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IncidentMinot AFB Minuteman ICBM Incident (August 1966)

aka Minot AFB Minuteman ICBM Incident (August 1966)

In August 1966 at the Minot AFB Minuteman ICBM complex in North Dakota, an incident similar to Malmstrom 1967 was reported: a UAP observed by base security over a missile launch facility coincided with the loss of guidance lock on multiple ICBMs. Documented most extensively in Robert Hastings's *UFOs and Nukes* (2008).

phenomenologically-open Reported security-team visuals concurrent with launch-facility equipment faults, paralleling Malmstrom the following year; the documentary record is thinner — unit- history fragments and later FOIA assembly.
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status history (1)
2026-06-09 · unannotated → phenomenologically-open — initial annotation sweep (Epic J.F4)

In August 1966 — date narrowed in subsequent reporting to a window between 24 and 25 August — at the Minot Air Force Base Minuteman Intercontinental Ballistic Missile complex (455th Strategic Missile Wing) in north-central North Dakota, an incident similar in pattern to the Malmstrom Echo Flight shutdown of March 1967 was reported. Base security personnel observed a luminous, structured object hovering over one of the Minuteman launch facilities; concurrent with the observation, the guidance lock on multiple ICBMs in the affected flight was reported lost, with the missiles transitioning to a no-go status.

The case is documented most extensively in Robert Hastings, UFOs and Nukes: Extraordinary Encounters at Nuclear Weapons Sites (Author House, 2008). Hastings’s primary sources for the Minot incident are USAF veterans of the 455th Strategic Missile Wing — including a former missile combat crew commander whose identity is recorded in Hastings’s research files — who gave on-the-record testimony to Hastings about the August 1966 event. The 455th SMW’s full operational records for that period have not been fully declassified; partial FOIA releases have confirmed unit-level documentation of the event without providing the detailed cause attribution.

The Minot 1966 case is among the cluster of UAP-ICBM-shutdown incidents documented by Hastings across the late 1960s, including incidents at Malmstrom (March 1967, Echo Flight and Oscar Flight; see malmstrom-1967), Whiteman AFB (Missouri), and Vandenberg AFB (California). The pattern — UAP visual sighting at the perimeter or over a launch facility, concurrent with the loss of operational status on one or more nuclear-capable ICBMs — is the central pattern of the nuclear-UAP-connection literature.

See also: malmstrom-1967; figure-salas.

Notable & intriguing

Public-record items already documented about this subject. Folklore is labelled. Sources cited where the specificity warrants it.

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