A former Pentagon official has claimed that the U.S. government has recovered non-human lifeforms in a top-secret spacecraft crash recovery program. spooky Assert.
“The United States has been involved in recovering objects and vehicles of unknown origin that are not from our country or any other foreign country that we know of,” said Luis Elizondo, a former senior U.S. government intelligence official. News Nation.
Elizondo claimed that one of the two spacecraft in the Pentagon’s inventory was used during the alleged Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon (UAP) crash in Roswell, New Mexico in 1947.
But it’s not just the spacecraft that the U.S. government is said to be interested in extraterrestrial life, it’s also interested in the organisations that operate them.
“We, the public, are not only interested in the vehicle itself, but also in its occupants and even in biological specimens. We are not the only ones,” Elizondo told the media.
“We are not alone in the universe, that’s a simple fact. The U.S. government has known that fact for decades.”
Elizondo, who left the Pentagon in 2017, has revealed more facts than any other US official to date, making the US government’s allegations of extraterrestrial involvement all the more frightening.
Elizondo claims to have witnessed a “technical device” being removed from a US soldier after an “encounter with a UAP,” and that the object allegedly made odd movements as it was being “removed.”
“I have seen technical devices removed, excised by VA surgeons, trained physicians, from U.S. military soldiers who claim to have encountered UAPs,” he told the news outlet.
“Doctors claimed a foreign object had tried to run over him or escape the resection.”
The Department of Defense has denied Elizondo’s claims, stressing that the government has “no credible evidence of extraterrestrial activity.” News Nation.
“The Department of Defense is committed to openness and accountability to Congress and the American people, but we must balance this with our obligation to protect sensitive information, sources and methods. To date, we have not found any credible evidence of extraterrestrial activity,” Pentagon spokesperson Sue Goff told the outlet.
“To date, AARO has found no verifiable information to support any allegations that any past or current programs exist for the possession or reverse engineering of extraterrestrial materials.”
Goff also alleges that Elizondo “had no responsibility whatsoever with respect to the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP) while assigned to the position of Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.”
Elizondo wrote in the article: Newsweek He announced on Tuesday that he graduated from the University of Miami with a degree in microbiology and immunology and a degree in parasitology.
He claims that after serving in the Army, he “served as a counterintelligence special agent” for the United States, where he was tasked with protecting “advanced aerospace technology” from falling into the wrong hands.
However, in 2008, Elizondo “accepted a new position at the Department of Defense” and was then “approached by two individuals working on a program I had never heard of before,” who knew of Elizondo’s “background” and were looking to bring him into their “organization.”
“After meeting with the director and a few other people, I agreed to take on a role in their program. It was called the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), which is a niche program under the AWSAPP umbrella,” he said. Written.
He eventually worked his way up the ranks to AATIP, where a “typical day” involved investigating reports of UAPs, “primarily from the Navy,” specifically incidents where UAPs “came dangerously close to our aircraft.”
“Not only were these UAPs able to fly unimpeded into our controlled airspace and combat zones, but they also performed far beyond our technical capabilities,” Elizondo argued.
A former Pentagon insider claims the government chose to make the information public because it believes “the American public has a right to know that UAPs are in our airspace,” and that the government is keeping it secret because UAPs may be an “unsolvable threat” and it doesn’t want to undermine “confidence in our ability to protect the American people.”
