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UFO

The Foo Fighters of World War II

Allied pilots encountered mysterious glowing orbs that paced their aircraft.

1944 - 1945
European and Pacific Theatres, Worldwide
500+ witnesses

The Foo Fighters of World War II

During World War II, Allied pilots over both European and Pacific theaters reported encounters with strange glowing objects that paced their aircraft. Dubbed “foo fighters,” these phenomena were reported by credible military aviators and were never explained.

The Sightings

Beginning in late 1944, pilots reported glowing balls of light, usually red, orange, or white, that would appear alongside their aircraft. The objects matched their speed, performed impossible maneuvers, and seemed to observe the planes.

The Reports

Pilots initially feared the foo fighters were German secret weapons. They reported them officially. When investigations revealed Allied pilots on all fronts were seeing the same things, it became clear they weren’t enemy technology.

The Behavior

Foo fighters never attacked or interfered with aircraft. They seemed curious, pacing planes at close range before suddenly accelerating away at impossible speeds. They would appear, observe, and depart.

Official Investigation

The military investigated foo fighters seriously. Both American and British intelligence looked into them. No conventional explanation was found. After the war ended, the sightings stopped.

Assessment

Foo fighters represent a mass sighting phenomenon among trained military observers during wartime. The objects behaved intelligently and uniformly across thousands of miles. What observed our war machines was never identified.