Ex–Intelligence Official Says Government Is Hiding Alien Technology From Congress

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The extraterrestrial enthusiasts in America have experienced a tumultuous journey over the past six years. It all began in 2017 when the New York Times disclosed that former senator Harry Reid had secretly allocated $22 million in Defense funds to investigate unidentified foreign objects.

Subsequently, Navy pilots came forward with reports of frequent UFO sightings, prompting the Pentagon to restructure its investigation process in an attempt to treat the matter more seriously.

Unfortunately, despite the heightened scrutiny, no significant breakthroughs were achieved, as it turned out that many of the objects sighted by the pilots were merely balloons.

However, a recent report by Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal, the journalists who initially broke the Times story, has provided a glimmer of hope for believers in extraterrestrial life.

The duo shared a compelling account on the science website called the Debrief. The story revolves around a Defense intelligence whistleblower named David Charles Grusch, who alleges that the Intelligence Community is concealing classified evidence related to “intact and partially intact craft of non-human origin.”

During an interview with NewsNation, Grusch went even further, claiming that the government possesses evidence of alien life through crashed spacecraft from another planet.

He stated, “Well, naturally, when you recover something that’s either landed or crashed, sometimes you encounter dead pilots. And believe it or not, as fantastical as that sounds, it’s true.”

Grusch’s complaint contends that the Pentagon, along with other nations and defense contractors, has recovered fragments “of exotic origin (non-human intelligence, whether extraterrestrial or unknown origin),” supported by morphological and material science testing, unique atomic arrangements, and radiological signatures.

He further asserts that these materials include both intact and partially intact vehicles.

Unlike a previous UFO expert in the government who faced discreditation, Grusch’s credibility is worth serious consideration.

A combat veteran of Afghanistan at the age of 36, he served as a member of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force from 2019 to 2021.

This task force, operated by the Office of Naval Intelligence, was responsible for investigating UFO sightings. Grusch represented the National Reconnaissance Office, one of the prominent U.S. intelligence agencies, during his tenure.

His colleagues, including retired Army colonel Karl Nell, who was also part of the UFO task force, hold him in high regard.

Nell affirmed Grusch’s integrity and supported one of his claims mentioned in the complaint, which states that a covert competition exists with other countries to identify and retrieve crashed or landed UFOs for exploitation and reverse engineering.

Nell stated, “His assertion concerning the existence of a terrestrial arms race occurring sub-rosa over the past eighty years focused on reverse engineering technologies of unknown origin is fundamentally correct.

As is the indisputable realization that at least some of these technologies of unknown origin derive from non-human intelligence.” Another intelligence official investigating UFOs, Jonathan Grey, concurred, emphasizing that the phenomenon of non-human intelligence is real and that we are not alone. He expressed frustration at the global inability to find a solution to this global phenomenon.

An unclassified version of Grusch’s complaint, shared with the Debrief, reveals that the Intelligence Community unlawfully withheld evidence of extraterrestrial technology from congressional oversight.

This action was taken to intentionally impede legitimate Congressional scrutiny of the UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena) Program. When Grusch raised concerns about this, he faced months of retaliation, the details of which are being kept confidential to protect the ongoing investigation’s integrity.

In response to his whistleblower complaint, an intelligence investigation has been initiated. While the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence refrained from commenting, the Pentagon confirmed the information in the report back in April. The Debrief has also provided insight into its fact-checking and reporting process for this story.

Grusch, who retired in April, expressed his hope that his claims would create an “ontological shock.” In his interview with NewsNation, he elaborated on his assertions, describing the retrieval of non-human origin technical vehicles, which could be considered spacecraft, from landings or crashes.

Initially, he was skeptical and believed it could be a deception or ruse. However, as his career progressed, he found that people started confiding in him, including senior former intelligence officers whom he had known for most of his career, all admitting their involvement in a similar program.

Grusch clarified that he had not personally seen photographs of the spacecraft. In April, the director of the Pentagon’s UFO research informed the Senate that no credible evidence had been found so far to substantiate extraterrestrial activity, off-world technology, or objects that defy known laws of physics.

Following the public disclosure of Grusch’s claims, a Department of Defense spokesperson informed Fox News that there is currently no verifiable information to support these claims.

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