Tuesday, 30 April 2019

UFO News Article:
“What The Hell Is Going On With UFOs
And The Department Of Defense?”


26 April 2019
(The Drive, U.S.A.)

Tyler Rogoway reports on the U.S. Navy’s new 2019 UFO reporting guidelines.

Quote from the article:
“This reality has led to much speculation, and rightfully so, that the military knows far more about these strange happenings than they are willing to let on, at least on the surface. Otherwise, why wouldn’t they want to know more about intruders wielding fantastic technology that makes them impervious to existing countermeasures and defenses? 

The fact is that we actually know that in the last 15 years, under at least some circumstances, the military has wanted certain high-fidelity data related to encounters with what many would call UFOs. The most compelling encounter of our time, at least that we know of, occurred in and around where the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group was operating during workups to deployment in 2004.

Let me underline this again for you, the Nimitz encounter with the Tic Tac proved that exotic technology that is widely thought of as the domain of science fiction actually exists. It is real.

So yeah, someone was highly interested in this event (the November 2004 USS Nimitz Carrier Strike Group 11 UFO case) within the DoD.

If the DoD truly has no idea of what these things are, then it seems absurd that it is just now curious about them after the better part of a century of sightings and even major encounters, including many having to do with its own installations and personnel.”

Information by the U.S. Navy regarding the new 2019 UFO reporting guidelines (the information came from Joseph Gradisher, Spokesperson for Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Information Warfare) (not quoted verbatim):
Incursions of unidentified aircraft into the U.S. airspace can be both a security risk and pose a safety hazard for both U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force aviation.

In recent years – a number of unauthorized and/or unidentified aircraft have entered various military-controlled ranges and designated airspace.

Because of the safety and security concerns – the Navy and the Air Force take these reports very seriously and investigate each and every report.

The new UFO reporting guidelines are being updated and formalized so that reports of any suspected incursions can be made to the right authorities.

The U.S. Navy wants to get to the bottom of this (who is doing it, where it is coming from and what their intent is) – and we need to try to find ways to prevent it from happening again.


Related posts:










realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=USS+Nimitz



Freeze-frame of the Tic Tac UFO (filmed from a U.S. Navy

F/A-18F Super Hornet jet fighter on 14 November 2004)
(U.S. Department of Defense/disclose.tv/gstatic.com image)










USS Nimitz (CVN 68) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)























USS Princeton (CG-59) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)










F/A-18F Super Hornet (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)