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Foo fighter

The term foo fighter was used by Allied aircraft pilots during World War II to describe various UFOs or mysterious aerial phenomena seen in the skies over both the European and Pacific theaters of operations.

Though foo fighter initially described a type of UFO reported and named by the U.S. 415th Night Fighter Squadron, the term was also commonly used to mean any UFO sighting from that period.[1] Formally reported from November 1944 onwards, foo fighters were presumed by witnesses to be secret weapons employed by the enemy.

The Robertson Panel explored possible explanations, for instance that they were electrostatic phenomena similar to St. Elmo's fire, electromagnetic phenomena, or simply reflections of light from ice crystals.[2]

Etymology

The nonsense word "foo" emerged in popular culture during the early 1930s, first being used by cartoonist Bill Holman, who peppered his Smokey Stover[3] fireman cartoon strips with "foo" signs and puns.[4][5][6]

The term "foo" was borrowed from Smokey Stover by a radar operator in the 415th Night Fighter Squadron, Donald J. Meiers, who, according to most 415th members, gave the foo fighters their name. Meiers was from Chicago and was an avid reader of Holman's strip, which was run daily in the Chicago Tribune. Smokey Stover's catch-phrase was "where there's foo, there's fire". In a mission debriefing on the evening of November 27, 1944, Frederic "Fritz" Ringwald, the unit's S-2 Intelligence Officer, stated that Meiers and Pilot Lt. Ed Schleuter had sighted a red ball of fire that appeared to chase them through a variety of high-speed maneuvers. Ringwald said that Meiers was extremely agitated and had a copy of the comic strip tucked in his back pocket. He pulled it out and slammed it down on Ringwald's desk and said, "[I]t was another one of those fuckin' foo fighters!" and stormed out of the debriefing room.[7][8]

According to Ringwald, because of the lack of a better name, it stuck. And this was originally what the men of the 415th started calling these incidents: "fuckin' foo fighters". In December 1944, a press correspondent from the Associated Press in Paris, Bob Wilson, was sent to the 415th at their base outside of Dijon, France, to investigate this story.[9] It was at this time that the term was cleaned up to just "foo fighters". The squadron commander, Capt. Harold Augsperger, also decided to sanitize the term to "foo fighters" in the historical data of the squadron.[7]

Other proposed origins of the term have been a corruption of the French feu for fire, and a corruption of the military acronym FUBAR (fucked up beyond all recognition).[10]

History

Although Royal Air Force personnel had reported seeing lights following their aircraft from as early as March 1942,[11][12] with similar sightings involving RAF bomber crews over the Balkans starting in April 1944,[13] American sightings were first recorded by crews from the 422nd Night-Fighter Squadron stationed in Occupied Belgium during the first week of October 1944. At the time, these were erroneously believed to be Messerschmitt Me 163 rocket-powered interceptors which did not operate at night.[14] However, the bulk of the sightings started occurring in the last week of November 1944, when pilots flying over Western Europe by night reported seeing fast-moving round glowing objects following their aircraft. The objects were variously described as fiery, and glowing red, white, or orange. Some pilots described them as resembling Christmas-tree lights and reported that they seemed to toy with the aircraft, making wild turns before simply vanishing. Pilots and aircrew reported that the objects flew together in formation with their aircraft and behaved as if they were under intelligent control, but never displayed hostile behavior. However, they could not be outmaneuvered or shot down. The phenomenon was so widespread that the lights earned a name – in the European Theater of Operations they were often called "Kraut fireballs", but for the most part called "foo fighters". The military took the sightings seriously, suspecting that the mysterious sightings might be secret German weapons, but further investigation revealed that German and Japanese pilots had reported similar sightings.[15]

On 13 December 1944, the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force in Paris issued a press release, which was featured in The New York Times the next day, officially describing the phenomenon as a "new German weapon".[16] Follow-up stories, using the term "Foo Fighters", appeared in the New York Herald Tribune and the British Daily Telegraph.[17]

In its 15 January 1945 edition, Time magazine carried a story titled "Foo-Fighter", in which it reported that the "balls of fire" had been following USAAF night fighters for over a month, and that the pilots had named it the "foo-fighter". According to Time, descriptions of the phenomena varied, but the pilots agreed that the mysterious lights followed their aircraft closely at high speed.[18]

The "balls of fire" phenomenon reported from the Pacific Theater of Operations differed somewhat from the foo fighters reported from Europe; the "ball of fire" resembled a large burning sphere that "just hung in the sky", though it was reported to sometimes follow aircraft. There was speculation that the phenomena could be related to the Japanese fire balloon campaign. As with the European foo fighters, no aircraft were reported as having been attacked by a "ball of fire".[19]

The postwar Robertson Panel cited foo fighter reports, noting that their behavior did not appear to be threatening, and mentioned possible explanations, for instance that they were electrostatic phenomena similar to St. Elmo's fire, electromagnetic phenomena, or simply reflections of light from ice crystals. The Panel's report suggested that "If the term 'flying saucers' had been popular in 1943–1945, these objects would have been so labeled."[2]

Sightings

Foo fighters were reported on many occasions from around the world; a few examples are noted below.

  • Sighting from September 1941 in the Indian Ocean was similar to some later foo fighter reports. From the deck of the S.S. Pułaski (a Polish merchant vessel transporting British troops), two sailors reported a "strange globe glowing with greenish light, about half the size of the full moon as it appears to us."[20] They alerted a British officer, who watched the movements of the object with them for over an hour.
  • Pilot Officer Bryan Lumsden, a New Zealander flying with No.3 Squadron's Night Flight, encountered two amber or orange-colored lights that followed him on an intruder mission over northern France in December 1942. One light was higher than the other, which appeared to rule out wing-tip navigation lights from an aircraft. The lights pursued him until he reached the English Channel. Another pilot from his unit experienced a similar phenomenon the following evening, with a green light. The story was eventually published in the Christchurch Star-Sun newspaper's 4 November 1955 edition.[21]
  • 13 October 1944: An RAF crew from No.178 Squadron based in Italy reported seeing lights following their aircraft over Hungary during a night raid on Székesfehérvár. B-24 Liberator KH103 flown by Pilot Officer Taylor was followed by an intermittent red light for several minutes.[22] The squadron had started reporting numerous similar instances as early as April 1944 and would continue doing so throughout the remainder of 1944 and into 1945.[23]
  • Charles R. Bastien of the US Eighth Air Force reported one of the first encounters with foo fighters over the Belgium/Netherlands area; he described them as "two fog lights flying at high rates of speed that could change direction rapidly". During debriefing, his intelligence officer told him that two RAF nightfighters had reported the same thing, and it was later reported in British newspapers.[24]
  • Career U.S. Air Force pilot Duane Adams often related that he had witnessed two occurrences of a bright light which paced his aircraft for about half an hour and then rapidly ascended into the sky. Both incidents occurred at night, both over the South Pacific, and both were witnessed by the entire aircraft crew. The first sighting occurred shortly after the end of World War II while Adams piloted a B-25 bomber. The second sighting occurred in the early 1960s when Adams was piloting a KC-135 tanker.[citation needed]
  • Senator Ted Stevens described an encounter from the time he was a US Air Force fighter pilot in the European theater of World War II, as recounted by Senator Harry Reid: "I was flying and there was an object next to me. I couldn’t get rid of it, I slowed up, it was there. I sped up, it was there. I would dive, it would be there. I called. Nothing on radar."[25]

Explanations and theories

The 415th Night-Fighter Squadron's Intelligence Officer, Captain Ringwald, sent a report listing 14 separate incidents in December 1944 and early January 1945 to the intelligence section at XII Tactical Air Command, the unit's immediate superiors at 64th Fighter Wing being unable to offer any answers.[26] Without answers of their own, XII TAC requested assistance from their opposite numbers at Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), in Paris. SHAEF had no knowledge of the phenomenon and asked if the British Air Ministry in London had any information. The Air Ministry's explanation for the Foo Fighter phenomenon was received on 13 March 1945:

Bomber Command crews have for some time been reporting similar phenomena. A few of the alleged aircraft may have been Me 262 and for the rest, flak rockets are suggested as the most likely explanation. The whole affair is still something of a mystery and the evidence is very sketchy and varied so that no definite and satisfactory explanation can yet be given.

— Air Ministry DDI2 to A/C of S, A-2, SHAEF, 13 March 1945[27]

A group of scientists, engineers and former high-ranking Luftwaffe officers were questioned about wartime "Balls of Fire" reports by staff from United States Air Force in Europe's intelligence section in the early autumn of 1945. None of the thirteen interviewed claimed any knowledge of a German secret weapons program that could have explained the sightings.[28]

The author Renato Vesco revived the wartime theory that the foo fighters were a Nazi secret weapon in his work Intercept UFO, reprinted in a revised English edition as Man-Made UFOs: 50 Years of Suppression in 1994. Vesco claims that the foo fighters were in fact a form of ground-launched, automatically guided, jet-propelled flak mine called the Feuerball (Fireball). This device, supposedly operated by special SS units, resembled a tortoise shell in shape, and it flew by means of gas jets that spun like a Catherine wheel around the fuselage. Miniature klystron tubes inside the device, in combination with the gas jets, created the characteristic glowing spheroid appearance of the foo fighters. A crude form of collision avoidance radar ensured the craft would not crash into another airborne object, and an onboard sensor mechanism would even instruct the machine to depart swiftly if it was fired upon. The purpose of the Feuerball, according to Vesco, was twofold. The appearance of this weird device inside a bomber stream would (and indeed did) have a distracting and disruptive effect on the bomber pilots. Also, Vesco alleges that the devices were also intended to have an "offensive" capability. Electrostatic discharges from the klystron tubes would, he stated, interfere with the ignition systems of the bombers, causing the engines to stall and the planes to crash. Although there is no hard evidence to support the reality of the Feuerball drone, this theory has been taken up by other aviation/ufology authors, and it has even been cited by some as the most likely explanation for the phenomena in at least one recent TV "documentary" on Nazi secret weapons.[29][30] However, others cite the single-sourced nature of the claims, the complete lack of evidence supporting them, and the implausible capabilities of the supposed device as marking this explanation as nonsense.[31][32]

Any type of electrical discharge from the wings of airplanes (see St. Elmo's Fire) has been suggested as an explanation, since it has been known to appear at the wingtips of aircraft.[18] It has also been pointed out that some of the descriptions of foo fighters closely resemble those of ball lightning.[33]

During April 1945, the U.S. Navy began to experiment on visual illusions as experienced by nighttime aviators. This work began the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Medicine (BUMED) project X-148-AV-4-3. This project pioneered the study of aviators' vertigo and was initiated because a wide variety of anomalous events were being reported by nighttime aviators.[34] Dr. Edgar Vinacke, who was the prime flight psychologist on this project, summarized the need for a cohesive and systemic outline of the epidemiology of aviators' vertigo:

Pilots do not have sufficient information about phenomena of disorientation, and, as a corollary, are given considerable disorganized, incomplete, and inaccurate information. They are largely dependent upon their own experience, which must supplement and interpret the traditions about "Vertigo" which are passed on to them. When a concept thus grows out of anecdotes cemented together with practical necessity, it is bound to acquire elements of mystery. So far as "vertigo" is concerned, no one really knows more than a small part of the facts, but a great deal of the peril. Since aviators are not skilled observers of human behavior, they usually have only the vaguest understanding of their own feelings. Like other naive persons, therefore, they have simply adopted a term to cover a multitude of otherwise inexplicable events.

— Edgar Vinacke, "The Concept of Aviator's 'Vertigo'"[35]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Toomey, Vurlee A. (2002). Let Us Not Forget: A Tribute to America's 20th Century Veterans. San Jose: Writers Club Press: iUniverse. p. 71. ISBN 0-595-23823-8.
  2. ^ a b Report of Scientific Advisory Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects convened by Office of Scientific Intelligence, CIA January 14–18, 1953
  3. ^ See for instance;
    Holman, "Smokey Stover – A Dead Ringer", Daily News, 21 November 1938, retrieved 6 Feb 2009,
    Holman, "Smokey Stover – Movie Idle", Daily News, 23 November 1938, retrieved 6 Feb 2009.
  4. ^ Moira Davison Reynolds, Comic Strip Artists in American Newspapers, 1945–1980, p. 94, Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co., 2003 ISBN 0-7864-1551-7.
  5. ^ Coulton Waugh, The Comics, p. 316, Univ. Press of Mississippi, 1991 ISBN 0-87805-499-5 (modern reprint first published 1947).
  6. ^ RFC3092 – Etymology of "Foo", Internet Society, 2001
  7. ^ a b Jeffery A. Lindell, 1991. "Interviews with Harold Augspurger, Commander 415th Night Fighter Squadron; Frederic Ringwald, S-2 Intelligence Officer, 415th Night Fighter Squadron".
  8. ^ Mark Bennis (2022-02-14). "Meet the 'FOO FIGHTERS' Amazing UFOs from World War Two". UFO Watch UK. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
  9. ^ "Balls of Fire Stalk U.S. Fighters in Night Assaults Over Germany". The New York Times. Associated Press. 1945-01-02. pp. 1, 4. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
  10. ^ Ralph Blumenthal, The Believer: Alien Encounters, Hard Science, and the Passion of John Mack, University of New Mexico Press, 2021 ISBN 0826362311.
  11. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 30-37. ISBN 9798464991583.
  12. ^ Rendall, Graeme. "The Foo Fighters: Today's Pilot Encounters With UAP Are Nothing New". The Debrief. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  13. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 94-95. ISBN 9798464991583.
  14. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 279. ISBN 9798464991583.
  15. ^ Lucanio, Patrick; Gary Coville (2002). Smokin' Rockets: The Romance of Technology in American Film, Radio and Television, 1945–1962. McFarland. pp. 16–17. ISBN 0-7864-1233-X.
  16. ^ "Floating Mystery Ball Is New Nazi Air Weapon". The New York Times. 1944-12-14. p. 6. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
  17. ^ Hayward, James (2003). Myths and Legends of the Second World War. Isis. pp. 343–344. ISBN 0-7531-5664-4.
  18. ^ a b . Time. 15 Jan 1945. Archived from the original on April 17, 2008.
  19. ^ Robertson, Gordon Bennett Jr. (2006). Bringing the Thunder: The Missions of a World War II B-29 Pilot in the Pacific. Stackpole Books. pp. 183–185. ISBN 0-8117-3333-5.
  20. ^ Clark 1998 p 230
  21. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 50-53. ISBN 9798464991583.
  22. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 125. ISBN 9798464991583.
  23. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. Chapter 2. ISBN 9798464991583.
  24. ^ Bastien, Charles R. (2004). 32 Copilots. Trafford Publishing. p. 205. ISBN 1-4120-1729-7.
  25. ^ "I-Team: UFO study focused on U.S. Military encounters". 21 December 2017.
  26. ^ Rendall, Graeme. UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. pp. 327–329. ISBN 9798464991583.
  27. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 340. ISBN 9798464991583.
  28. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. pp. 530–532. ISBN 9798464991583.
  29. ^ Renato Vesco, David Hatcher Childress, Man-made UFOs 1944–1994: 50 years of suppression, Adventures Unlimited Press, 1994 ISBN 0-932813-23-2.
  30. ^ Renato Vesco, Intercept UFO, Pinnacle Books, 1974 ISBN 0-523-00840-6.
  31. ^ The Nazi UFO Mythos [1] The Nazi UFO Mythos: An Investigation by Kevin McClure
  32. ^ Rendall, Graeme (2021). UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945. Reiver Country Books. p. 453-506. ISBN 9798464991583.
  33. ^ Stenhoff, Mark (1999). Ball Lightning: An Unsolved Problem in Atmospheric Physics. Springer. p. 112. ISBN 0-306-46150-1.
  34. ^ "The Real Foo Fighters: A Historical and Physiological Perspective on a World War II Aviation Mystery". Skeptic Magazine, vol. 17, no. 2 (pp. 38–43)
  35. ^ Vinacke, Edgar. 8 May 1946. "The Concept of Aviator's 'Vertigo'". Report No.#7. U.S. Naval School of Aviation Medicine, Project (X-148-Av-4-3). Reprinted in Journal of Aviation Medicine. 1948. 19:158–190

References

  • Jerome Clark, The Ufo Book: Encyclopedia of the Extraterrestrial, Visible Ink, 1998, ISBN 1-57859-029-9
  • Timothy Good, Need to Know: UFOs, the Military, and Intelligence, Pegasus Books, 2007, ISBN 978-1-933648-38-5
  • Graeme Rendall, UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo-Fighters 1940-1945, Reiver Country Books, 2021, ISBN 979-8-464991-58-3

External links

  • The Foo Fighters of World War II – Saturday Night Uforia
  • Foo Fighter Documents – Computer UFO Network
  • By Jeff Lindell, Folklorist & WW2 Aviation Historian. October 2013 revision: An inventory of 68 (90-minute tape recordings) of interviews concerning sightings of Foo Fighters, etc.,
  • The Foo Fighters: Today's Pilot Encounters With UAP Are Nothing New - By Graeme Rendall, author of UFOs Before Roswell: European Foo Fighters 1940-1945, explaining similarities between "dogfights" with Foo Fighter-type lights in WW2 and UAP encounters in 2004 and 2015.
  • GERMAN DISCS: UFO in the Third Reich Takes on claims of the German Reich having developed and flown high-performance flying discs, declaring them "unlikely" (with footnotes)
  • by Jerome Clark and Lucius Farish: A widely reproduced essay describing many wartime sightings (including those in above article) from 1941 to 1947 and onward
  • The Foo Fighters: UFOs During WWII - Graeme Rendall discusses the European Foo Fighter phenomenon of World War 2 on The Micah Hanks Program podcast, from the first sightings in March 1942 (and vague records of earlier cases) through to the end of the war.

fighter, this, article, about, aerial, phenomenon, rock, band, fighters, homebuilt, aircraft, stewart, fighter, term, fighter, used, allied, aircraft, pilots, during, world, describe, various, ufos, mysterious, aerial, phenomena, seen, skies, over, both, europ. This article is about the aerial phenomenon For the rock band see Foo Fighters For the homebuilt aircraft see Stewart Foo Fighter The term foo fighter was used by Allied aircraft pilots during World War II to describe various UFOs or mysterious aerial phenomena seen in the skies over both the European and Pacific theaters of operations Though foo fighter initially described a type of UFO reported and named by the U S 415th Night Fighter Squadron the term was also commonly used to mean any UFO sighting from that period 1 Formally reported from November 1944 onwards foo fighters were presumed by witnesses to be secret weapons employed by the enemy The Robertson Panel explored possible explanations for instance that they were electrostatic phenomena similar to St Elmo s fire electromagnetic phenomena or simply reflections of light from ice crystals 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Sightings 3 Explanations and theories 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEtymology EditThe nonsense word foo emerged in popular culture during the early 1930s first being used by cartoonist Bill Holman who peppered his Smokey Stover 3 fireman cartoon strips with foo signs and puns 4 5 6 The term foo was borrowed from Smokey Stover by a radar operator in the 415th Night Fighter Squadron Donald J Meiers who according to most 415th members gave the foo fighters their name Meiers was from Chicago and was an avid reader of Holman s strip which was run daily in the Chicago Tribune Smokey Stover s catch phrase was where there s foo there s fire In a mission debriefing on the evening of November 27 1944 Frederic Fritz Ringwald the unit s S 2 Intelligence Officer stated that Meiers and Pilot Lt Ed Schleuter had sighted a red ball of fire that appeared to chase them through a variety of high speed maneuvers Ringwald said that Meiers was extremely agitated and had a copy of the comic strip tucked in his back pocket He pulled it out and slammed it down on Ringwald s desk and said I t was another one of those fuckin foo fighters and stormed out of the debriefing room 7 8 According to Ringwald because of the lack of a better name it stuck And this was originally what the men of the 415th started calling these incidents fuckin foo fighters In December 1944 a press correspondent from the Associated Press in Paris Bob Wilson was sent to the 415th at their base outside of Dijon France to investigate this story 9 It was at this time that the term was cleaned up to just foo fighters The squadron commander Capt Harold Augsperger also decided to sanitize the term to foo fighters in the historical data of the squadron 7 Other proposed origins of the term have been a corruption of the French feu for fire and a corruption of the military acronym FUBAR fucked up beyond all recognition 10 History EditAlthough Royal Air Force personnel had reported seeing lights following their aircraft from as early as March 1942 11 12 with similar sightings involving RAF bomber crews over the Balkans starting in April 1944 13 American sightings were first recorded by crews from the 422nd Night Fighter Squadron stationed in Occupied Belgium during the first week of October 1944 At the time these were erroneously believed to be Messerschmitt Me 163 rocket powered interceptors which did not operate at night 14 However the bulk of the sightings started occurring in the last week of November 1944 when pilots flying over Western Europe by night reported seeing fast moving round glowing objects following their aircraft The objects were variously described as fiery and glowing red white or orange Some pilots described them as resembling Christmas tree lights and reported that they seemed to toy with the aircraft making wild turns before simply vanishing Pilots and aircrew reported that the objects flew together in formation with their aircraft and behaved as if they were under intelligent control but never displayed hostile behavior However they could not be outmaneuvered or shot down The phenomenon was so widespread that the lights earned a name in the European Theater of Operations they were often called Kraut fireballs but for the most part called foo fighters The military took the sightings seriously suspecting that the mysterious sightings might be secret German weapons but further investigation revealed that German and Japanese pilots had reported similar sightings 15 On 13 December 1944 the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force in Paris issued a press release which was featured in The New York Times the next day officially describing the phenomenon as a new German weapon 16 Follow up stories using the term Foo Fighters appeared in the New York Herald Tribune and the British Daily Telegraph 17 In its 15 January 1945 edition Time magazine carried a story titled Foo Fighter in which it reported that the balls of fire had been following USAAF night fighters for over a month and that the pilots had named it the foo fighter According to Time descriptions of the phenomena varied but the pilots agreed that the mysterious lights followed their aircraft closely at high speed 18 The balls of fire phenomenon reported from the Pacific Theater of Operations differed somewhat from the foo fighters reported from Europe the ball of fire resembled a large burning sphere that just hung in the sky though it was reported to sometimes follow aircraft There was speculation that the phenomena could be related to the Japanese fire balloon campaign As with the European foo fighters no aircraft were reported as having been attacked by a ball of fire 19 The postwar Robertson Panel cited foo fighter reports noting that their behavior did not appear to be threatening and mentioned possible explanations for instance that they were electrostatic phenomena similar to St Elmo s fire electromagnetic phenomena or simply reflections of light from ice crystals The Panel s report suggested that If the term flying saucers had been popular in 1943 1945 these objects would have been so labeled 2 Sightings Edit Foo fighters were reported on many occasions from around the world a few examples are noted below Sighting from September 1941 in the Indian Ocean was similar to some later foo fighter reports From the deck of the S S Pulaski a Polish merchant vessel transporting British troops two sailors reported a strange globe glowing with greenish light about half the size of the full moon as it appears to us 20 They alerted a British officer who watched the movements of the object with them for over an hour Pilot Officer Bryan Lumsden a New Zealander flying with No 3 Squadron s Night Flight encountered two amber or orange colored lights that followed him on an intruder mission over northern France in December 1942 One light was higher than the other which appeared to rule out wing tip navigation lights from an aircraft The lights pursued him until he reached the English Channel Another pilot from his unit experienced a similar phenomenon the following evening with a green light The story was eventually published in the Christchurch Star Sun newspaper s 4 November 1955 edition 21 13 October 1944 An RAF crew from No 178 Squadron based in Italy reported seeing lights following their aircraft over Hungary during a night raid on Szekesfehervar B 24 Liberator KH103 flown by Pilot Officer Taylor was followed by an intermittent red light for several minutes 22 The squadron had started reporting numerous similar instances as early as April 1944 and would continue doing so throughout the remainder of 1944 and into 1945 23 Charles R Bastien of the US Eighth Air Force reported one of the first encounters with foo fighters over the Belgium Netherlands area he described them as two fog lights flying at high rates of speed that could change direction rapidly During debriefing his intelligence officer told him that two RAF nightfighters had reported the same thing and it was later reported in British newspapers 24 Career U S Air Force pilot Duane Adams often related that he had witnessed two occurrences of a bright light which paced his aircraft for about half an hour and then rapidly ascended into the sky Both incidents occurred at night both over the South Pacific and both were witnessed by the entire aircraft crew The first sighting occurred shortly after the end of World War II while Adams piloted a B 25 bomber The second sighting occurred in the early 1960s when Adams was piloting a KC 135 tanker citation needed Senator Ted Stevens described an encounter from the time he was a US Air Force fighter pilot in the European theater of World War II as recounted by Senator Harry Reid I was flying and there was an object next to me I couldn t get rid of it I slowed up it was there I sped up it was there I would dive it would be there I called Nothing on radar 25 Explanations and theories EditThe 415th Night Fighter Squadron s Intelligence Officer Captain Ringwald sent a report listing 14 separate incidents in December 1944 and early January 1945 to the intelligence section at XII Tactical Air Command the unit s immediate superiors at 64th Fighter Wing being unable to offer any answers 26 Without answers of their own XII TAC requested assistance from their opposite numbers at Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force SHAEF in Paris SHAEF had no knowledge of the phenomenon and asked if the British Air Ministry in London had any information The Air Ministry s explanation for the Foo Fighter phenomenon was received on 13 March 1945 Bomber Command crews have for some time been reporting similar phenomena A few of the alleged aircraft may have been Me 262 and for the rest flak rockets are suggested as the most likely explanation The whole affair is still something of a mystery and the evidence is very sketchy and varied so that no definite and satisfactory explanation can yet be given Air Ministry DDI2 to A C of S A 2 SHAEF 13 March 1945 27 A group of scientists engineers and former high ranking Luftwaffe officers were questioned about wartime Balls of Fire reports by staff from United States Air Force in Europe s intelligence section in the early autumn of 1945 None of the thirteen interviewed claimed any knowledge of a German secret weapons program that could have explained the sightings 28 The author Renato Vesco revived the wartime theory that the foo fighters were a Nazi secret weapon in his work Intercept UFO reprinted in a revised English edition as Man Made UFOs 50 Years of Suppression in 1994 Vesco claims that the foo fighters were in fact a form of ground launched automatically guided jet propelled flak mine called the Feuerball Fireball This device supposedly operated by special SS units resembled a tortoise shell in shape and it flew by means of gas jets that spun like a Catherine wheel around the fuselage Miniature klystron tubes inside the device in combination with the gas jets created the characteristic glowing spheroid appearance of the foo fighters A crude form of collision avoidance radar ensured the craft would not crash into another airborne object and an onboard sensor mechanism would even instruct the machine to depart swiftly if it was fired upon The purpose of the Feuerball according to Vesco was twofold The appearance of this weird device inside a bomber stream would and indeed did have a distracting and disruptive effect on the bomber pilots Also Vesco alleges that the devices were also intended to have an offensive capability Electrostatic discharges from the klystron tubes would he stated interfere with the ignition systems of the bombers causing the engines to stall and the planes to crash Although there is no hard evidence to support the reality of the Feuerball drone this theory has been taken up by other aviation ufology authors and it has even been cited by some as the most likely explanation for the phenomena in at least one recent TV documentary on Nazi secret weapons 29 30 However others cite the single sourced nature of the claims the complete lack of evidence supporting them and the implausible capabilities of the supposed device as marking this explanation as nonsense 31 32 Any type of electrical discharge from the wings of airplanes see St Elmo s Fire has been suggested as an explanation since it has been known to appear at the wingtips of aircraft 18 It has also been pointed out that some of the descriptions of foo fighters closely resemble those of ball lightning 33 During April 1945 the U S Navy began to experiment on visual illusions as experienced by nighttime aviators This work began the U S Navy s Bureau of Medicine BUMED project X 148 AV 4 3 This project pioneered the study of aviators vertigo and was initiated because a wide variety of anomalous events were being reported by nighttime aviators 34 Dr Edgar Vinacke who was the prime flight psychologist on this project summarized the need for a cohesive and systemic outline of the epidemiology of aviators vertigo Pilots do not have sufficient information about phenomena of disorientation and as a corollary are given considerable disorganized incomplete and inaccurate information They are largely dependent upon their own experience which must supplement and interpret the traditions about Vertigo which are passed on to them When a concept thus grows out of anecdotes cemented together with practical necessity it is bound to acquire elements of mystery So far as vertigo is concerned no one really knows more than a small part of the facts but a great deal of the peril Since aviators are not skilled observers of human behavior they usually have only the vaguest understanding of their own feelings Like other naive persons therefore they have simply adopted a term to cover a multitude of otherwise inexplicable events Edgar Vinacke The Concept of Aviator s Vertigo 35 See also EditAutokinetic effect Ghost rockets Green fireballs Will o the wisp Hessdalen lights List of UFO sightings Nazi UFOsNotes Edit Toomey Vurlee A 2002 Let Us Not Forget A Tribute to America s 20th Century Veterans San Jose Writers Club Press iUniverse p 71 ISBN 0 595 23823 8 a b Report of Scientific Advisory Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects convened by Office of Scientific Intelligence CIA January 14 18 1953 See for instance Holman Smokey Stover A Dead Ringer Daily News 21 November 1938 retrieved 6 Feb 2009 Holman Smokey Stover Movie Idle Daily News 23 November 1938 retrieved 6 Feb 2009 Moira Davison Reynolds Comic Strip Artists in American Newspapers 1945 1980 p 94 Jefferson N C McFarland amp Co 2003 ISBN 0 7864 1551 7 Coulton Waugh The Comics p 316 Univ Press of Mississippi 1991 ISBN 0 87805 499 5 modern reprint first published 1947 RFC3092 Etymology of Foo Internet Society 2001 a b Jeffery A Lindell 1991 Interviews with Harold Augspurger Commander 415th Night Fighter Squadron Frederic Ringwald S 2 Intelligence Officer 415th Night Fighter Squadron Mark Bennis 2022 02 14 Meet the FOO FIGHTERS Amazing UFOs from World War Two UFO Watch UK Retrieved 2022 07 15 Balls of Fire Stalk U S Fighters in Night Assaults Over Germany The New York Times Associated Press 1945 01 02 pp 1 4 Retrieved 2021 06 12 Ralph Blumenthal The Believer Alien Encounters Hard Science and the Passion of John Mack University of New Mexico Press 2021 ISBN 0826362311 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 30 37 ISBN 9798464991583 Rendall Graeme The Foo Fighters Today s Pilot Encounters With UAP Are Nothing New The Debrief Retrieved 15 April 2021 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 94 95 ISBN 9798464991583 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 279 ISBN 9798464991583 Lucanio Patrick Gary Coville 2002 Smokin Rockets The Romance of Technology in American Film Radio and Television 1945 1962 McFarland pp 16 17 ISBN 0 7864 1233 X Floating Mystery Ball Is New Nazi Air Weapon The New York Times 1944 12 14 p 6 Retrieved 2021 06 12 Hayward James 2003 Myths and Legends of the Second World War Isis pp 343 344 ISBN 0 7531 5664 4 a b Foo Fighter Time 15 Jan 1945 Archived from the original on April 17 2008 Robertson Gordon Bennett Jr 2006 Bringing the Thunder The Missions of a World War II B 29 Pilot in the Pacific Stackpole Books pp 183 185 ISBN 0 8117 3333 5 Clark 1998 p 230 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 50 53 ISBN 9798464991583 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 125 ISBN 9798464991583 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p Chapter 2 ISBN 9798464991583 Bastien Charles R 2004 32 Copilots Trafford Publishing p 205 ISBN 1 4120 1729 7 I Team UFO study focused on U S Military encounters 21 December 2017 Rendall Graeme UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books pp 327 329 ISBN 9798464991583 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 340 ISBN 9798464991583 Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books pp 530 532 ISBN 9798464991583 Renato Vesco David Hatcher Childress Man made UFOs 1944 1994 50 years of suppression Adventures Unlimited Press 1994 ISBN 0 932813 23 2 Renato Vesco Intercept UFO Pinnacle Books 1974 ISBN 0 523 00840 6 The Nazi UFO Mythos 1 The Nazi UFO Mythos An Investigation by Kevin McClure Rendall Graeme 2021 UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books p 453 506 ISBN 9798464991583 Stenhoff Mark 1999 Ball Lightning An Unsolved Problem in Atmospheric Physics Springer p 112 ISBN 0 306 46150 1 The Real Foo Fighters A Historical and Physiological Perspective on a World War II Aviation Mystery Skeptic Magazine vol 17 no 2 pp 38 43 Vinacke Edgar 8 May 1946 The Concept of Aviator s Vertigo Report No 7 U S Naval School of Aviation Medicine Project X 148 Av 4 3 Reprinted in Journal of Aviation Medicine 1948 19 158 190References EditJerome Clark The Ufo Book Encyclopedia of the Extraterrestrial Visible Ink 1998 ISBN 1 57859 029 9 Timothy Good Need to Know UFOs the Military and Intelligence Pegasus Books 2007 ISBN 978 1 933648 38 5 Graeme Rendall UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 Reiver Country Books 2021 ISBN 979 8 464991 58 3External links Edit Look up foo in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Foo Fighters of World War II Saturday Night Uforia Foo Fighter Documents Computer UFO Network A Historical and Physiological Perspective of the Foo Fighters of World War Two By Jeff Lindell Folklorist amp WW2 Aviation Historian Composite Bibliography October 2013 revision Revised Foo Fighter doc An inventory of 68 90 minute tape recordings of interviews concerning sightings of Foo Fighters etc Foo Fighter Archive The Foo Fighters Today s Pilot Encounters With UAP Are Nothing New By Graeme Rendall author of UFOs Before Roswell European Foo Fighters 1940 1945 explaining similarities between dogfights with Foo Fighter type lights in WW2 and UAP encounters in 2004 and 2015 GERMAN DISCS UFO in the Third Reich Takes on claims of the German Reich having developed and flown high performance flying discs declaring them unlikely with footnotes Foo Fighters of WWII by Jerome Clark and Lucius Farish A widely reproduced essay describing many wartime sightings including those in above article from 1941 to 1947 and onward The Foo Fighters UFOs During WWII Graeme Rendall discusses the European Foo Fighter phenomenon of World War 2 on The Micah Hanks Program podcast from the first sightings in March 1942 and vague records of earlier cases through to the end of the war Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foo fighter amp oldid 1128724159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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