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ScienceDirect - Technol Rep Tohoku Univ ... - Garryck Osborne

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NICK COOK 41<br />

something—anything—that signaled the presence of another aircraft,<br />

jinking the plane left and right to check his blind spots.<br />

Still nothing.<br />

It was only when he started to execute a turn back to base that<br />

Ringwald told him the lights were back again.<br />

Schlueter followed the line indicated by Ringwald and saw them a long<br />

way off. Impossibly far, in fact, but still within radar range. He called out<br />

to Meiers, but the radar operator was now having technical problems<br />

with his AI set.<br />

Schlueter again prepared to engage the enemy, but the lights had<br />

already begun to glide away to the northeast, eventually retreating deep<br />

into the German lines and disappearing altogether.<br />

Nobody said anything until shortly before the Black Widow landed.<br />

Although Schlueter and Meiers were agreed that the Germans must<br />

have been experimenting with some new kind of secret weapon, neither<br />

wanted to hazard a guess as to what this weapon might have been. There<br />

was nothing they knew of in their own inventory that approached the<br />

weird, darting performance characteristics of the aircraft they'd just<br />

seen.<br />

Fearful they would become the target of unwelcome squadron<br />

humor—along predictable lines they were "losing it"—they decided not<br />

to report the incident. And Ringwald, the spook, went along with it.<br />

<strong>Rep</strong>orts of this incident exist in a number of UFO books—books I'd<br />

not encountered before because to someone steeped in the dry reportage<br />

of nuts-and-bolts technical journalism, they'd never entered my orbit.<br />

The incident showed that almost three years before Twining wrote his<br />

memo to General Schulgen unconventional aerial objects had appeared<br />

in German skies prior to their manifestation across the U.S.A. in 1947.<br />

On odd days off work and at weekends, I'd begun trawling public<br />

archives for corroborating evidence of this sighting. What I found were<br />

details on the 415th Night Fighter Squadron and the aircraft Schlueter<br />

had flown at the time of the encounter; details that allowed me to fill in<br />

the gaps of the published account and to visualize the sense of bewilderment<br />

and fear that Schlueter and his crew would have experienced that<br />

night. But along the way, I discovered that Schlueter's sighting was far<br />

from unique. All that winter of 1944-45, Allied aircrew reported small,<br />

ball-shaped aircraft glowing orange, red and white over the territory of<br />

the Third Reich. While some attributed the lights to natural phenomena<br />

such as ball lightning or St. Elmo's fire, others could not dismiss the<br />

sightings so easily. The devices appeared to be able to home in on Allied<br />

aircraft as if guided to them remotely or by some built-in control system.

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