Former Director of National Intelligence Reveals: UFO Actions Cannot Be Copied by Humans! The United States is about to reveal secret evidence

The U.S. Department of Defense admits to having allocated large sums of money to secretly search for UFOs (UFOs), pictured in a screenshot of the ufo film released by the Pentagon. Photo/U.S. Department of Defense

The U.S. has too much undisclosed UFO evidence, some of which is completely beyond human imagination. According to John Ratcliffe, former director of national intelligence, the U.S. has evidence that UFOs break the sound barrier without producing sonic booms, and that their maneuverability exceeds the limits of known technology.

According to Fox News (Fox News) and the Daily Mail (Daily Mail) 22 reported that the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies must release details of the intelligence by June 1. As the day of declassification approaches, there is growing concern. Radcliffe said many of the incidents remain difficult to explain. He stressed that there are far more sightings than have been made public, and that some of them have been declassified.

“What we call sightings are objects witnessed by Navy or Air Force pilots or images captured by satellites that are apparently carrying out unexplained activities.” Their movements cannot be imitated by humans with current technology, Radcliffe said. And while they fly at speeds that have broken the sound barrier, they do not produce sonic booms.

In addition, he noted that this unexplained aerial phenomenon has been observed all over the world. The Trump administration limited in December, the relevant agencies must disclose information on UFOs within 180 days. And Radcliffe said he had hoped that their findings would be made public before the new Biden administration took office on Jan. 20.

And the report in question was sandwiched between a whopping $2.3 trillion (about 65 trillion Taiwan dollars) New Crown Pneumonia relief package, signed into law by President Trump last December.

The report, produced by the Pentagon and intelligence agencies, must confirm whether these aerial phenomena pose any threat, and whether they could be caused by enemy nations.

Sometimes they are curious to know if the enemy has a higher level of technology than the U.S. knows, Radcliffe said. However, in some situations, some of the status quo just lacks good explanation. He stressed that it’s healthy to release as much of this information as possible.

And the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Project Team (UAPTF) issued a revised report in early 2020 that said UFOs can travel through the air and water at will, travel unnoticed through the sea at fire speed, and scamper up into the sky at an alarming rate.