🇺🇸 CIA
In 1952, multiple witnesses in Africa and France reported sightings of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) with unusual shapes and behaviors. A technician in Dakar observed a flat object with reddish and bluish streaks moving at high speed. Although initially thought to be a meteor, other witnesses in Oran and Algiers described silver disks and luminous cylinders moving silently. These sightings sparked controversy, as local authorities tried to explain them as weather balloons or natural phenomena, but witnesses insisted they were not conventional objects. Descriptions included elongated shapes, blue lights, and glowing particles falling, adding mystery to the events.
A notable case occurred in the Tarn department of France, where hundreds of people observed a formation of 16 disk-shaped objects emitting blue light and bright particles. These phenomena generated both curiosity and debate about their nature. In West Germany, an inventor named Rudolf Schriever announced he had developed a "flying saucer" after 11 years of research, though his prototype was never tested in the air. These reports, though unconfirmed, reflect the growing fascination with UFOs in the 1950s, a time when science fiction and reality often intertwined.