UFO Congressional Hearing Reveals Pentagon Secrets on Advanced Technologies and Missing UAP Data

November 15, 2024
1 min read
Representative Image.
Representative Image.

Representatives Nancy Mace (R-South Carolina) and Glenn Grothman (R-Wisconsin) held the latest Congressional hearing on UFOs – now officially termed UAPs – on November 13 at 11:30 a.m. ET in the Rayburn House Office Building. “The American people are tired of the obfuscation and refusal to release information by the federal government,” they declared in their joint statement.

Luis Elizondo, former manager of the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, testified clearly: “UAP are real. Advanced technologies not made by our Government — or any other government — are monitoring sensitive military installations around the globe.” When Rep. Mace asked about secret UFO crash retrieval programs, Elizondo’s “Yes” response was unequivocal.


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Michael Gold, former NASA administrator, emphasized the need to “overcome the pernicious stigma that continues to impede scientific dialogue.” He stated that “probably the vast majority of UAP are drones, experimental aircraft, weather conditions… But there is a percentage that isn’t.”

The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), established July 2022, processes UAP reports from military and FAA sources. They accept reports from government personnel dating back to 1945, though not from the general public.

Michael Shellenberger’s testimony revealed the “Immaculate Constellation” program, describing an F-22 encounter where the aircraft “was intercepted and boxed in by approximately 3-6 UAPs.” He shared a whistleblower report about the program with lawmakers.

Elizondo characterized UAPs as “an enigma” and stated “we are talking about technologies that can outperform anything we have in our inventory.” He warned this could be “an intelligence failure eclipsing that of 9/11 by an order of magnitude.”

Historical records on UFO investigations are extensive. The Navy maintains online case files, the FBI holds UFO records from 1947-1954, and the National Archives contains 37 cubic feet of Project Blue Book documentation. Of Project Blue Book’s 12,618 reported UFO sightings, 701 remained “Unidentified.” The Air Force stated none indicated abilities beyond modern science or constituted security threats.

In 1977, President Carter asked NASA to examine UFO investigations, but both NASA and the Air Force concluded “nothing would be gained by further investigation.”

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