Former US Intelligence Officer: The US Government's Long term Concealment of UFO Recycling Program Century | US | Recycling
According to the Associated Press, on the 26th local time, a former US Air Force intelligence officer testified in Congress that the United States has been concealing a long-term plan aimed at recycling and reverse engineering crashed unidentified flying objects for decades, but the US military has denied his claim.
According to reports, the testimony provided by retired military officer David Grosh to the House Oversight Committee is highly anticipated, marking the latest congressional investigation into the field of "unidentified aerial phenomena.".
The term UAP is an official term used by the US government to replace "unidentified flying objects". Although research on mysterious aircraft or objects often evokes associations with aliens, Democrats and Republicans have been pushing for further research in recent years because they are concerned that some of the special flying phenomena observed by pilots may be related to American competitors and involve national security issues.
Grush stated that he was commissioned by a UAP government task force leader in 2019 to investigate all highly confidential plans related to the task force. He was sent to the National Reconnaissance Office responsible for operating US spy satellites.
Grush claimed to have learned of a decades long UAP debris recovery and reverse engineering project while carrying out the mission, but was not granted access to the project.
When asked if the US government has any information about extraterrestrial life, Grush said that the US may have been aware of the existence of "non-human activities" since the 1930s.
He also claimed that the US government not only owns UAP, but also the remains of "non-human" pilots, but he himself has not seen them with his own eyes.
The Pentagon has denied Grush's claim of "covering up the truth.". A spokesperson for the Ministry of Defense stated that investigators have not found any verifiable information to confirm any past or current claims of possession or reverse engineering of extraterrestrial material programs. The statement did not mention unidentified flying objects that were not suspected to be extraterrestrial objects.
According to CNN, the other two witnesses attending the hearing on that day, Graves and Frevo, were former US Navy fighter pilots. When asked why UAP poses a threat to national security, Frevor said of a scene he witnessed in 2004, "The technology we face is far superior to any technology we have."
In April 2023, Kirkpatrick, the director of the Global Anomaly Analysis Office responsible for tracking unidentified flying objects at the Pentagon, stated that the US government is tracking 650 potential cases related to UAP. He emphasized that there is currently no evidence of extraterrestrial life, and his office has not found any "credible evidence" of objects that violate known laws of physics.