UFO Disclosure: From Tin Foil to Pentagon Briefings
In 2017 the Pentagon admitted it had a UAP program. In 2023 a former intelligence officer testified under oath about non-human biologics. The story is no longer fringe.
For 70 years anyone who reported a UFO was a crank. Then in 2017 the New York Times published a front-page story confirming the existence of the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a $22 million Pentagon project that had been studying UAPs since 2007.
In July 2023, former U.S. intelligence officer David Grusch testified before Congress under oath that the U.S. government has been recovering "non-human biologics" and intact craft for decades, that members of Congress have been illegally denied access to these programs, and that personnel have been killed to maintain secrecy.
Three months later the Senate passed an amendment requiring the Pentagon to declassify all UAP records older than 25 years. The amendment was gutted in conference committee at the request of the CIA, NRO, and DNI.
The pattern: insiders confirm, the press reports, then the bureaucracy buries the disclosure. Repeat for 70 years.
The question is no longer "are they real?" The question is "why does the U.S. government work this hard to deny it - and what do they have?"