A Pentagon UFO unit will make some investigations public, as former aides suggest that “vehicles not built on this land” were placed in storage by the US government.
The team will update the United States Senate Intelligence Committee on its investigation of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) every six months, The New York Times reported Thursday.
Publicly named in 2019 as the Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force, the Pentagon unit succeeded in a UFO investigation program that was said to have dissolved before 2017.
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A former official, Eric Davis, said The times who reported to the United States Department of Defense in March about the recovery of “off-world vehicles not made on this earth.”
The Pentagon consultant and subcontractor said the objects he believed “we couldn’t do … ourselves” were discovered during his time at the unit, where he has worked since 2007.
Although shock artifacts have never been documented in public, Harry Reid, the former Democratic Senate Majority Leader, said The times that he “concluded” that the UFO materials were in the possession of the government.
“After investigating this, I concluded that there were reports – some were substantive, others not so much – that there were actual materials that the government and the private sector had in their possession,” said the former Nevada senator.
It is unknown what details the Pentagon unit will provide to the Senate, while interim intelligence committee chairman Marco Rubio said last week that his priority was to find out who was behind the unidentified flying vehicles seen on bases. American military.
“We have things flying over our military bases and places where we are conducting military exercises and we don’t know what it is, and it’s not ours,” Senator Rubio told CBS Miami.
“Frankly, if it’s something from off this planet, that could be better than the fact that we’ve seen a technological leap on behalf of the Chinese or the Russians or some other adversary,” added Mr. Rubio.
The Senate committee ordered the Pentagon unit to “standardize the collection and reporting of unidentified aerial phenomena” as part of 2021 spending plans on intelligence agencies.
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