Tuesday, May 24, 2022

The Pentagon UFO report. What was in it?

 Is the US government hiding the truth about UFOs and aliens? The British daily "The Sun" reached the Pentagon's documents of 1,500 pages. They describe numerous cases of meetings with unidentified flying objects. Moreover, people who observed UFOs suffered physical injuries in age cases. Some of them were created by radiation or contact with energy emanating from technologically advanced drives. Nervous system damage and unexplained pregnancies have also been reported. The Sun writes about 42 UFO contacts reported in medical records and another 300 similar incidents.

Aliens are not everything. The Sun claims that the pentagon documents also describe supernatural phenomena, crop circles, spontaneous self-immolation of people, and alien abductions. Apparently, the US government is researching technology such as clothing to make invisible, robots that control the mind, and technology that allows you to explore far outer space.

The report was also supposed to mention that the US government was preparing for potential contact with an extraterrestrial civilization. Apparently, various scenarios and methods of communication are being developed.

Is this report pure science fiction? The Sun claims that the document was to be drafted as part of the Pentagon's mysterious Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP) project that ran from 2012 to 2017. Meanwhile, sources such as Futurism and Live Science recommend taking the sensation of the British tabloid with a grain of salt. They demand the publication of a report, which "The Sun" stubbornly does not want to do ...

In the years 2004-2021, US navy pilots reported 144 times of sightings of "unidentified aerial phenomena," the Pentagon said. However, the long-awaited report by no means suggests that aliens could be responsible for these phenomena.

Many UFO enthusiasts were waiting for the published report, hoping that the US military would reveal the extraterrestrial origin of some of the observed phenomena. Recall that a few years ago the US administration stopped using the term UFO (unidentified flying object) and started using the abbreviation UAP (unidentified aerial phenomena).

While the change from "flying object" to "aerial phenomenon" suggests the natural origin of some observations, the report states that "most reported UAPs are likely to represent physical objects." Out of 144 reports on UAP from 2004–to 2021, only one could be identified. It turned out, according to the report, that it was the large balloon that was observed at the time of emptying.

While all the pilots' observations of the UAP varied significantly, the authors of the report said they found some patterns regarding the sizes, shapes, and, in particular, the drives that the UAPs might have at their disposal.

In 18 reports, "observers reported unusual UAP traffic patterns or flight characteristics," the report reads. Some objects appeared to be "stationary in the air, going against the wind, abruptly maneuvering or moving at high speed with no discernible means of propulsion."

Some of these "strange flight features" could be seen in three videos released by the US Navy in April 2020. The clips called FLIR, GOFAST, and GIMBAL showed what appeared to be a spacecraft moving at hypersonic speed with no visible means of propulsion.

The authors of the report also characterized five potential UAP categories: airspace interference (birds, balloons, and private drones), natural atmospheric phenomena (e.g., ice crystals that can reflect infrared radiation), US government secret programs, and hostile systems of foreign governments (technology developed by the governments of China, Russia or other hostile countries).

The fifth category has been defined as "other" and while there is no mention of extraterrestrial technology, it is this category that may still capture the imagination of UFO enthusiasts. Moreover, the open and public part of the report is only 9 pages long. The Guardian notes that the "juiciest details" and most relevant sightings may remain top secret, and still only available to a select group.

The long-awaited report comes after a law was passed on December 21, 2020, at the request of the Senate's intelligence committee, calling for an investigation into unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP). The Pentagon delayed the publication of the report until the last minute. From the moment the bill was passed, the head of the defense department had six months to present information to the public.

Some UFO information was not disclosed in a report published by the Pentagon. However, classified data is not necessarily about extraterrestrials, which creates even more anxiety.

The United States has taken all reports of UFOs seriously for several years. This information can often contain valuable data on, for example, spy objects sent by hostile countries. However, some phenomena cannot be explained, as confirmed by the Pentagon's report on unidentified flying objects published last year.





Interestingly, even the NASA administrator, based on the analyzed reports, was to say that we are not alone in space and it is possible that someone is watching us all the time. However, the most interesting fact is that some information contained in the Pentagon report was classified for unknown reasons. Recently, excerpts from the "cut" analyzes were published by The Black Vault.

As it turns out, the document on UFOs did not contain, inter alia, reports of pilots who similarly reported the appearance of unidentified objects. It turned out that all the witnesses spoke of "common shapes". It seems that encounters with objects of similar appearance are repeated.

Classified information does not necessarily have to be about an alien civilization and the appearance of spaceships. It is possible that the mysterious objects are drones or ultramodern planes sent to the United States by enemy countries, and this is even more disturbing now than the reports of aliens.

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