A governmental watchdog report has found that the United States has no defense mechanisms in place in the event of an alien invasion of the country. The Department of Defense’s Office of Inspector General compiled the report after studying the policies and measures of the Defense Department and Military Services when it comes to unidentified aerial phenomena(UAPs).
The Defense Department has been collating data and sifting through UAP sighting claims since the 1940s. UAPs, which are often used interchangeably with UFOs, may not necessarily be extraterrestrial in origin. The term can refer to an airborne incident that is not identifiable immediately; sightings can often be natural atmospheric phenomena.
Since UFO whistleblower David Grusch testified in front of Congress last year, there has been renewed pressure on the government to be more transparent about their knowledge of extraterrestrials. Grusch claimed that the US government has been reverse engineering retrieved alien craft since the 1930s.
If you can’t see the official report below, click here.
-
UFO experts now ‘searching underwater‘ after claims of waterborne alien craft
-
An alien invasion of Earth is ‘possible’ predicts Harvard professor
With the societal want for official UFO information at an all-time high, Inspector General Robert Storch released his department’s report on January 25. The details of the analysis show the Defense Department as being wholly unprepared in the scenario of aliens invading.
“Given the significant public interest in how the DoD is addressing UAPs, we are releasing this unclassified summary to be as transparent as possible with the American people about our oversight work on this important issue,” Storch said in his statement.
The damning report found that the United States government lacked a “comprehensive, coordinated approach” against the possibility of a UAP invasion. The official capabilities, instead, focus on collecting and analyzing information on supposed UFO encounters.
-
Aliens living on Earth is ‘100pc certain‘ according to top Stanford academic
-
UFO probes confirmed by former British Prime Minister, says comedian Jimmy Carr
The Department of Defence has not used its “geographic combatant commands,” which are listed as deterrents for any “threats and attacks” that could arise for the country. This lack of preparatory steps, according to the report, could mean that national security is threatened alongside military personnel.
“For instance, the DoD OIG determined that the DoD has no overarching UAP policy and, as a result, it lacks assurance that national security and flight safety threats to the United States from UAP have been identified and mitigated,” the Inspector General.
-
Egg-shaped UFO was hidden at Area 51, according to extraterrestrial whistleblower
-
‘UFOs’ landed at Chernobyl disaster site to help humans by ‘sucking radiation from the air’
The Inspector General’s report made 11 recommendations that could adequately protect the country from an alien invasion. The report says that a process where the Department of Defence integrates responsibilities and roles regarding UAPs into already existing policies.
Click here to follow Irish Star on Google News for local news and features on Irish America.
Also recommended was an interim issue of counsel from the Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, as well as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff until such a point that the Department of Defence has its policies in place. The report highlights the need for “tools to help commands determine the threats posed by unidentified anomalous phenomena.”
For the latest local news and features on Irish America, visit our homepage here.
Story Saved
You can find this story in My Bookmarks.Or by navigating to the user icon in the top right.
Más historias