UFOs - Generals, Pilots And Governmant Officials Go On

Page 64 of 229

Page 64 of 229
UFOs - Generals, Pilots And Governmant Officials Go On

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approach the object, which I was piloting. It was now about 1:30 a.m. on September 19. First Lieutenant Jalal Damirian, my second pilot in the backseat, operated the radar and other equipment; we called him "the backseater." When we took off, the object looked just like what had been reported. It was so brilliant, flying at a low altitude over the city, and then it started climbing. Captain Khani had approached the Russian border, and at that point he was told to turn back. When he turned around, he said that he could see the object in front of him at twelve o'clock. I said, "Where exactly do you see it?" He said, "Over the dam, close to Tehran." I told him, "You go home, 111 take care of it." As he headed back, I looked over, and then I saw it. It was flashing with intense red, green, orange, and blue lights [I] so bright that I was not able to see its body. The lights formed a diamond shape—just brilliant lights, no solid structure could be seen through or around them. The sequence of flashes was extremely fast, like a strobe light. Maybe the lights were only one part of a bigger object, which we couldn't see. There was no way to know. I approached, and I got close to it, maybe seventy miles or so in a climb situation. All of a sudden, it jumped about 10 degrees to the right. In an instant! Ten degrees ... and then again it jumped 10 degrees, and then again.... I had to turn 98 degrees to the right from my heading of 70 degrees, so we changed position 168 degrees toward the south of the capital city. x 4 a4 . a4 a 1 ae 1 mm I asked the tower whether they had it on radar. The operator replied, "The radar is out of order. It's not operational right now." All of a sudden my backseater, Lieutenant Damirian, said, "Sir, I have it on radar." I looked on the radar screen and saw the marker. I said, "Okay, brake lock and repaint it." This was to make sure it wasn't a ground effect or a mountain that we were picking up on the radar. We now had a good return on the screen, and it was at 27 miles, 30 degrees left; our closing speed was 150 knots and in a climb. We kept it locked on with radar. The size on the radar scope was comparable to that of a 707 tanker. At this moment, I thought this was my chance to fire at it. But when it—whatever it was—was close to me, my weapons jammed and my radio communications were garbled. We got closer, to 25 miles at our twelve o'clock position. All of a sudden it jumped back to 27 miles in an instant. I wondered what it was. I was still seeing that giant, brilliant diamond shape a 1 . 1 aae4a. with pulsating, colored lights. Then I was startled by a round object which came out of the primary object and started coming straight toward me at a high rate of speed, almost as if it were a missile. Imagine a brightly lit moon coming out over the horizon—that's what it looked like. I was really scared, because I thought that maybe they had launched some kind of projectile toward me. I had eight missiles on board, four operated by radar and four heat-seeking ones.