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Iranian Air Force F-4 Phantom jets were scrambled to intercept the object over Tehran — and found their instrumentation systematically neutralised on approach
Unforgettable Cases

The Tehran UFO Incident — 1976: When Iran’s Air Force Scrambled Jets and Lost

The Tehran UFO incident of September 1976 is considered by many UFO researchers to be one of the most significant military encounter cases on record — not because of the number of witnesses or the duration of the event, but because of the quality of the documentation and the identity of the organisation that called it credible. That organisation was the United States Defense Intelligence Agency, which assessed the case in an internal report classified until its declassification decades later and described it as “an outstanding report” that met “all the necessary criteria” for a genuine UAP encounter: multiple witnesses, radar confirmation, electronic effects, and physical evidence.

At approximately 12:30 AM on 19 September 1976, the Imperial Iranian Air Force command in Tehran began receiving calls from civilians reporting a brilliant light in the sky over the city. The duty officer scrambled an F-4 Phantom II from Shahrokhi Air Force Base. As the jet approached the object — described as radiating light in multiple colours — at approximately 40 miles distance, its instrumentation and communications systems failed completely. The pilot turned back toward base. As he did, the systems immediately restored to normal function.

A second F-4 was scrambled. Its crew observed the object as approximately the size of a tanker aircraft, emitting intense white, red, green, and blue lights in a strobing pattern. On radar, it appeared as strong as a 707 airliner. As the second jet closed to within 25 nautical miles, a smaller object separated from the primary craft and accelerated toward the F-4 at high speed. The pilot attempted to fire an AIM-9 Sidewinder missile. His weapons control panel went offline and his communications failed simultaneously. He executed a hard dive manoeuvre to evade; the smaller object followed briefly, then returned to the primary craft.

A third smaller object then separated and descended toward the ground, illuminating the desert below it with a bright light before landing or appearing to land near a dry lake bed. A fourth object was observed near the ground in a separate direction. The primary craft and remaining objects eventually departed. On the ground the following morning, investigators found nothing at the apparent landing site. The crew of the second F-4 reported that the area lit by the descending object had shown a peculiar bright flash, and a civilian aircraft in the area at the time reported communications and instrumentation anomalies consistent with the military crews’ accounts.

The DIA report, written by Lieutenant Colonel Olin Mooy, noted the “classic components of a genuine UFO report” and the reliability of the witnesses. It was circulated to the White House, the CIA, the NSA, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and multiple military commands. The Iranian Imperial Air Force General who oversaw the investigation stated in subsequent interviews that he had no doubt the craft was not of earthly origin. The Shah of Iran’s government fell in 1979; many records from the period were lost. What survived is enough.

Watch: The Tehran UFO Incident 1976 — Full Military Analysis

Documentary and witness testimony available on YouTube.

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Recommended Reading

UFOs and the National Security State — Richard Dolan

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UFOs: Generals, Pilots and Government Officials Go On the Record — Leslie Kean

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