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Close EncounterCold War

Peruvian Air Force Dogfight — La Joya

Apr 11, 1980

La Joya Air Base, Arequipa, Peru

Cessna A-37 Dragonfly of the Peruvian Air Force — Captain Oscar Santa María flew this aircraft type when he pursued and fired on a UAP over La Joya Air Base on April 11, 1980

Cessna A-37 Dragonfly of the Peruvian Air Force — Captain Oscar Santa María flew this aircraft type when he pursued and fired on a UAP over La Joya Air Base on April 11, 1980 — Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

Credibility Assessment

High
Military WitnessPilot WitnessMultiple WitnessesOfficial ReportGovt. Acknowledgment

Event Description

Observed Shape
Sphere

Craft morphology

Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Reported Entities

No NHI encounter documented for this event.

On April 11, 1980, at 7:15 AM, Peruvian Air Force Captain Oscar Santa María Huanca was on duty at La Joya Air Base near Arequipa when radar operators detected an unidentified object hovering at approximately 600 meters altitude above the airfield. The base commander ordered Santa María to identify and eliminate the contact. Santa María scrambled his Cessna A-37B Dragonfly — an armed light attack aircraft — and climbed toward the target. At close range, Santa María described the object as roughly spherical, approximately ten meters in diameter, with a smooth polished metallic surface and no visible windows, doors, wings, engine inlets, or exhaust. It showed no markings or control surfaces. Santa María opened fire with his 20mm cannon, firing 64 rounds at the object from a range of approximately 600 meters. Rounds appeared to impact the object's hull with no visible effect — no deformation, no smoke, no debris, no altitude loss. The object then began to ascend and accelerate away. Santa María pursued for approximately 22 minutes in a chase that took him to 19,200 meters — near the service ceiling of his aircraft — as the object consistently maintained a lead distance that kept it just beyond effective weapons range. When Santa María finally received orders to break off due to critically low fuel state, the object remained visible and appeared to halt its ascent once the pursuit ended. The encounter was tracked on La Joya's ground radar throughout, providing independent corroboration of the object's maneuvers and Santa María's pursuit profile. Santa María filed a detailed official report to the Peruvian Air Force, which investigated the incident formally. The case became one of the most significant military UAP encounters in South American aviation history — notable for the duration and nature of the engagement, the failure of cannon fire to damage or deter the object, and the apparent responsiveness of the craft's flight behavior to the pursuer's actions and fuel state. Santa María recounted the encounter on multiple public occasions across the following decades and remained consistent in his account. He was promoted to general, a career trajectory inconsistent with the account being treated by the Peruvian Air Force as an embarrassment or fabrication.

5 Observables Detected

Instantaneous Acceleration
Hypersonic Velocity
Low Observability
Trans-Medium Travel
Anti-Gravity Lift

Suspicious Activity

Intelligence Agency
Cover-up Actions
Men in Black
Disinformation
Witness Suppression

Sources

mediaLt. Oscar Santa María Huertas — National Press Club Testimony, 2001governmentPeruvian Air Force Official Report — La Joya 1980

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