Declassified UFO / UAP Document
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AI-Generated Summary
A 1946 newspaper report alleges that Swedish Communist Party members were ordered to track mysterious projectiles. It also claims Soviet rocket bases were established in the Baltic and Karelia regions.
This document is a newspaper article dated August 27, 1946, written by London correspondent Alf Martin. It details a report from Ossian Goulding, writing for the Daily Telegraph, regarding the activities of the Swedish Communist Party concerning mysterious projectiles observed in the region. According to Goulding, members of the Swedish Communist Party were under orders to use official party channels to report all available details regarding the flight of these projectiles, including time, direction, altitude, and estimated speed, with a specific focus on impact sites. The article notes that Swedish radar installations in Vaxholm, despite being described as somewhat outdated, were able to determine that a number of these projectiles originated from the Baltic Sea, with flight paths suggesting they may have come from the Peenemünde area of the German coast. Furthermore, the article mentions claims from reliable sources that the Russians had established rocket and reaction plane bases in Dagö, Ösel, East Karelia near Lake Ladoga, and in the vicinity of the city of Petrozavodsk. Finally, the article mentions that Goulding published official Swedish denials regarding earlier, firm British claims about the existence of British radar equipment used for tracking these projectiles.
Svenska kommunistpartiets medlemmar har order att genom officiella partikanaler rapportera alla tillgängliga detaljer rörande de mystiska projektilernas flykt
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Official Assessment
The article reports that members of the Swedish Communist Party were ordered to track and report details of mysterious projectiles. It also cites claims that these projectiles originated from the Peenemünde area and that the Soviets had established rocket and reaction plane bases in Dagö, Ösel, East Karelia, and near Petrozavodsk.
Key Persons
- Ossian GouldingLondon correspondent for Daily Telegraph