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Pentagon report says no evidence of alien visits

The Department of Defense’s newly created All Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) released its findings on Friday. Historical Record Report Volume 1meets the requirements established by Congress to review the history of what is now called Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP).

The report’s findings are based on former military intelligence officer and prominent whistleblower David Glash, who claimed without evidence that the U.S. was hiding information about the unmanned aircraft and that the drones had been recovered. It is contradictory. Non-human artifacts using non-human biological materials.

AARO reviewed U.S. government studies and reports; [Goingbackto1945weinterviewed30peopleexaminingbothclassifiedandunclassifieddocuments[1945年にまで遡り、機密文書と非機密文書の両方を調べながら、30人にインタビューしました。

According to the office’s report, No evidence of hidden UAP reverse engineering programsstates that these program claims are false, misidentified, or relate to unestablished programs.

Pentagon spokesman Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said the department “Rigorous analytical and scientific approach The purpose of the investigation was to investigate past U.S. government-sponsored UAP research efforts and claims by interviewees that the U.S. government and various contractors are recovering and concealing extraterrestrial technology and biological materials. ”

“To date, AARO has discovered: no verifiable evidence against claims that the U.S. government and private companies are accessing or reverse engineering extraterrestrial technology,” Ryder said.

“Also, AARO has found no evidence that any U.S. government investigation, academically sponsored study, or official review board has confirmed that UAP sightings represent extraterrestrial technology,” he said. added.

Found by AARO Most UAP sightings involved regular objects He said they are “the result of misidentification” and that while some UAP reports remain unresolved, they remain mysteries due to the lack of available data to unravel them. Ta.

However, AARO acknowledged that the Department of Homeland Security: I received a proposal for a special program. Dubbed “Kona Blue” by individuals who wanted to investigate whether the United States was hiding extra-world technology, the program was never approved.

Read the full report at TheHill.com.

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