The U.S. Navy has drafted a procedure to investigate and catalogue reports of unidentified flying objects coming in from its pilots. But the service doesn't expect to make the information public, citing privileged and classified reporting that is typically included in such files.
Bible believers know that we are not alone in this universe, extraterrestrial beings are all through the pages of scripture, in both Testaments. Little green men? Not so much. But a King on a flying white horse with an army of redeemed soldiers flying behind Him through Outer Space? You better believe it.
"Then I turned, and lifted up mine eyes, and looked, and behold a flying roll." Zechariah 5:1 (KJV)
Jesus said that the
time of Jacob's trouble would be like it was in the 'days of Noah', when
half-breed fallen angel children roamed the earth and God destroyed it all with a flood. If you
are interested in the bizarre, the unexplained, 7-headed red dragons, zombies, flying UFOs people coming back from the dead and aliens from Outer Space, then dust off your King James Bible and take it for a spin. It's the wildest, most unbelievable Book ever written, and it's all true.
UFO information not expected to go to general public, Navy says
FROM SFGATE: Joe Gradisher, a spokesman for the office of the deputy chief of naval operations for information warfare, said in a statement that the Navy expects to keep the information it gathers private for a number of reasons.
"Military aviation safety organizations always retain reporting of hazards to aviation as privileged information in order to preserve the free and honest prioritization and discussion of safety among aircrew," Gradisher said. "Furthermore, any report generated as a result of these investigations will, by necessity, include classified information on military operations."
He added, "Therefore, no release of information to the general public is expected."
The Navy's recent decision to draft formal guidelines for pilots to document encounters with unexplained aerial phenomena comes after the revelation in late 2017 that the Pentagon ran a secret "UFO" office that spent $22 million over five years to collect and analyze "anomalous aerospace threats." Funding for the office, known as the
Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, or AATIP, officially ended in 2012, though operations continued.
Among other things, the program resulted in the release of footage from the cockpit cameras of military aircraft, which appeared to document oval-shape vessels that resemble flying Tic Tacs.
Reports of curious sightings from military aircraft aren't new. During World War II, Allied military pilots witnessed unexplained objects and fireballs that they dubbed "foo fighters." A number of official government investigations looked into such phenomena in the postwar period.
Now, the Navy has agreed to a more formalized process for cataloguing and investigating reports from pilots, a decision welcomed by former U.S. officials who want the military to take the matter seriously and remove the stigma in the armed forces of reporting such incidents.
READ MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment