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| Author | Robert Hastings |
| Publisher | Robert Hastings |
| Published | 2008 |
| Narrator | Check Audible listing |
| Rating | ★★★★★ |
If you had to make the case for UAP reality in a court of law, this is the book you’d bring. Robert Hastings has spent decades tracking a single, specific pattern: UFOs appearing over American nuclear weapons facilities, sometimes interfering with missile launch systems. UFOs and Nukes is the result — hundreds of pages of military witness testimony, declassified documents, and on-record interviews.
What It Covers
UFOs and Nukes documents UAP incidents at U.S. Air Force nuclear weapons sites spanning decades. Hastings has conducted personal interviews with over 150 military veterans who witnessed these incidents firsthand.
Key incidents and themes:
- Malmstrom Air Force Base, 1967 — the most documented case, in which multiple Minuteman missiles were taken offline simultaneously during a UAP incursion
- Minot, Loring, Wurtsmith, and Barksdale — additional documented incidents at Strategic Air Command bases
- Declassified FOIA documents that corroborate witness testimony in specific cases
- The 2010 National Press Club event — where Hastings organized seven Air Force veterans to testify publicly
Why It Matters
This is one of the most rigorously evidenced books in the UAP canon. Hastings is methodical, source-transparent, and careful not to claim more than his evidence supports. The result is a book that serious skeptics struggle to dismiss — not because the witnesses are credible in the abstract, but because the pattern across dozens of independent accounts at geographically separate facilities is statistically remarkable.
Whatever these objects are, they appear to have a specific and sustained interest in humanity’s most destructive weapons. That’s not a marginal observation.
Closing Recommendation
Who should listen: Essential for any serious UAP reader. This is the primary source document on the nuclear-UAP connection. Also highly recommended for skeptics — Hastings has done the evidentiary work.
Who can skip it: Nobody. This one’s non-negotiable.
Bottom line: The gold standard of UAP investigative research. Methodical, credible, and genuinely alarming in its implications.
