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The US is hiding the UFO program, says a former Air Force intelligence official

 

Unveiling Truth: Luis Elizondo, Ex-Intelligence Officer of US UFO Program, Amazes in Conference Snapshot

   A former Air Force intelligence official said in congressional testimony on Wednesday that the United States has been concealing a long-running program that recovers and reverse-engineers unidentified flying objects. The Pentagon denied his allegations.

The highly anticipated certification of a retired Major. While the study of UFOs often invokes discussions of aliens and "little green men," in recent years Democrats and Republicans have pushed for more research as a matter of national security out of concern that sightings of the pilots could be linked to adversaries from the United States.

Grosh said he was asked in 2019 by the chair of the government's task force on unpaid work programs (UAPs) to identify all of the top-secret programs related to the task force's mission. At that time, Grusch was assigned to the National Reconnaissance Office, which operates the country's spy satellites.

"I was informed in the course of my official duties of the failure of a UAP reverse engineering and recovery program several decades ago, to which I have been denied access," he said.

Grosh replied that the United States might have known about "non-human" activity since the 1930s if the government had any information on alien life.

Pentagon denied Grosh's allegations of a cover-up. Defense Department spokeswoman Sue Goff said in a statement that investigators have not disclosed "any verifiable information to substantiate allegations that any program involved the acquisition or reverse engineering of foreign material." The report did not address UFOs that are not suspected of being extraterrestrials.

Grosh says he decided to become a government informant after he was discovered and suffered reprisals for speaking out. He declined to be more specific about the methods of retaliation, citing an ongoing investigation.

"It was so brutal and unfortunate, and some of the tactics they used hurt me professionally and personally," he said.

Congressman Glenn Grotman, R-Wisconsin, presided over the session and joked to a packed audience, "Welcome to the most exciting subcommittee in Congress this week."

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