David Grush reported that dead pilots were found in some of the discovered extraterrestrial vehicles.
The U.S. Defense Department in a secret military program allegedly was able to get spaceships of extraterrestrial origin. This was reported by former U.S. intelligence officer David Grush in an interview with NewsNation on Tuesday.
According to his version, the Washington administration has "undamaged and partially undamaged" extraterrestrial aircraft that "either [successfully] landed or crashed." A former employee of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency as well as the National Reconnaissance Office of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency claimed that the Pentagon was able to acquire them as part of a secret military program to search for extraterrestrial craft, which U.S. authorities have been engaged in for the past several decades.
Grash, 36, also said that many current members of the U.S. intelligence community continue to provide him with documents and other evidence of this secret program and space ships. "Sometimes [while detecting vehicles] there are dead pilots, believe it or not, as fantastic as it sounds, it's true," said Grasch, who also served in the U.S. Air Force in Afghanistan.
"We're certainly not alone [in the universe]," he added. - The data indicate, quite empirically, that we are not alone."
Complaint against the government
Grush said he filed a complaint with Congress and the Intelligence Community's Office of Inspector General, which serves as an independent oversight body. The document states that Washington has classified information that the former intelligence officer believes proves that the U.S. administration, defense contractors, and U.S. allies have been involved in a program to search for extraterrestrial vehicles for decades and until today.
As the retired serviceman believes, these developments have long been hidden in "numerous [U.S.] directorates as part of routine classified programs without appropriate reporting to various oversight agencies." Thus, he continued, the program has been "illegally contracting, <...> committing other crimes."
Grasch claims that for decades there has been "a cold war, unknown to the public, with close adversaries <...> to identify UFO crash sites and landings <...> in order to gain national defense advantages." "There is a sophisticated campaign of disinformation directed at the U.S. population that is highly unethical and immoral," said the former intelligence officer, referring to the government's failure to disclose the results of the program.
He added that since 2022 he has been providing Congress with all the relevant data in his possession.
Increase in UFO reports
In early 2023, U.S. intelligence reported that it was recording an increase in reports of unidentified flying objects and noted the importance of their detailed analysis from a security perspective. Thus, by August 30, 2022 the Office of the Director of National Intelligence of the United States received a total of 510 reports of "unidentified air phenomena. As specified, it is mainly those cases where information about UFOs is provided by the U.S. Navy and Air Force, as well as U.S. agencies.
The experts believe that "the recorded increase in reports of unidentified aerial phenomena is due in part to a fuller understanding of the possible threat they may pose to flight safety and the potential danger of enemy intelligence gathering."