UFO Encounters: Issue Four of Six
Around the World; Global UFO Phenomena
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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D. Phoenix Blake
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
The Belgian Air Force held a press conference the next day. They released the radar data. Their chief of operations told the assembled journalists: "There was something in the air. We don't know what it was."
That kind of official transparency is rare. But the UAP encounters behind it are not.
From Belgium to Brazil. From the Soviet KGB files to the Japanese Self-Defense Force. From France's GEIPAN program — the world's only permanent government UAP investigation agency — to the United Kingdom's declassified Ministry of Defence records. Every major military power has its own UAP record. And those records tell the same story.
UFO Encounters Issue 4: Around the World examines the global UAP record with the same evidentiary standards applied throughout this series: named sources, primary documents, verified sensor data, and official findings. What emerges is a picture of a genuinely planetary phenomenon — one that has been independently documented by the militaries of nations that were Cold War adversaries, using sensor systems developed by different manufacturers under different specifications, reaching consistent findings with no opportunity for coordination.
You will explore:
• Belgium's triangle wave: 13,500 civilian witnesses, F-16 radar data released at a NATO press conference, and a maneuver that exceeded 40 Gs
• Brazil's Operation Plate: the night the Air Force scrambled eight fighters to pursue twenty-one simultaneously tracked objects — and caught none
• France's GEIPAN and the Trans-en-Provence case: the most rigorously documented physical trace evidence in UAP history
• The Soviet KGB files: what the Cold War adversary was tracking in the same period as American military UAP encounters
• The UK's declassified MOD files: what British military analysts privately concluded while publicly dismissing the phenomenon
• Japan's new transparency: why a nation once deeply resistant to UAP discussion is now one of the most open military nations on the subject
One sky. The same objects. Independent documentation from every direction.
The global record changes everything about how we understand what is happening above us.
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