFO experts is
currently underway so there is a need to discuss its goals and progress.
Termed "Project 1946" by its plarmers, Anders Liljegren and Clas Svahn,
it hopefully will provide sanething approaching a definitive study of
the mystery.
-The U.S. Department of State documents concerning the Scandinavian
ghost rockets were discovered by liFO researcher William L. J.foore of
William L. Moore Publications & Research, 4219 West Olive Street, Suite
247, Burbank, California, 91505.
* The Afrship File. Thanas E. Jlullard, 517 East University Street, 112,
lil""oanmgton,!iii!iana, 47401.
More notes on sources:
People finally began to wonder if sanething very odd '"as takinr, place.
'nte t.lay 28th issue of the t-lorgon-Tidningen declared:
"It i::; not only in I.andslcrona and Gavle that fireballs and
lighted ... (wo~ missing) without wings are seen. Also from Karls-
krona and Halsingborg are similar observations reported, and many
persons in the Stockholm area stated to the ~IT that they saw the
same phenomenon in Huddings and Hagalund.
No one really knows what is going on. One guess is of ex-
periments with secret weapons, but aviation experts think that in
2.
such a case it is curious that no sound is reported in connection
with observations - long range bmbing practice gives off noise." 6.
The Danes too.
An AP dispatch stated on May 29th:
. "The same night that people in I.andskrona saw a flying object
wtuch flew toward the southwest at about 100 meters altitude, a
border guard in Denmark's southern-lying parish, Rudbol, at Tonder,
made a stmilar discovery.
"At 3 o'clock at night the guard saw a bright light, followed
by a tail, which very rapidly sailed on a path from east to west,
reports the Berlingake Mtenavis." 7.
. Late in May many people in northern Sweden had noticed Wlusual sights
m the heavens which which they dismissed as just inordinate meteor act-
ivity. 8.
"Mysterious flier."
A June 1st newsstory from the Swedish city of Katrineholm informed its
readers:
"It seems as if the mysterious flier, which was obseiVed in
Osternarks at the beginning of this week, \-tas not altogether an
illusion. Yesterday the same thing was reported in fact in
Katrineholm. An object Which can be compared to a silver-glis-
tening rocket, in the shape of a giant cigar, was noticed in the
east on the horizon. The time was 11:43 a.m. in the morning.
"The 'ghost airplane' had no hint of wings, but on the other
hand sane thought that it had the semblance of a stabilizer or the
like. lt traveled very rapidly through the air and many observers
pointed out that not even the fastest fighter plane would be able
to keep pace. A light rumble was heard, near the object after it
had made a turn trn-tard the \.rest, in a diving continued trip (?)
tcr.-1ard the south. The size of the mvsterious monster did not
agree with that of the one seen at Narke, neither was the altiu1de
the same .... the projectile, or whatever it might be, was as long
as nn ordinary training plane and went at 300 meters altitude.
The Skavata air fleet out fran Nykoping had none of its airplanes
up at the right time in the tmmediate vicinity of Katrineholm.
On an airplane seen from the side in broad daylight no wings are
visible. Therefore it could be asstuned that it was an ordinary
airplane that the KatrineholJllers sal-1.
"In this connection it can still be mentioned that one of the
Katrincholn \~itnesscs smo~ the object not only fn11n the side llut
also front to back. Tiu:- sun's rays in this case were not at their
worst shaTpness, thc.>rcforc one with reason can uphold it a:.l as
very mysterious." I 0.
Early in June 1946, it appeared that airpower was gain-
ing the influence it had hoped to achieve. Rear Adm~ral
Sidney W. Souers, who had just been chosen to head the newly
established Central Intelligence Agency in January, was sud-
denly replaced with an Air Force General, Hoyt S. Vandenburg.
When the Bikini atomic tests in the Pacific started,
Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, one of the key men of the scien-
tific commission selected to observe the tests, was withdrawn,
and replaced with a scientist who had a more varied back-
ground and an extensive knowledge of radar, rockets, and
atomic energy. He was the Director of the Bureau of Standards,
Dr. E. U. Condon. The move underlined the shift from atomic
theory to the military application of atomic power.
A Dr. Alvarez, a professor of physics at the University
of California, secretly suggested at this time that liquid
hydrogen be tested as the fluid propellant in any proposed
atomic powered rocket because of the element's favorable
ratio of mass compared to the exhaust velocity at certain
temperatures- The technical details are too complex to list
here, but one important point of this theory was. of interest.
The professor believed such a nuclear driven rocket would
speed across the sky leaving large quantities of super-heated
and highly inflammable hydrogen in its wake, thus creating an
explosive hazard.6 The eventual development of such an atomic
driven missile was felt to be far in the future, so in !'>fay,
1946, when mysterious missile-like bodies trailing strange
illuminous smoke and accompanied by loud, unexplained detona-
tions appeared over the Baltic, there must have been some
concern in the Pentagon.
Sunday night, June 9, 1946, a "light phenomenon" appeared
above Sala, Sweden. An enormous light dropped earthward
leaving a long fiery trail behind. Shortly thereafter, an
explosion was heard. 11.
Also on June 9th at 10:17 p.~ .• a rocket-like light
filled the night sky over Helsinki, Finland. People there
rushed outdoors in time to see a smoke trail in the heavens
and to hear a distant rumble. An illuminous afterglow
iasted ten minutes. This "ghost rocket," as it was dubbed
by witnesses, had passed toward the southwest at an altitude
of about 1.000 feet.
A professor Gustaf Jarnefelt said he believed the object
was a normal meteorite, ~n opinion that was quoted in the .
newspaper Nya Pressen. 12.
Before the Finns could recover from the Sunday phenomenon,
a "V-2" roared over the town of Tammerfors in western Finland
on Monday, June lOth, only to reappear the same night on a
southeast heading over the capital, Helsinki. A correspon-
dent of the London Daily Mail wrote that Monday·' s •;y. 2" was
an "unidentified lum1nous body" giving off glowing smoke and
that the "thing" had come in from the direction of the Baltic
Sea. only to wheel around and retrace its course. 13.
The "sky phenomenon" of June 12th:
"A sky phenomenon of the same sort as was obsetved yesterday has
occuTTed over Eskilstuna I Sweden I . The observation is reported by
an engineer who flies daily and must be thought of as a reliable ob-
server.
"--I had just put out (the light) and stood by my window when
in the half-darkness I was able to see something come out of a cloud.
related the engineer. The bomb, if it really was such • passed west
of the city in a northward direction. It seemed as if it was on a
descending course at close to a 30-dree angle--on this matter I r.an
naturally not be completely sure--and in such a case ought to have
fallen down somewhere in the area, probably going out north over
Hugelata. It could not have been any of our new jet planes, which
have a continuous exhaust and thereby look like true rockets. The
later V-weapons did the same, but the first had inte~ttent exhaust.l4.
The next day. July 11th, news of the incident was less
sensational •. According to the Swedish press, the impact site
was visited by the following Swedish military personnel: Lt.
Colonel Rudberg, Captain C. Ljungdahl, and a Capt~in R. Westlin.
All three officers quickly came to the conclusion that no pro-
jectile had crashed on the beach. The material -picked up by
Mr. Linden was judged to have existed on the beach previous
to the supposed fall and no doubt was jetsam. On the other
hand, it was admitted there was no way of discounting the
possibility that a meteor had fallen in the area. An Army
Captain by the name of Aston had been leading an infantry
unit on a training exercise in the area and he reported a
falling body that matched the account given by Mr. Linden. 46 ·
July llth·also had its share of sightings. A Mr. Ejnar
Andersson of Otterslatlen claimed that sometime between 7:30
and 8:00 a.m. he sighted a glittering object moving through the
air. He estimated that the object was about a meter in length
and ·that it trailed smoke. If Mr. Andersson had not been
watching an aircraft at the time he might not have spotted
the object. The object appeared next to the aircraft and
then fle~ away to the northeast •.
Something similar was reported at the city of Dalaholm the
same day when residents sighted a "winged projecticle with a
copper-like shine" that trailed fire and which made a growling
sound. The thing was supposed to ~ave fallen in a field of
rye. 47.
Early on July lith, at 9:08 in the morning, at a pla~e
two miles south of the city of Gotebory, a person sunbath1ng
happened to catch a glimpse of a "long silver object" flying
toward the south at a slow speed. The object moved slowly
and made no noise that could be heard.48.
A "green" ball:
"A mysterious fireball was observed between 1-2:00 p.m. on Thursday
(July 11th 1 over Kopingsvik bathing area north of Borgholm. It looked
like a light green, brightly shinning_ball, which moved with grea~
speed in an easterly direction. Beh1nd the 'ball' appeared a sptral-
shaped violet streak of light. According to what many obse:vers tell,
the luminous phenomenon disappeared suddenly. No trace of 1t could be
found !seen}." 49.
A July 11th dispatch from the Swedish town of Orebro read:
"A mysterious fireball was seen on Wednesday
at 2:30p.m. It had the form of a light.green
luminous ball trailing reddish smoke as 1t moved
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in a nor~heasterly direction. The same ~ime a
phenomenon was observed at Kumla that gave the
appearance of a large bullet shot toward the
eartb. from a great height."50.
The Swedish military announced that smoke trails viewed
at Ockello and Falun were generated by a pair of J. 26 Mustangs
of the Swedish Air Force and were not from any sort of "ghost
projectile." Annexed to the foregoing announcement was a
statement by the military that a search of rocket crash sites
in the vicinity of Stockholm had resulted in finds of slag-
like material that compared well with the material picked up
near Njurunda (The Sundsnall b_each case). 51.
"Ghost Ball."
The Morgan-Tidningen tells us:
"Some workers, occupied at a construction site at Hageraten-
ssen, saw at 12 o'clock on Saturday l July 13th 1 a 'mysterious' ball
come travelling at treetop level over the ridge from Malarhojden in
a northerly direction. It was round and about as large as a man's
head and had a two or three meter tail. It gave out a bright blue-
green shine, but no sound was heard." 62.
Also:
"A gang of line road workers a half-mile from Nasvikens station
witnessed at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday a flying object at 150 meters
altitude, which went forward with a sound like that of a outboard
motor ~ at high speed. The object might have been a cruple of
meters l in size I and had back-bent wings. It went in a northerly
direction." 63.
Elsewhere, an explosion believed to have been a bomb or
artillery shell was reported at Bjorklinge, twenty kilometers
north of Uppsala, according to a farmer named Carl Nilsson
who sent a report to the newspaper Up~sala Nya Tidning. A
Mr. Nilsom and another person, at 9:3 p.m., were out in the
woods in the vicinity of the farm when a dull humming was
heard in the air which appeared aassociated with a projectile
passing by at a height of 10 to 20 meters and on a flat tra-
jectory, The projectile came from the southeast and went
toward the northwest. About 400 meters from Nilson the
first explosion occurred. Three blasts in rapid succession
were heard. Smoke covered four to five kilometers. The
incident was reported to police and military authorities. 64 ·
"Fireworks?''
The t-lorgon-T~gen revealed that the farner Carl Nilsson case was
due to a ratller m anecause:"The 'projectile' has turned out to be a
fireworks article which was sent on its way by a couple of boys.'' 65.
In Norway the newspaper Stavanger published the claim
that a "ghost rocket" appeared over Rogal and at 11:00 p.m.,
July 13th. A citizen that night saw a luminous object
approach out of the southeast at great speed and at a fairly
great height. The object was a strong yellow·red color. It
gradually disappeared in a northwest direction. The entire
time it was under observation the object maintained the
same altitude which indicated it could not have been a
meteor in the opinion of the observers. Four persons
viewed its passage. 66.
The abo.ve report is probably the same incident as that
published in an English newspaper. In the English version
inhabitants of a small Norwegian-coastal town south of Oslo
spotted a smoking fireball ~ipping overhead at an altitude
of only 400 feet. The London Tele~ra~h reported the appear-
ance of the "Oslo mystery star" an t e news that Norway's
newspapers were urging future witnesses of strange aerial
phenomena to contact authorities immediately and to keep
on the lookout for any wreckage. 67.
Unfortunately the following case was not published in a
1946 newspaper which makes it suspect and not good evidence
that "flying saucers" were seen prior to 1947.
A Mr. Hans Sorensen, a citizen of Denmark, wrote a letter
to the Danish newspaper Sjaellands Tidende in the 1970's con-
cerning an aerial phenomenon he w1tnessed 25 years before:
"In the summer of 1946, I was cycling on the
way from Jyd~rup toward Kalundborg. A coup]~ of
kilometers outside Viskinge toward Kalundborg, I
suddenly noticed something odd. At first I thought
I saw smoke rings from a tractor, so I stopped in
a clear spot so as to see better. Then I saw
three thingamajigs fitting the descriptions of
UFO's. They flew vertically overhead. They
sort of tilted in the middle, choppily (this is
a guess as to the meaning of the work "hakvis,"
by analogy with 'stodvis' -- DGW -- translator)
not very rapidly. They were like polished mirrors
on top, and in profile almost like a flat and deep
saucer. The underside was uneven and dull gray.
"That was in July, in calm weather. It was
about 2:00p.m., and the sun was behind me. As
I stood there, several people came up, and we
concurred that there were no sounds, such.as a
normal aircraft would make." 68.
The next item is also an "interesting if true," case pub-
lished long after 1946. ' ·
A British officer, Wing-Commander G. R. Leatherbarrow,
17.
related a strange story about an incident that took place in
Turkey right after the war. He was unsure of the day or
month:
" ••• in Istanbul in 1946, I was dancing at
Taxim's Night Club, on the roof. People started
to point into the sky towards the East. The band
stopped playing and everyone watched as four red-
dish lights, in line abreast crossed the sky very
quickly and disappeared in the West. Each light was
square. There was a faint trace of Cirrus cloud,
so I would put their height at about 50,000 feet.
They crossed from horizon to horizon in under a
minute, far too fast for any form of-aircraft.
There was a lot of shouting from the people
around, who were clearly frightened, and I was
told the next day that the incident had been reported
in the Turkish press.'· 69.
Returning to Scandinavia, on Sunday night, July 16th,
a queer light was seen in southern Finland. Dr. V. R. Olander
of the Helsingfor Observatory saw the light and suggested that
the phenomenon was some kind of meteor. Another report from
a different part of the country mentioned the possibility that
the light was not a shooting star and the missile theory could
not be excluded. 70.
The same day a supposed "spook rocket" was observed in
Sweden's Norrland district at 10:00 p.m., passing over the
city of Matfors. A factory worker and another person in the
area riding on a bicycle spotted the object. The object passed
over Matfors and continued on in the direction of the city of
Sundsvall. The object had a "tail," and as it moved away it
displayed a strong white glow. 71.
Swedish radio broadcasted the following message on
July 18th:
"The so·-called ghost rocket has again been
sighted near Sundsva11 where today three workers
saw a cylinder-shaped, shiny object moving in the
sky at an altitude of 200 to 300 meters, noiselessly
and without any smoke exhaust. It was moving at
first towards the west, but before disappearing,
it had a northwesterly course." 72.
More of the forementioned episode was published by the
swedish press. The printed account stated that the three
laborers had viewed the object at the city of Ortviken, but
that a short time later a Bank of Sweden officer, Gunnar Falck,
had apparently viewed the same phenomenon from the northern
part of Sundsvallsbo. Mr. Falck said the object was a
silvery cylinder that flew off in a northwest direction.
Both the altitude and speed did not appear to be great. No
smoke or sound was noticed. 73.
lB.
Disappeared in a cloud:
"The latest repor_t canes fran a person who just before 7:00 p.m.
on 1\.Jesday [July 23rdljsaw a silvery-shining torpedo in the air. It
\,rent remarkably low, mid disappeared little by little in a cloud. Be-
fore that it could be planily discerned all the while. The object
looked most nearly like a balloon, said the report. Last week a sim-
ilar phenanenon was observed three evening in a raw in almost the same
direction." 94.
An unusual "ball of fire" flashed over Melaren, on
July 23rd, which was desc;:ribed as looking like: " ••• a
swan without a head(?)."95.
A meteor, or similar object, was seen about midnight
July 23rd over southern Sweden by several persons. Just
before midnight a bright ;_iery light was visible which exploded
in pieces with an intense ·~flash of light. 96.
Meanwhile, during the spring of 1946, an intense inter-
service rivalry erupted over control of the United States'
long-range rocket program. During a radio dramatization of
a future war fought with rockets, Lieutenant General Curtis
Le~fay, head of the Army Air Force's Research and Development,
and General Carl Spaatz, Army Air Force Commander in Chief,
boldly asked NBC's radio audience to back their bid to obtain
exclusive authority over all guided missiles. A short time
later another Army Air Force spokesman even told the press
that, as far as the future of warfare was concerned, the
U.S. Navy had no significant role; he bluntly stated that
seapower as a fighting force was "finished." It would seem
that the Air Force was right, for the Bikini atomic tests in
1946, on June 30th and another on July 25th, proved the vul-
nerability of the massed naval fleets of World War II.
A month later after the last Bikini atomic test on
Jul~ ZSth, Newsweek magazine printed an unusual statement:
"Th1~ was the Russian reply to Bikini. Such was the con-
cluslon drawn by many from the continued flight of self-
propelled missiles over Sweden ... " 97.These two sentences
introduce the most mysterious crisis of the East-West Cold
War--the riddle of the "ghost rockets."
23,
"The first went higher and exploded over the water. It had a
strong bright luminous yellow-white tail. The other space project-
ile was thought more brightly lighted. It exploded too. Both
objects were cigar-shaped." 116.
The very next day, August Znd, the Stockholm press told
its readers how silvery projectiles were spotted speeding just
above the forests in the northern section of Sweden. Quoting
as its source the newspaper Da~ens Nyeter, the Stockholm
press stated that at least e1g t people had witnessed the
passage of the objects. Moreover, it was reported that the
Dagens Nyeter had listed yet another sighting of two missiles
seen com1ng out of the interior and heading for the coast
flying at a very low altitude. Both missiles blew up with
a yellow-white flash as they reached the seawaters of the
Baltic. 117.
An alleged impact crater in central Sweden was the sub-
ject of discussion August 2nd when the hole was suggested
to have had something to do with phenomenon that was recently
observed. The Air Defense authorities sent specialists to
examine the site and up ~~-August 2nd no final word had been
received about the case. 118.
However, the next day the crater was less mysterious.
The press reported that the alleged crater in central Sweden
that some said had some relation to a ghost rocket fall had
a natural explanation. Military experts on Augu·st 3rd de-
clared that the hole was actually created by the undermining
action of subterranean water. 119.
In another case an actual object was picked up in Denmark.
A farmer in the area of Sonderborg believed he had found one
of the famous spook bombs in his fields. He was so happy he
hung it on tbe.wall in his living room next to the family
photographs. 120.
He had dug up the object which had bored 25 to 30 centi-
meters into the earth. The object recovered was like an oil
can ~f about·lo centimeters in length. On one end there was
attached a copper wire about 50 meters long. The canister
itself weighed approximately one kilogram. The farmer did
not dare to inspect his find too closely since he was afraid
it might contain a high explosive·. 121.
"Reports fran Sweden clam that the F:ussians are in fact carrying
on experiments with V·2's at Peenemunde in northern Pommerania, asserts
a German rocket expert to the New York Herald-Tribune's correspondent
in Frankfurt an f.Jain. - -- --- -
"The man '~ho spoke to the American newspaper. who worked at Peene-
munde and at other experimental stations durinp, the war, says that
there have been unconfirmed reports from the Russian zone ahout rockets
factories and laboratories at Nordhausen, Rleicherode, Sonderachausen
and Saalfeld being again in action. In !>~ordhausen was located an ex-
tensive under)!Tound factory for V-2 banbs during the war, and if reports
fr011 Stockholm are ture, it indicates that the Russians haYe set in
motion the faMous rocket base at Peenemunde. This place was homhed
29.
many times by the British, but when the Tribune correspondent's in-
formant evacuated during the last weeks of the war the equipment was
for the most part undamaged .... " 129.
The Svcnska ~bladet report on the 6th that a "square" projectilt~ wa5
seen:
"<.Ver the west coast at miuday 1\Jesday a space projectile was
sighted, which at ordinary airplane height went directly toward the
north. According to the report many persons observed the thing, which
happened to be square and had a red color on the underside. The pro-
jectile had no wings and no sound was heard when it passed. The spE!P.d
was reported to be the same as a r passenger plane)ordinarily makes." no.
The ~bladet also informed its readers about a sighting by a member C\nthe
defense staff:
" ..• Lieutenant Lennart Neclanan of the defense staff's air defense
division himself sighted a phenanenon, which without the slightest
doubt was a rocket projectile. It went at a height which was estimat
ed at 500·1,000 n1eters and with a horizontal course. The phenanenon,
which was observed just before midnight till six minutes after, was
made out as a fireball with a bright lumininous f'l8111e.
''t-1ajor Niles Ahlgren, who is chief of the air division, thinks
that the majority of the projectiles pass over the country from the
south and strike down in the Fastem Sea on Bottnisk Bay, if they are
not directed to return to their starting-place. Since of course
those who carry out the experiments will not give any hints concerning
the fall sites, they are secret. Now, however, it is possible, anong
other things, with tbel1elji"'Or"radar to follow the course of the pro-
iectile fran the start. No damage from a fall has yet occurred." 131.
News from the "crash site at Overkalix on August 6th was that the pro-
jectile location work had slacked off and that half the search team had been
released from duty so they could return home. Authorities felt that combinr,
the lake bottom may not produce positive results and draining the water would
have to be done. 134.
One of those baffling "low altitude" cases made the
report list the very next day (August 7th). While driving in
central Sweden a motorist heard a loud whistling sound and
at the same instant sighted an object which flew by at a
great velocity, and at a height of Z - 3 meteors above the
ground. It passed the auto ten meters away and continued on
through the woods. A passenger in the auto was also a wit-
ness to the phenomenon. 135.
The Swedish press commented:
"From Norrland has collie further reports of
projectiles plainly seen. One was seen at sun-
set--a spool-shaped form, tapered, that m9ved
with fairly great speed in a northerly direction.
Viewed frQm the rear, it looked like a strong
1 ight." 136.
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"The 11-on. l_ong object of unknown origin which was taken possess-
ion of on Wednesday~gust 14thl in central Sweden should not, according
to the statements of experts made with certainty, issue fran any space
projectile, reports the defense staff. The same is true of the copper
remains which also were taken today. These certainly have lain a long
time on the ground.
"In spite of close examination , still nothing up to now has come
forth to give a definite basis to judge whether the observed luminous
phenanena and such issue fran sane fall of space projectile." 216.
A Danish newspaper stated:
"One of the very strange ghost rockets passed over Copenhagen
last night, where it was sighted at many places on the city's north-'
ern periphery. Statements agree both in regard to time and appear-
ance and in case l the statement) is made by a Danish military man.
There cannot be talk of any fraud.
"A cottage dweller in '1\.tborgvej described for the Berlingske
Tidende the phenanenon thusly:
'A rocket, which had the shape of a red fireball, came
from the southwest and went in an easterly direction until
it reached a point where it looked like it lay over llellerup.
Here it turned and took a course toward the north and dis-
appeared in the direction of Kampenborg. I together with
many others witnessed the rocket from 9:45 p.m. when it
came into sight, and I was able to follow it till 10:10 p.
m., when it disappeared . It made no noise, but was light-
ed with a little flickering gleam. The height had to be
several thousand meters.
"A witness in Olarlottenlu nd said that he saw the rocket cane
from the sou~h with a course northward. The speed was ~ostly
slower than an airplane's, likely about 100 Jan. He estimated the
height at 4-5,000 meters. The time was 10:05 p.m., which agrees
entirely with the sightings fran Hellerup." 217.
August 15th.
Who Pays?
Concern abrut the "rocket bnl'Tage" took an unusual turn .August lSth:
"The mysterious space projectiles , which recently have been ob-
served over Sweden, have still not caused any harm, but the question
has finally been dealt with of who shruld pay in case the ghost bombs
bring about the destruction of people and property. The question is
of course diffit:Ult to deal with as long as it is not known who lies
behind the mysterious firings. but probably of course the state would
step in as in cases of transgressio n ar,ainst neutrality during the war,
said secretary of the State War Damage. Assistant Justice of Appeals,
Olof H. Appeltoft, on !'-IT's inquiry."
"The insurance companies have a clause by which they do not pay
compensation for damage in connection l·!ith 'war affairs.' Tluring the
war we in the war damages commission had to take a position on many
cases in connection with breach of neutrality. The Germans tested
their V-2 bcmbs over Swedish territory, incurrin~ a bit of damage for
48.
which the state made payment, but probably it will not now be the in-
surance canpany that pay the canpensation debts, either.
"Fire insurance is hardly valid in such a case, said director
Fraenke1 in the Fo lket Samarbete as we 11." 218.
The Svenska ~bladet reported on .August 15th that in spite of the im-
mense floOd of reportS'i:>r"various kinds of sky phenomena, by Wednesday not the
slightest evidence has been obtained. The paper stated:
"Investigations concerning the alleged projectile crash in a lake
in Norrbotten have now concluded with no results.
"On Wednesday a couple of sensational reports were received con-
cerning an object suspected to have issued from a space projectile
that was found in the Sala area, but even at a very early stage this
theory too could be dismissed as tmtenable. In one of the falls, in
a placewhere the other day it was thought a space projectile was seen
to dissolve, a drh•er the day before yesterday found an 11-cm. long
object of unknown origin lying in the way. The object was sent to the
defense staff, where on Wednesday evening it was taken for examination.
It was a bolt-like thing, probably of brass or bronze, which seemed too
rough and old and worn to be considered to enter into a space projectile,
whose components would be of a quite different quality. The bolt rather
looks like it had belonged to a farm machine of sane kind,or at least
some kind of motor. It seemed symbolic that that a press photographer
who investigated the find without difficulty could screw tight the bolt
in the stand holder of his Rolleiflex camera. Owing to this one can
think that the bolt probably did originate from the stand of some older
heavier land-surveying instrument. During Thursday the object got a
closer examination in a series of mechanical shops in order to get the
question of its origin answered.
"In another Wednesday report a metal part was found in a place
where on Sunday a space projectile was supposed to have fallen. A
military expert was sent to the place, and according to his preliminary
investigations, it amounted to a couple of copper objects, which partly
seemed old, partly lacked marks after the fall to the ground, where
neither in this case is there any reason to suppose that they can be
componnents fran a space projectile. The copper pieces were found by
some playful child." 219.
August 16th.
The following case was strange, but the official explana-
tion was stranger still:
Principal Annual l·leteor Showers hetween June 1st and ScptCI'Iher 30th:
The SVenska ~bladet had sane additional details about the Danish man-
ifestation. The paper reported that the objects:" •.. occasionally ejected
sizeable smoke clruds ... I andJwent slower than an airplane." 233.
The morning of the 17th in Finlan~ at a railway station in
Traskanda, near Helsingfors, an object was spotted flying in
an east-west direction. The.height was estimated at 1,500
feet. The object was a clear glaring light that reminded
witnesses of a magnesium flare •. 234.
By this time rumors became so rampant in Stockholm that
the "low flying luminous bombs," c.s they were being termed
by some, dominated conversations throughout the city. Imagi-
nations were becoming more and more inflamed. Yet, strangely
enough, when windows were smashed in Tromso, on the 17th,
by another aerial blast of suspicious origin, the Swedish 235
Defense Staff insisted that lightning had been the cause. •
Sunday, August 18th.
Object over Nassjo:
"A so-called ghost banb passed over Nassjo[S\o/eden I on Sunday
morning at 1:40 a.m. Two persons saw a comet-like fireball pass
the city at an apparently low height. ·
"The fireball, which was reflected against the sky at about a
decimeter's diameter, moved with seemingly great ~peed in a westerly
direction. In a talk with the Svenska ~bladet's correspondent,
one of the persons who saw the hreball stateatliat the view was ap-
parently good and that the round projectile had a round-edged lighted
surface but no tail or other features could be observed. It moved in
a horizontal plane with some risin~ in its path, and therefore could
not have been any heavenly body." 236.
52.
A person at a place in central Sweden observed at 6:30 p.~. Sunday a
"luminrus ball" in the heavens. The ball appeared to be about three
inches in diameter; or as the Swedish witness put it: like a "kroket-
klots" or· croquet ball. The ball hit and snapped a telcflhone line. Of
the ball nothing was found. 237.
"Violent explosion."
Swedish radio broadcasting from Stockholm announced:
"A report from Goeteborg says that a mys-
terious bright light and violent explosion
occurred so near the buildings that it was
at first feared that a barn had caught fire.
The explosion was heard round about (?) the
farms and at.some places a bright light resem-
bling a meteor was seen shortly before the
blast. Some observers say that they are con-
vinced that the stratospheric projectile was
an ordinary meteor." 238.
The Associated Press then received news from Paris that
told of whistling, rocket-like objects, leaving red-orange
glowing trails of vapor. The objects had been alarming the
district of Chatillon-sur-Seine nightly for a week.239.
Meanwhile, the international situation was anything but
bright in East-West relations. The United States had deliv-
ered an ultimatum to Communist Yugoslavia over the shooting
down of an American airplane, and had backed up Turkey in
that nation's refusal of bilateral control with the Soviet
Union of the Dardanelles. Diplomatic reporters in Washington,
D.C. expressed opinions that America's relations with Russia
had sunk to a post war nadir. Strangely enough, diplomatic
relations between the Soviets and the Scandinavian powers
was one of the few bright spots in an otherwise dark European
picture. The Russians had a track team touring Sweden, and
the Soviets publicly supported Sweden's and Iceland's admis-
sion into the United Nations "with pleasure," as the Reds
themselves expressed it. Moreover, the Finnish border dis-
pute with Russia had been settled in the l"at:ter' s favor,
with the Soviets gaining the major part of the Karelia
territory, Petsamo in the Arctic, and the Baltic port of
Pokkala near Helsinki. Also, the large Danish island of
Bornholm, just a short distance north of the Peenemunde
test base, had been occupied by Russian troops at th·e close
of the war, but the Communists had evacuated the island on
March 18, 1946 with little hesitation. Surely that island
would have been of value if rockets were being launched on
test flights from the old German missile installation. There-
fore, all things considered, diplomatic observers called the
"Swedish rocket barrage" mysterious and mentioned that there
was "under-cover" concern in Washington. 240.
53.
Like other journalists, Ernest Lindley thought that the
boasting of the publicity specialists of the U.S. armed ser-
vices so far that summer had been a strange mixture of fancy
and ambition. Prophecies of American intercontinental rock-
ets, satellite vehicles, and space ships, seemed premature.
Perhaps, he suggested, the generals in the Pentagon were
becoming insecure. The cause of this insecurity, he believed,
apparently was the superiority of the "Russian ghost rockets."
Lindley wrote: "The indications are that the Russians, with
German help, are now sending pilotless missiles up to 900
miles-more than three times the range of the V-2. '' 241.
The Danish Berlingske Tidende putlished the following
assertions about an August 18th case. At 10:00 p.m. on
Sunday an object in the sky was sighted at Copenhagen in the
capital's northern environs. The object blew up with extra-
ordinary force producing a great fireball. The object had
been on a south to north course at a slow speed before the
blast. 242.
The Dagens Nyheter's August 19th contribution told of
six persons see1ng an obJect flying just above roof-tops at
8:00 p.m. that evening:
"It was shaped like a 9 foot long cigar
and at the nose we could see some small spheres;
a bluish light was oroduced at the rear. No
sound was heard." 243.
A special dispatch datelined Stockholm. August 20th,
announced that American Intelligence officials were now on the
scene in Sweden. The visit was thinly veiled, evidently for
the benefit of the Soviet Union:
"Two United States experts on aerial
warfare, General James Doolittle and David
Sarnoff, arrived in Stockholm today, appa-
rently independent of each other. The offi-
cial explanation is that General Doolittle,
who is now vice-president of the Shell Oil
Company. is inspecting Shell branch offices
in Europe and selling oil and gasoline,
while General Sarnoff, who is president of
the Radio Corporation of America and a former
member of General Dwight D. Eisenhower's London
staff, is studying the market for radio equip-
ment.
"The two men arrive here as reports on
'phantom bombs' are more numerous than ever.
The Chief of the Swedish Defense Staff, Col.
C.R.S. Kempt, said tonight he was extremely
interested in asking the two generals advice
and, if possible, would place all available
reports before them. 244.
54.
Decades later, when Doolittle reached the age of 85, he was inteTViewed
hy UFO researcher William Hoore. The retired general impressed t-toore as being
very mentally alert. When asked abrut the events of 1946, Doolittle recalled
clearly his European trip of ftugust, all of it except his visit to Sweden which
Moore's associate, Stan Friedman, later said was a strange case of:" ••. very
selective anmesia." 247.
Although they were still engaged in the preliminary test-
ing of their captured V-2 rockets at White Sands, the Americart
military experts must have been well aware of the possibility
of missiles of more advanced design approximating the "ghost
bombs" then alarming Sweden. In fact, on August 21st. the
very day the Generals Doolittle anci Sarnoff \'iere in Stockholm,
speculations by a professor at the California Institute of
Technology appeared in many U.S. newspapers telling of a
German scientist by the name of Eugene Sanger. Sanger had
suggested a variant of the V-2 rocket design during the war.
55.
He believed the addition of short wings to the V-2 would
improve its performance. By utilizing the lift, the wings
would give as the V-2 re-entered the atmosphere on its down-
ward plunge. The V-2 would glide up to from two to three
thousand miles, skipping alon~ like "a flat stone on the
surface of a body of water." 248.
Meanwhile, reporters interviewed a Swedish scientist
who had just arrived in the United States to inspect American
scientific facilities. Evidently to underline Sweden's desire
for peace, the Swedish professor, a Dr. Ragnar Woxen, empha-
sized that the recently established Swedish Atomic Control
Committee was supervised by civilian physicists to the
exclusion of military officers. When pressed to comment on
the ghost rocket barrage, the professor replied.with great
brevity, mentioning only that some missiles were reported
to have "fallen into lakes." 249.
August 21st.
A French news story from Paris declared:
"Inhabitants of the Dijon area, Burgundy,
report that huge elongated projectiles passed
overhead at prodigious speeds, emitting a
whistling noise. It is believed they were
rockets. No official confirmation is forth-
coming." 250.
The American news service Associated Press noted on
August 21st that at least 12 "ghost rockets" had so far been
observed in the skies over Denmark with at least one explod-
ing over Copenhagen. The news service added that as a con-
sequence of the increasing "traffic" authorities have
requested that the press use an expression like "somewhere
in northern Denmark" when reporting ghost rocket sightings. 251.
"Danish collaboration?''
The Swedish Morgon-Tidningen reported on August 22nd:
"The space projectile over Denmark, according to the National-
tidende, appear to be a reality, and since na~ military experts have
gotten hold of metal parts fran one or more projectiles and are carry-
ing on investigations of them, they have entered into collaboration
with Swedish military technicians to try to clarify the matter.
AMLEGATIOH,
STOCIQIOLK.
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FROM BFSB ·'ro RAVJID:U..
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13-27-46
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61.
Exeress correspondent in Stockholm. They are
sa1d to have exploded very near the observers and
not in the air as previously, but again no one was
injured and no fragments were recovered.
"The correspondent adds that the authorities
are considering a new theory--that the bombs are
made largely of plastic or glass which disinte-
grates at the moment of explosion.
"The reports deepen the mystery surrounding
these silent highspeed missiles, which--if all
reports are to be believed--the Russians are
firing in large numbers, the correspondent
remarks." 274.
On August 30th the London Evening News printed: n ••• that
Sweden has asked Britain for sound photographs(?) to find the
launching sites of the rocket proiectiles which have been
flying over Swedish territory."275.
Norway notified the press on August 31st that in the
future all rocket sigbtings were to be sent to the Intelli-
gence Department of the Norwegian High Command. Any discus- 276
sion of the ghost rockets in Norwegian newspapers was banned. ·
In Sweden, ~here only limited censorship was still in
effect, the Swedish High Command let it be known that it
had developed a "new Explosive Theory" to explain wby the
radar-tracked mystery rockets explode and yet leave nothing
for metal detectors to find. The Swedes had the idea that
an unusual explosive was being used in an extremely effi-
·cient self-destruct system which fragmented the ghost rocket
into particles as small as dust. 277.
The Russians, in the Soviet foreign affairs weekly New
Times, issued a denunciation of Western allegations. Charges
~the ghost rockets were Russia~ devices meant to intimi-
date the Swedes, the New Times called "anti-Soviet slander"
designed to "poison the international atmosphere." The
Moscow publication further stated: " ••• that although one
Swedish newspaper had concluded that the alleged missiles
were nothing but a mirage, the 'panic' spread by the reports
was not a mirage but a real fact." 278.
Official silence then prevailed. News out of Scandinavia
shrank to nearly nothing. The silence did not deteT the
London Daily Mail which sent one of its best men to Stockholm.
The Mail's representative, Alexander Clifford, cabled to
London what he had learned as of the first of that September.
It seems there was not much new to report. He found that
Swedish public opinion varied. Some believed the sightings
to be mass hallucinations and others believed them to be
luminous balloons. On the official side, scientists that
he had contacted had expressed bafflement, and from all
indications the Swedish and Danish military staffs were
deeply worried. Generally, the phenomena seemed to be
wingless, low-flying, tube-like objects, that moved silently
62.
through the air except for an occasional whistling. The
things flew from one hundred to two hundred miles an hour,
sometimes trailing flame and smoke. The phenomenon had its
beginnings in the northern region of Scandinavia's Lapland
back in May, and then shifted its activities slowly southward.
So far, unofficially some two thousand sightings had been
tabulated. Z79.
The "southern shift" idea gained increased credibility
when, in the month of September, the ghost rockets phenomenon
moved beyond the news restrictions of Scandinavia and appeared
in the Mediterranean region.
The New York Times reported:
·~cting Foreign Minister Stephanos Stephana-
poulos (of Greece) supported a statement in
London by Premier Constantin Tsaldaris that
flying rockets have been seen in northern Greece
(the night of September 1-2). He said that
Greek divisional commanders and British offi-
cers had seen them both east and west of Salonika
traveling from north to south ..• (also) that
rockets estimated to be flying at heights of
15,000 to 30,000 feet, had been spotted at
Drama, 130 miles northeast of Salonika, and
just below the Bulgarian border. 1he Foreign
Minister added that an investigation was under
way." 280.
Moreover, Premier Tsaldaris told newsmen: "We do not know
where they (the rockets) were from or from which direction they
came." 281.
The Manchester Guardian's special correspondent stationed
in Salonika, g1v1ng his view of the incident, blamed the
reports of rockets seen over Salonika on the war of nerves
being waged against Greece by its hostile Communist neigh-
bors to the north. He did admit, however, that the British
Counsul had witnessed a strange light in the sky the evening
of September 1st, but had dismissed the phenomenon as prob-
ably fireworks since the lumination was so near the ground. 282 ·
A third version of the sighting of rockets over Greece
was filed by a representative of the Chicago Tribune Press
Service. It read:
"Four mysterious rockets were sighted over
Greece on the night of September 1, the date of
the plebiscite on the return of exiled King
George II, it was disclosed today by Greek
Premier Constantin Tsaldaris. One rocket,
the premier said, passed over Salonika at
5,000 feet and fell into the sea. Asked the
direction whence the rocket came, he replied.
63.
'It certainly did not come from the Mediter-
ranean.' Other rockets passed over Mounts
Belles and Pailken, in Macedonia near the
Greek, Yugoslav, and Bulgarian border, and 283
over the town of Katharini, near Larissa." ·
Adriatic Sea:
"A 'ghost banb' was, according to Italian newspapers, reported oh-
sezved yesterday [.September 2nd l over the Adriatic Sea. Fishemen
fran Ancona have reported that they observed the mysterious ~rojectile,
which fell down into the sea and threw · up a high vapor cloud. Since
neither artillery fire fran a warship took place in those waters nor
was any military airplane reported over the area, it is thought that
the projectile was a rocket banb of the r.eman V-type, which was fired
fran a base on Yugoslavian terri tory." 284.
Fa OM
SUBJECT:
:
00.
•
f\i
Jack:
IT Of s1t.~). ~
The· 1'o1low1Dg h the text o1' te1egrua no. 1~/ · ,.... 0
dated August 29 .trom our Legation at. Sto~bl: L.•. :.~~&·. 0
· "Depts 1398, J.ugllat ~ ,d. .&:~ ¢-;t_,g~ 2?. . .):.. .
"Wh1~~ ·over aOo ~porta. have b~en rece1~~~.r~;~ 1·, ·· ~
and new raporta :ooauu~&11'J", · Swe4esii~.~~l·.hav•~-· t~ .,,. -
tangible evidence.. Ppll deta11a ·o.t·~eporta t!ma ',.... . r
tar received have been torwar4e4 to Washington b)' -<
our llil1tary and Naval Attaches. ~··~wu aource '
personally convinced some .tore1gn power·ia actual17 CD
experimenting over Sweden and he gueaaea it 1a I
Rusaia. Be baa prom1ae4 to notity . . betore any- f\i
one elae 11' anything tangible ahould be discovered." Ul
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64,
A nunber of clear radar returns were registered by both the Swedish Air
Force and the Coast Artillery Gommand and according to official Swedish re-
cords at least one clear radar echo and simultaneous visual sighting of a
suspious luminous phenanenon was made.
Ground control interception of aerial intruders was of a primitive
nature in 1946 but by autumn of that year the Swedish military attempted to
rinp, Stockholm with such a network, unfortunately hy that time "ghost rockets"
were sporadic and on those few occasions when something did appear,tl~ defense
forces happened to be on stand down.
Suspicions of possible Russian rocket launches were great enough to prompt
action by the Swedish Defense Radio Institute. BIB bombers equipped with
radio direction finding gear were ordered to sweep the Baltic seeking elect-
ronic transmissions that might be guiding flying bombs.
Neither radar or radio provided the evidence desired, sanething con-
clusive. 289.
Sweden, September lOth:
An object w~th a blue-white glow and a luminous tail was
sighted over southern Sweden by several people. 290.
Denmark, September 11th~
THE END
79.
"Project 1946."
The ~host rocket mystery has always been one of s11ecial interest to lifO
researchers because it is considered to be somet~ng of a precursor to the
'flying saucer' riddle.
F.fforts have been made to research the Swedish sky 11henomenon, this work
is one attempt, but so far no Swedish UFO expert has done justice to the full
extent of the Scandenavian "projectile" excitement of 1946. Swedish UFO re-
searchers are a natural choice for the task, yet until recently none were equal
to the chal:tenge. Now, it see111s, there is some hope a complete research job
will be done. Anders liljegre:t and Clas Svahn,of the Archives for UFO re-
search, Norrkoring, Sweden, have teamed up launch::foject 1946.
The advantage of being Swedish inmediately pr uce<rresults. When con-
tacted b)• Liljegren and Svahn, the Swedish Defense Staff confirmed the exist-
ence of four volumnes of "space projectile" doCI.Dllents in its archives. Access
to the material was made possible because Liljegren had secured permission
frCJ'\ the Swedish Secretary of War. Some 1, 000 pages of material have been
copied that might have value and this collection has been under review for
sane time now.
To supplement this material persons named in the doc1ments are being local-
eel and interviewed. These individuals include ghost rocket witnesses and form-
er government officials.
Other plans cantemplated:
-A more canplete search of Swedish newspapers. It is estimated that sane
200 Swedish dalies have yet to be combed for "projectile reports."
-A computer catalog of reports is envisioned to faciltate analysis of data.
-To document contacts between the Intelligence agencies of different nat-
ions concerning the ghost rockets.
-To check for Swedish reports of possible sky phenomena before the year
1946.
-To cataloge literature dealing with the subject.
About the only oversight is the the apparent lack of plans to comb more
extensively the press of Finland, Norway, and Denmark. Other than that, one
might be concerned about the scope of the project, whether or not it is too
ambitious and thus never be canpleted. Hopefully it will.
1. Letter: To: Dr. lincoln La Paz, University of 1-'ew Mexico, Albuf1erque.
From: ---(deleted) Hicksville, New York. 4 January 49. Pdr Force
Blue Book Files.
2. "First Prize." Doubt, publication of the Forstean Society. r:d. Tiffany
Thayer. Issue ll~p. 234.
3. t-1orgon-Tidningen. 4 f.fay 46, p.l.
4. Margon-Tidn1ngen. 25 May 46 (last page).
5. Thid-:-
6. ROrgon,.-Tidnin~en. 28 t1ay 46, p.l2.
7. ~gon-"'Tdiiiilgen. 29 Hay 46, p. 7.
8, tocKlloliii, Sweaen. 12 August 46 (liP).
9. Berliner, Don. "The Ghost Rockets of Sweden." Official UFO. October
1976, p. 61.
10. ~gon-tidningen. 1 June 46, p.ll.
11. smgfors, Fmland. 10 .Tune 46 ('IT).
12. flelsingfors, Finland. 11 June 46 (TI).
13. "First l'rize." Doubt, H16. p.234.
14. ~r.on-+iringen-:---r! June 46, n. 5.
15. orgon-.1 n1ngen. 22 June 46, p.6.
16. Rerlmer, Don.-.'The Ghost Rockets of Sweden," p.6L
17. t-tcGovern, James. Crossbow and Overcast New York:William Morrow & Co.,
Inc., 1964.
18. NorrkopinR, Sweden. 11 July 4fi (TI).
19. Berliner, Don. "The Ghost Rockets of Sweden," p. 61.
20. Sundsvall, Sweden. 9 July 46 (TT).
21. Mariestad, Sweden. 12 July 46 (TT).
22. Sundsvall, Sweden. 10 July 46 (TT).
23. Karlstad, Sweden. 11 July 46 (TT).
24. Svenska Dagbladet. 11 July 46, pp.3,9.
25. ~lorgon-Tiiiillngen. 10 July 46, p.L
26. ffiirgon-Tidmngen. 11 July 46 (last page).
27. SVen5Ka~b130et. 11 July 46, pp.3,9.
28. Svenska ~Dliiret. 10 July 46, p.3.
29, Bailrias,sweaen:- 11 July 46 (IT).
30. Hietama'lci, A. ~lauritz. "Some little-Known UFO Reports from Finland."
Awareness, Autumn, 1976, Vol.5,H3. p.S.
31.
32.
fn' ('~Daily Tribtme. 11 July 46, p.l. (AP).
ndu. Bombay, India. 12 July 46, p.6. (Reuters).
33. '6erl"iiier,' Jlon. "The Ghost Rockets of S\-Jeden," p.61.
34. Svenska Dagbladet. 10 July 46.
35. Karistaa-;-swe<ien. lf'l July 46 (TI).
36. Rorlange, Sweden. 11 July 46 ('IT).
37. Norrkopin~, Sweden. 11 .July 46 (TI).
38. Svenska Dagbladet. 11 Julv 46, pp.3,9.
39. flnd. ---- '
40. ~ska Da~bladet. z July 46, p.6.
41. Svenska ~bliiOef. 11 .July 4fi, pp.3,9,
42. Ib1d. ---
43. Sundsvall, Sweden. 11 July 46 (TT).
44. Ibid.
45. 'SVeiiska nagbladet. 13 .July 46.
46. Sundsvalr, Sweden. 11 July 46 (TI).
47. Mariestad, Sweden. 12 July 46 (TT).
~8. Gotehorg, Sweden. 11 July 46 (TT).
49. Svenska ~hladet. 13 July 46.
50. Oiehro, sweaen;--u July 46 (TT).
51. Stockholm, Sweden. 11 July 46 (TT).
52. Focus. Monthly newsletter of the Fair-VIitness Project, Inc., Vol.TI,
~e 30, 1986. p.5.
53. Stockholm, Sweden ~ens tJyheter. 11 July 46.
54. Ljusdal, Sweden. TI Jury 401'1"l').
55. Tonsberg, NoNay. ]3 .July 46 (TT fran NTR).
56. Oslo, Norway. Aftenposten. 12 July 46.
57. Ibid. --
58. 'StOCkholm, Sleien. ~ens ~heter. 11 July 46.
59. Stockholm, Sweden. ~ens ~heter. 12 July 46.
60. Stockholm, Sweden. IT July 461Tf}.
61. Morgon-Tidningen. 12 July 46, pp.l,9.
62. ROTgon-'i'iaiUii'gen. 14 July 46, p. 3.
63. TI>rd:-
64. Uppsala, Sweden. 15 July 46 (1T).
65. 1-lorgon-Tidningen. 21 July 46 (last page).
66. &avanger, Nornay. 16 July 46 (TT fran NfB).
67. London Daily Telk~h. 16 July 46.
68. Slagelse, Demar "[)aellands Tidende. 17 April 71. Lt:tter to the
editor by Hans Sorensen of JYderup, !lenmark.
69. Leatherbarrm·l, G.R. "Two Early UFO r.ases fran the Middle East."
Awareness, 1976, Vol.S,H3. p.S.
70. Hels1ngfors, Finland. 16 July 46 (TT).
71. Sundsvall, Sweden. 19 July 46 (TT).
72. Stockholm, Sweden. Sweden Hone Service(Radio). 1R .Tuly 46, 1:30 p.m.
EST.
73. Sundsvall, Sweden. 19 July 46 (TT).
74. Berliner, non. "Tite Ghost Rockets of Swede-." p.61.
75. Olso, NoNay ~tenposten. 20 July 46.
76. Svenska Dagbla et. ~uly 46, p.9.
77. I.oridon, tm'granil. 18 July 46 (INS).
78. Goteeorg, Sweden. 18 July 46 (TT).
79. Ibid.
80. ~on-Tidningen. 21 July 46 (last page).
81. tocKllolm, Sweaen. 19 July 46 (TT).
82. Olso, Norway. 1 9 July 46 ('IT fran NTB) .
83. Skel1efttea, Sweden. 19 July 46 (TT).
84. wea, Sweden. 21 .July 46 (TT).
85. Sundsvall, Sweden. 23 July 46 (TT).
86. Overkalix, Swden. 20 July 46 (TT).
87. Ibid.
88. Tierp, Swden. 20 July 46 (TT).
89. Stockholm, Sl•eden. 21 July 46 (TT).
90. Halsingborg, Sweden. Goteborg Handel f, ~ofarts Tidnin~. 22 July 46.
91. Svenska ~bladet. 21 July 46 ,~ - ---
!l2. Berhner--;l)~The Ghost Rockets of Swden," p. 61.
93. Oslo, Non~ay. 23 July 46 (TT fran RB).
94. Svenska ~qbladet. 25 July 46, p. 5.
95. Stockholm, S\~eden ~qens Nvheter. 23 .July 46.
96. Malmo, Sweden. 2S .Ju1Y4't 1"f"i')."
97. "Russia: A l~arning in the Rocket's Glare?" Newsweek. 26 Aur,ust 46. p. 32
98. ~orgon·Tidningcn. 25 July 46, p.3.
99. ven"SKa ~blaaet. 24 July 46, p.3.
100. copellhagen, Denmark. 27 July 46 ('IT fran RR).
101. Olso, Norway. 26 July 46 (Reuters).
102. Valee, Jacques. "A New Look at the Saucer Mysteries." The TRIJE ~ort
on £!Ying Saucers, Frank Bowers, FD.itor, 1967, Fawcett Pu'61Tcattons,-
GreenwiCh, conn .• p. 76.
103. Sundsvall, Sweden. 27 July 46 ('IT).
104. Morgon-Tidningen. 1 August 46. p.3.
lOS, ~!ew York Tlllles. 28 July 46, p.32 (AP).
106. ~dsvall, S\.reden. 28 July 46 (IT).
107. Svenska ~bladet. 22 July 46, p.3.
108. F.bpe~hagen, nenmark Berling~ Tidende ~enhagen. 30 July 46, p.l.
109 .. Los Angeles, California Examiner. 29 July 46, p.4.
110. London, England Da~ly Telw.~h. 29 July 46.
111. Stockholm, Sweden agens neter. 29 July 46.
112. Stockholm, S"l«len. """"!OJ\i"ly 401IT).
113. Sundsvall, Sweden. 31 July 46 (TT).
114. Karajas, Oniros. "Greek UFO ~liscellany." I!>'!!!& Saucer Review, Vol. 24,
#6, April 1979. p.iii.
115. Sundsvall, Sweden. 1 August 46 ('IT).
116. Svenska ~bladet. 2 /ugust 46, p. 7.
117. Stockholm, SwE!dP.n. 2 Augu!;t 46 (AP).
118. Stockholm, Sweden. 2 August 46 (IT).
119. Stockholm, Sweden. 3 August 46 (IT).
120, Copenhagen, Denmark. 2 .August 46 (AP).
1 Zl. t-lalmo, Sweden. S /ugust 46 (TT).
122. Svenska .Q!sbladet. 6 August 46 (last page).
123. Mallilo, Sweden. 4 August 46 (TT).
1Z4. \\'ales, Henry. "Russiana Test Super Rockets in Artie Wilds." Cl!icago
Tribune Press Service. Olicago D?¥ Tribune. s August 46, p.l.
125. Goteborg, Sweden Gotebori1JiUiOel ~ofarts Tidning. S August 46.
126. ~talmo, Sweden. 5 AUgust 46 (TI). - --- ---
127. Stockholm, Sweden. 7 August 46 ('IT).
128. Ibid.
129. Sveilska ~· 1 August 46, p.S.
130. Svensk3 DagOiaaet. 8 August 46, p.7.
131. Ibid. ---
132. stOCkholm, Sweden, 6 August 46 ('IT).
133. Farish, lllcius & Jerane Clark. "The Ghost Rockets of 1946." Sag~ UFO
~ort, Fall 1974. p.25.
134. ~on-Tidningen. 6 August 46, p. 7.
135. tocKFiolrii, Sweaen ~ens ~heter . 8 August 46 ('IT).
136. Stockholm, Sweden. I 'i\UgUst 46 (TI).
137. ~lanchester, England Manchester Guardian. 7 August 46, p.S.
138. Stockholm, Sweden ~ens :&'fleter. 8 Aligust 46.
139. Sundsvall, Sweden. -gAU~gUst 46 (Tr).
140. Stockholm, Sweden. 8 August 46 ('IT).
141. ~on-Tidningen. 10:\August 46, p.lO.
142. tocK1io~eaen Dagens ~\·heter. 9 August 46.
143. Stockholm, Sweden §tens NYfieter. 10 August 46.
144. Shalett, Sidney. "Aurand Calls Talk on Missile Policy." Ne'~ York Times.
10 August 46, p.ll.
145. Paris, France l..e figaro. 11 August 46, p. 2.
146. Nonnan, Lloyd. -rrReveaTRussia Leads U.S. In War Rockets." Chicago
Tribune Press Service. Chicap~ naily Tribune. 10 1\i.IJ!USt ~6. p.7.
147. Scientific Study of Unidentified .!:!ring ~ects, llt:lited by Ilaniel S.
G1lmor, E.P. Dutton &
Co., Inc., New Yor~~- pp.926-927.
148. Lyons, Leonard. "Advice from Sweden." The Washinp,ton Post. 10 Au!,JUSt
46. ------
149. Stockholm, Sweden. 11 August 46 (AP).
150. Scientific Study of Unidentified £!ring ~ects, p.927.
151. NeW York Times. IT August 46, p.l.
152. 'ITJiltrusfveness." Time. 19 August 46, p.36.
153. Ne\'1 York, New York:-Herald-Tribune. 10 August 46, p.l.
154. Ibid. --
155. Morgon-TAdn~ngen. 12 August 46, p.l.
156. SvenS'Ka ag laaet. 12 August 46, p.3.
157. Ibid. _, - - -
158. ~ka ~bladet. 13 August 46, p. 3.
159. Stockholm, Sweden. 11 August 46 (1T).
160. Ibid.
161. StoCkholm, Sweden. 13 ftugust 46 (TI).
162. Stockholm, Sweden. 12 August 46 (1T).
163. Ibid.
164. Tfiid'.
165. Ne\'1 York, New York. Herald-Tribune. 10 August 46, p.l.
166. Ibid.
167. IllliT.
168. 10I'd.
169. NeW\'ork Times. 12 August 46, p. 2.
170. Ibid-.- - -
171. "i'he"""Christian Science r.tonitor. 14 ftugust 46, p.12 (AP).
172. NeW York Tunes. 12 August 46, p.2.
173. tciCkliOiiii,SWEiaen. 12 August 46 (UP).
174. ~orgon-Tidningen. 13 August 46, pp.1,7.
175. toc'Kllolrn, sweOe'n. 12 August 46 (UP).
176. Stockholm, SHcden. 12 August 46 (TI).
177. Ibid.
178. New York Times. 13 August 46, p.4.
179. Sven~bladct. 14 August 46 (last page).
180. Svenska ~'bi'iii<Iet. 14 August 46, p.3.
181. lDndon, Eigland Di~ly Teleg~h. 13 August 46.
182. Ne\'1 York Times. August 40,-p.2.
183. UiTd-.---
184. "RiiSsia:A 1\'arning in the Rocket's Glare." Newsweek. 26 August 46, p.~2
185. Stockholm, Sweden. 12 August 46 (TT).
186. Stockholm, Sweden ~ens ~heter. 12 August 46 (TT).
187. Copenhagen, DenmarK. 1! August 46 (AP) .
188. Tite 1\'ashington Post. 12 August 46, p.l.
189. 'Sf0c'kh01iii;' Sweden. 13 August 46 (UP).
190. New York Times. 12 August 46.
191. London, Englana Dai].y jeleg~h· 13 August 46.
192. The 1\'asJ-.ington Post. 1 August 46, p.2.
193. stOckholiri, Sweden. 13 August 46 (UP).
194. Ibid.
195. 'Gadclis, Vincent 11. "Apparitions of the Atomic Age." Sir, March 1948.
p.lO.
196. The l~ashington Post. 14 August 46, p.l (UP).
197. llird. ---
198. ~obn, SloJcden. 13 ,'\ugust 46 (UP).
199. Stockholm, Sweden ~ens ~heter. ~3 ."'-.!gust t16.
ZOO. Goteborg, Sweden. 13 .~gust 46 (TT).
201. Stockholm, Sweden. 14 August 46 lTT).
202. Goteborg, Sweden Goteborg Handel! ~ofarts. 13 August 46.
203. Ibid.
204. Svenska ~bladet. 14 August 46 (last page).
205. Banbay, lndia"The Hindu. 16 August 46, p. 5 (Reuters).
206, Malmo, Sweden. 14 AUgust 46 ('li).
207. Struer, Demnark. 14 August 46 (TT fran RB).
208. Stockholm, Sweden. 14 August 46 (IT).
209. Ibid.
210. Stock'!olr.l, Sweden. Sweden Heme Service (Radio) 14 August 46, 4:00 p.m.
EST.
211. Helsingfors, Finland. 14 August 46 (TT).
212. New York Times. 14 August 46, p.ll.
213. m~--
214. 'StOCkholm, Sweden. 14 August 46 (TT).
215. Stodholm, Sweden. Sweden !lome Service (Radio) 14 August 46, 1:00 p.m.
EST.
216. ~-Tidningen. 15 August 46 (last page).
217. copeiillagen, Denmark Berlingske Tidende Q:penhagen. 16 August 46, pp.1-2.
218. ~g<>n-Tidningen. 15 Ailgus't46 (last page~
219. vensl<a ~blaaet. 15 August 46, p.3.
220. Stoc'ldlobn, swe<reii. Sweden Hane Service (Radio) 16 August 46, l :00 p.m.
EST.
221. Ka11J!'ldberg, Demnark. nanish Hane Servke (Radio) 16 August 46, 11:40
a.m. EST.
222. Cope!lhagen, Denmark. 16 August 46 (TT).
223. Copeflhagen, Denmark. 17 August 46 (IT).
224. London, England Daily Te1eg!!P,h. 15 August 46.
225. The ·Christian Sc1ence Momtor.- 22 August 46, p. 7.
226. Morg~n-Tldningen. 16 AUgust 46, p.4.
227. SveriSKa.~blaaet. 16 August 46, p.3.
228. ~-~. 16 August 46, p.ll.
229. f\lailcnester, England Manchester Guardian. 17 August 46, p. 6.
230. Ibid.
231. He Ising for, Finland. 18 August 46 (IT) .
232. Ka1undberg, Denmark. Danish Heme Service (Radio) 18 August 46, 5:30 a.m.
EST.
233. Svenska.~bladet. 19 August 46 (last page).
234. Heismgtof, Finland. 19 August 46 (IT).
235. London, England Daify Teleg!!!J'.h. 17 August 46 (TT).
236. Svenska ~E_!adet. 9 'AUgUst 4o (last page).
237. ~gon·T~ 19 Pugust 46 (last page).
238. toclllolm, S\ieaen. Sweden Hane Service (Radio) 18 August 46, 6:40 a.m.
EST.
239. Doubt, publication of the Fortean Society, #16. p.235
240. 'Rlglrtown, John M. "Allied-Soviet Relations at Lowest Since War." Associ-
ated Press Dipomatic Reporter- Washington D.C. 21 August 46 (AP).
241. Lindely, Ernest K. "Some Talk of New l~eapons Rivalry Biased." Wa~hington
D.C. 15 August 46.
242. Copenhagen, Denmark. 19 August 46 (TT from RB).
243. Stockholm, Sweden Dagens ~heters. 19 August 46.
244. Ne'~ York Times. 20 Aueust 4 o . -
245. lilCW York Tunes. 21 August 46, p.3.
246. NeW York.-rrAugust 46 (Tf fran Reuters).
247. A.F.U. Newsletter. Box 5046 Norrkoping, Sweden, Issue H25, p.13. l~ttcr:
To:J\ndcrs Liljergren. Fran:Stan Friedman.
248. New York Times. 21 August 46, p.25.
249. 'i'lle lliiTstlail'"""Scicncc t4onitor. 21 August 46, p.4.
250. London, England Ptly relcg!!P.!!· 21 Aub'liSt 46.
251. Copenhagen, Denmar . 2 August 46 (AP).
252. Just Cause. Editor:Barry Greenwood. Publisher:J.awrence Fa,.cett, Coventry,
Cuiui.~S. Issue HS, September 1985. p.3.
253. ~on~Tiddingen. 22 August 46, p.3.
254. Mallno, Sween. 21 "August 46 (TT).
255. New York Times. 22 August 46, p.2.
2s6.mer.- - -
257. McN1call, Ron. "The UFO' s :More Than t-teets the Eye." The Pleasanton,
California Times. 18 February 79, p.24.
258. New York Times. 22 August 46, p.2.
259. The TIU=rsti3'i1Scicncc Monitor. 22 August 46, p. 7.
260. 'SUrldsvall, S\ieden. 22 August 46 (TT).
261. Stockholm, Sweden. 22 August 46 (TT).
262. Manchester, England Manchester Guardian. 23 August 46 (Reuters).
263. Stockholm, S'"eden. 22 .1\ugust 46 (TT).
264. t·lanchester, England Manchester Guardian • 24 August 46, p.S.
265. Olsu, Norway Aftenposten. 24 August 46.
266. Ibid. --
267. Olso, Norway. 26 August 46 (TT fran NTB).
268. Svenska ~bladet. 29 August 46, p.l4.
269. Malmo, Sweden:-27 August 46 (TT) •
270. !~don, England. 27 August 46 (Reuters).
271. Ibid.
272. Fansh, Lucius & Jerane Clark. "The Ghost Rockets of 1946," p. 24.
273. Copenhagen, Denmark. 28 August 46 ('IT).
274. London, England. 30 August 46 (INS).
275. Ibid.
276. LoilOon, England Daily Teleg!!!Jlh. 31 .August 46.
277. Ibid. -
278. New York Times. 4 September 46, p.lO.
279. ra:Tis, France I.e ~:aro. 5 September 46, p.3.
280. New York Times. 6 eptember 46, p.ll.
281. LonCiOn,"""'England. 5 September 46 (INS).
282. Manchester, England Manchester Guardian. 7 September 46, p. 5.
283. Chicago, Illinois 9115ago Da1lv Tnbune. 6 September 46, p. 2.
284. Svenska ~bladel. • eptember 46, p. 3.
285. ManChester, England Manchester Guardian. 7 September 46, p.5 (Reuters).
286. London, England London Sbday ~ress. * Septel'lber 46.
287. Athens, Greece. 9Sei)tem er 4o(UO).
288. Berliner, Don. "The Ghost Rockets of Sweden," p.62.
289. Liljegren, Anders. "Project 1946 - The Ghost Rocket Doa.unents &the
Swedish Defense Staff." Focus. Vol. II ,H4, .June 30,1986. p.3.
290. Stockholm, Sweden. 10 September 46 (TT).
291. Olso, Non.regian HOllie Service (Radio). 11 Scptcmher 116.
292. Goteborg, Sweden. 11 September 46 (TT).
293. Stockholm, s,..-eden. 12 September 46 ("IT).
294. Stockholm, Sweden. 13 September 46 (TT).
295. Svenska Jlagbladct. 13 September 46 (last page).
296. Stockholm, S\veden 14 September 46 (TT).
297. Jlaag, llolland. 14 September 46 (Reuters).
298. Pads, Prance Le Ftfaro. 14 September 46, p. 2.
299. London, England. September 46 (UP).
300. Radio broadcast: A French program,"Friends of Greece Abroad," broadcast
fran Athens on 16 September 46, 3:30p.m. EST.
301. Doubt, publication of the Fortean Society, 117, p.255.
302. Bonabot, Jacques. "Europe 1946." UFO INFO. Published by the Groupcment
Pour L' etude des Sciences D'avant-Gardc, Leopold I Jaan, 141 B-8000
Bruges Belgium (Date of source misplaced).
303. Paris, AFP, in French Morse to Latin America and Canada. 16 September 46.
304. London, England. London Sungay Express. 18 September 46.
305. Herford, Gennany. ""'I/Se'ptem er l61'fi'T.
306. London, England J.ondon Daily J61~g!!Jl.!!· 18 September 46.
307. Bonabot, Jacques.-oTfu"rope 19 . UFO INFO, p. 5.
308. VallaC.olid, Spain. Report for 20 September 46. Radio broadcast (CIG
Document).
309. New York Times. 17 September 46, p.8.
310. PortTaiiCf,--oregon Oregonian. 19 September 46, p.l.
311. Ibid. --
312. Manchester, F.ngland Manchester Q.Jardian. 9 September 46, p.5.
313. New York Times. 17 September 46, p.8.
314. SVen"Sra .!!!gbladet. 18 September 46, p.3.
315. t-111an, Italy~er della Sera. 19 September 46, p.l.
316. Doubt, publicatlon ortlleFortcan Society, H17, p.255.
317. (]iiT(fs, ~larquis. "Actuality of Flying Banbs Yet Uncertain." The Portland,
Oregon <Jregonian. 1 October 46, p. 8.
318. Helsink1, F1nland. 26 September 46 (INS).
319. Olilds, t-larquis. "Actuality of Flying Banbs Yet Uncertain." The Portland,
Oregon Oregonian. 1 October 46, p.8.
320. Ibid. --
321. London, England navy Telegraph. 27 September 46.
322. Bonabot, Jacques. 'Europeff46." UFO INFO, p.6.
323. London, England ~i[k Telegraph. 2'9"Septeiiiber 46.
324. New York Times. toberl0,-pp.1,48.
325. t.lanChester, England t-lanchester Guardian. 3 O:tober 46, p. 5.
326. Childs, t-larquis. "Washington Ca1llng." The Portland, Oregon Oregor.ian
7 October 46.
327. Stockholm, Sweden. 8 October 46 (TT).
328. Stockholm, Sweden. 10 October 46 (Reuters).
329, Stockholm, Sweden. 10 October 46 (INS).
330. Stockholm, Sweden. 9 October 46 (INS).
331. Svenska ~bladet. 11 October 46, p.l7.
332. Air Intelligence Infonnation ~ort IIIR 115-48. Preparc..-d b)· IISAF Lt.
tol'onel DonaliiL. Haray. 30 Deceiiib"er 48. U.S. Air Force BUIE.BOOK files.
333. Ibid.
334. TIOUDt, publication of the Fortean Society, 117, p.255.
335. SvenSka ~bladet. 21 October 46, p. 5.
3~6. NeW York Times. 24 October 46, p.12.
337. New York Times. 26 October 46, p. 2.
338. London England. 20 November 46 (AP).
339. Berliner, Don. "The r.hnst RnckPts of Sweden.' p.f\2.
340. Ibid, p.M.
341. l'bid.
342. lllliT.
343. "Central Intelligence Group Report." 9 :'\pril 47, p.l.
344. ~laccahce, Pr. llmcc. "liFO Re1atcd Infonnation frcm the FRT File." 1\PRO
Bulletin, November 1977, Part II, pp.7-8.
345. Ibid.
Note: The t4orgon-Tidningen and the Svcnska Oagbladet are hoth StockholJ'I,
S\•eden, ne\•spapers-:-
INf)FJ(