Former Pentagon official: Enough evidence to confirm the existence of real UFOs

The U.S. government has long conducted research on UFOs flying over military bases in the country. The U.S. Department of Defense released three videos of proven observations in April of this year. (U.S. Department of Defense)

A former Pentagon official says there is enough evidence to believe that UFOs are real.

The New York Post reported on April 30 that the former official, Luis “Louie” Elizondo, who joined the Pentagon’s “He joined the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP) in 2008 and served as the program’s director from 2010 to 2017.

In addition to investigating “unidentified flying objects” (UFOs) or “unidentified aerial phenomena” (UAPs), the program also studies advanced theoretical physics concepts such as antigravity and warp engines (UAPs). Examples include antigravity and warp drive, a hypothetical faster-than-light (FTL) propulsion system.

As part of his job, Elizondo said, he has access to Pentagon UFO data and talks to military witnesses who encounter unexplained flight phenomena on an almost “daily” basis. Meanwhile, Navy pilots testified that the attractive 50-foot Tic Tac-type (note: strange rectangular objects resembling Tic Tac candy) craft disappeared without a trace in the blink of an eye. Other pilots said their fighter jets had a “near collision” with a strange “sphere wrapped in a cube.

Elizondo watched the video and saw the photos and carefully examined all the evidence, including radar and electro-optical data that showed the UFO gliding 60 miles rapidly in five seconds and descending at 14 miles per second. 60 miles in five seconds is equivalent to 43,200 mph. This compares to the U.S. Air Force’s SR-71 Blackbird reconnaissance aircraft – which can travel up to about 2,100 miles per hour.

UFO technology allows them to fly without wings or obvious airworthy configurations, and the way UFOs lift off turns rational engineering on its head. “These things have no wings, no cockpit, no control panel, no rivets on the craft, no visible signs of propulsion, and they are somehow able to resist the natural effects of Earth’s gravity.” Elizondo said.

Elizondo added that the unidentified craft could fly 50 feet above the Earth’s surface, 80,000 feet in the air, and even dive underwater with no degradation in performance at any level, “more advanced than ours.”

“Humans can withstand 9G forces for a short period of time without negative physical effects. the F-16 fighter will begin to experience structural failures at around 17G forces. The (unidentified) object we saw was running 600G forces, clearly well beyond the limits of what any object can withstand.” G-force (gravitational force equivalent, G-force) was originally an aviation term, but is now widely used as a unit of force to be applied when moving or changing tangents, or accelerating and decelerating, he said.

Nick Pope, former head of the UFO office at the British Ministry of Defense, told the New York Post that it all adds up to “an advanced technology that we don’t yet have.

Elizondo said there is enough evidence to convince him that UFOs are real.

He previously told U.S. media outlet Politico that many UFO sightings have occurred near vulnerable nuclear facilities, watercraft and power plants.

One interpretation of the question of whether UFOs are simply vehicles on Earth or from another galaxy, Elizondo said, is that humans can only perceive a small part of reality. The human eye cannot see many things (such as infrared, radio waves, cosmic radiation). Humans are confronted with things in front of them, but cannot see them.

In April, the U.S. Department of Defense confirmed that photos and video of an unidentified aerial phenomenon (UAP) taken by Navy personnel in 2019 were indeed legitimate images of the unidentified object, showing a triangular-shaped object flashing and moving through clouds.

U.S. Navy officials refer to the mysterious objects as UAPs (“unidentified aerial phenomena”) rather than UFOs, according to U.S. Navy spokesman Joe Gradisher, who explained that the term UAP is used to refer to “unauthorized, unidentified aircraft or objects that have been sighted. He explained that the term UAP is used to refer to “unauthorized, unidentified aircraft or objects that have been sighted and observed entering or operating in various military controlled training areas.

By June 25, 2021, U.S. intelligence agencies are required by Congress to issue a report on “unidentified aerial phenomena. “There is a critical level of interest,” Elizondo said. “I think (government officials realize) it’s like putting the cat back in the bag or putting the toothpaste back in the tube. Now that the government has acknowledged the unexplained unexplained flight phenomenon, it’s going to be hard to go back.”