World
Pentagon UFO Report Raises Eyebrows Amid Claims of Soviet Invasion

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A declassified document recently uploaded to the CIA’s website is drawing significant attention over details of an alleged UFO attack on Soviet forces. The Pentagon’s report, which surfaced during a segment on Fox News, outlines a retaliatory incident involving extraterrestrial beings after Soviet military personnel shot down an unidentified aircraft over a military base in the late 1980s.
According to the document, the event took place between 1989 and 1990 and is based on a firsthand account reported by Canadian Weekly World News and the Ukrainian paper Holos Ukrayiny. The documents suggest that after downing what was described as a ‘low-flying spaceship in the shape of a saucer,’ five short humanoids with large heads and black eyes emerged from the wreckage.
As outlined in the report, the aliens allegedly fused together into a singular object, creating a burst of bright light that petrified all but two soldiers in its vicinity. Eyewitnesses at the scene reported that 23 Soviet soldiers suddenly turned “into stone poles,” with only two surviving the event due to their positioning in shaded areas away from the light.
“If the KGB file corresponds to reality, this is an extremely menacing case,” a source quoted in the article said. “The aliens possess such weapons and technology that go beyond all our assumptions. They can stand up for themselves if attacked.”
This revelation raises questions about national security protocols regarding unidentified flying objects. The U.S. government is mandated to investigate UFO sightings to assess potential threats. In a statement, a former CIA agent, Mike Baker, expressed skepticism about the sensational claims, suggesting that the actual incident may differ from the narrative presented over time.
“If there was an incident, regardless of its nature, I suspect that the actual report doesn’t look much like what has now come out from five or six or seven iterations of what originally was written,” Baker noted.
The CIA has yet to provide comments on the document, which remains ambiguous in terms of its origins, potentially stemming from a telegram or other open-source information.
As part of its commitment to transparency, the Pentagon recently formed an Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force to catalog and analyze unidentified objects. This initiative follows a longstanding interest in investigating unusual aerial sightings that may have implications for aviation safety and national security.
Baker emphasized, “The Pentagon was saying if aviators are flying and they identify something they can’t readily explain, then they should catalog it and figure out what it was.” He added that while the idea of an alien spacecraft captures the public’s imagination, investigations often focus on more mundane explanations.
In light of the increasing attention to UFO reports, many are left speculating about potential cover-ups and undisclosed evidence. Nick Pope, a former U.K. Defense Ministry official, remarked, “A lot of people believe there’s a smoking gun somewhere in the files… that’s what everyone really wants to know. That’s the $64,000 question.”
Despite the sensational nature of the denunciations in the declassified files, skepticism remains rife among experts. Baker concluded, “I’m sure there’s something out there, but I just don’t think that they landed decades ago, turned Soviet soldiers into limestone and we’re just now hearing about it.”