For decades, there have been conspiracies and other seemingly ‘out there’ reports claiming that unidentified flying objects – UFOs – have been visiting our planet.
Much was made about a supposed crash-landing of an alien spacecraft outside of Roswell, N.M., in the 1950s, and there have been several reported sightings since.
No question, most of those have been blown off by most people as hoaxes and tinfoil-hat conspiracies. But it appears as though the naysayers and the doubters were wrong.
Since 2017, there has been more official confirmation of the existence of such craft – now referred to as UAP, or “unidentified aerial phenomenon – than at any time since Roswell, and complete with official U.S. Navy video.
Up to now, no one has ‘gone there’ and said they believe these craft are from another world.
Up to now.
According to The Debrief, U.S. intelligence officials have confirmed the government has evidence, photographic and otherwise, of UAPs that no one can logically explain or say with any high degree of confidence are of this world.
What’s more, officials have acknowledged that a U.S. Navy F/A-18 pilot had another encounter with a UAP just last year – in 2019, and managed to take an incredibly revealing picture of the craft using a cell phone.
You can see an artist’s rendering of the actual photo by clicking on The Debrief link above. But here are some incredible YouTube videos showing encounters with UAPs in 1994 and in 2013:
(Video Credit: The Debrief)
Here’s more from The Debrief:
Multiple sources confirmed for The Debrief that the UAPTF had issued two classified intelligence position reports, which one individual described as “shocking.” Details provided on these reports suggest both a greater degree of Pentagon involvement, and that the UAPTF’s hunt for unidentified objects isn’t confined only to aerial phenomena. …
One of the intelligence reports, released in 2018, is said to have provided a general overview of the UAP topic and included details of previous military encounters. According to sources who had read it, the report also contained an unreleased photograph of an “aerial phenomena” categorized as “unidentified.”
The Debrief was told the accompanying photo was captured from within the cockpit of an F/A-18 fighter jet with a pilot’s personal cell phone. According to three U.S. officials who had seen it, the photo showed an unidentified silver “cube-shaped” object. The report is said to have indicated the object was “hovering” or completely motionless when military pilots encountered it. All three officials agreed that based on the photo, the object appeared to be at an altitude of roughly 30,000 to 35,000 feet and approximately 1,000 feet from the fighter jet. …
The photograph, which is said to have also been taken from inside the cockpit of a military fighter jet, depicted an apparent aerospace vehicle described as a large equilateral triangle with rounded or “blunted” edges and large, perfectly spherical white “lights” in each corner. Officials who had seen it said the image was captured in 2019 by an F/A-18 fighter pilot.
Two officials that received the report said the photo was taken after the triangular craft emerged from the ocean and began to ascend straight upwards at a 90-degree angle. It was indicated that this event occurred off the eastern coast of the United States. Several other sources confirmed the photo’s existence; however, they declined to provide any further specifics of the incident.
Regarding the overall theme of the recent report, officials who read it say the report primarily focused on “Unidentified Submersible Phenomena,” or unidentified “transmedium” vehicles capable of operating both under water and in the air.
Tom Rogan, a former intelligence community official with decades of experience (and contacts) confirmed the information contained in The Debrief report. He writes at The Washington Examiner:
I can confirm the accuracy of McMillan’s story, the previously unreported Navy UFO encounter in late 2019, and his description of task force intelligence reports from 2018 and 2020. And that the government has been unable to positively identify the UFOs recorded on video by naval aviators in 2004 and 2015. Those videos were first published in a 2017 New York Times article and officially released by the Navy this year.
But that’s just the start.
McMillan correctly notes that the 2018 task force report “expressly stated that the potential for UAP to be ‘alien’ or ‘non-human’ technology was of legitimate consideration.” That report included photos taken by naval aviators on their personal cellphone cameras, which appear to show a cube-like UFO of the kind aviators described in the 2015 video-recorded incident.
It is the 2020 report, however, which is most striking. Shared very widely across the civilian and military intelligence community, it includes an extraordinary photograph taken in late 2019 of a triangle-shaped UFO. The photograph was taken by a F/A-18F fighter jet operating off the U.S. East Coast. According to the report, the Triangle UFO rose out of the Atlantic Ocean and rapidly accelerated out of sight on a vertical axis. I believe, but have been unable to confirm, that the aircrew responsible for the photo were operating off either the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower or the USS John C. Stennis.
Rogan goes on to list several reasons why all of this is very big news, and it has at least some to do with national security:
First, it confirms the ongoing presence of UFOs proximate to the Navy’s nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. These UFOs are apparently powered by unconventional non-jet based flight propulsion systems, exhibiting no exhaust trails, and are capable of rapidly navigating water, air, and space. No nation or corporation has been shown to possess, let alone manifest, such advanced engineering. As an extension, the reports reinforce the classified assessment that there is an unknown connection between naval nuclear reactors and proximate UFO activity.
Third, the previously unreported Triangle UFO incident adds a third design form to the portfolio of “Tic-Tac” and “Cube” form UFOs seen by naval aviators in 2004 and 2015. It’s worth noting here that triangle-shaped UFOs closely matching the one referenced in the 2020 report have been reported by witnesses in U.S. airspace for many decades.
Finally, the 2020 report carried a heavy focus on underwater operating UFOs, or what the government calls “Unidentified Submersible Phenomena.” McMillan rightly notes that the Navy is particularly loath to discuss this element of the phenomenon, fearing that doing so will compromise the operation of highly classified Navy acoustic sensor networks. As I’ve reported, another motive for the government’s secrecy here is the apparent ability of some UFOs to travel underwater at speeds of hundreds of knots or more per hour. Combining that factor with the UFOs’ means of and apparent propensity for occasionally closing with nuclear-powered submarines has the Navy reasonably concerned.
Namely, that the silent service isn’t running as silent as the admirals would like to admit. And that China or Russia must not be able to replicate this technology. Such a development would shred the credibility and very function of U.S. nuclear deterrent forces, of which ballistic missile submarines are supposed to be the most survivable linchpin.
We think it’s safe to say at this point that ‘believing in UFOs’ is no longer a fringe conspiracy theory because it’s obvious craft from…somewhere else…have been visiting our planet for quite some time. And there is a growing amount of visual evidence proving as much.
Bottom line: If our Pentagon thought this was all BS, the brass wouldn’t be wasting resources studying the phenomena.