VIDEO: Alien mothership in solar system could send mini probes to Earth, Pentagon warns - GulfToday

VIDEO: Alien mothership in solar system could send mini probes to Earth, Pentagon warns

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A videograb shows part of an unclassified video taken by US Navy pilots showing interactions with "unidentified aerial phenomena." AFP

Gulf Today Report

The US Pentagon has issued an official warning of mysterious small objects being sent to Earth. According to the report, the objects are sent to Earth from a large Alien mothership in a manner similar to how NASA uses smaller vehicles to explore other planets in the solar system.

Sean Kirkpatrick, a Pentagon employee and head of the Astronomy Department at Harvard University, confirmed that a mothership is the one that launches small vehicles to Earth, according to the British newspaper Daily Star.

In 2005, the US Congress required NASA to find 90% of objects larger than 140 meters in diameter, and as a result, the Pan-STARRS telescopes were built.

This led to the discovery of the pencil-shaped ‘Oumuamua, an unknown interstellar object that may be a small asteroid or comet and appears to originate from outside the solar system or from elsewhere in our galaxy.

The report continued: “These small vehicles will reach Earth or other planets of the solar system for exploration, as the main vehicle passes in a small part of the separation between the Earth and the Sun.”

The report added: Astronomers will not be able to observe the spray of small compounds, because it does not reflect enough sunlight for current survey telescopes to notice it.

In 2021, a US intelligence report on dozens of mysterious unidentified flying object sightings said most could not be explained, but did not rule out that some could be alien spacecraft.

A 2021 unclassified report said researchers could explain only one of 144 UFO sightings by US government personnel and sources between 2004 and 2021, sightings that often were made during military training activities.

Eighteen of those, some observed from multiple angles, appeared to display unusual movements or flight characteristics that surprised those who saw them, like holding stationary in high winds at high altitude, and moving with extreme speed with no discernable means of propulsion, the report said.

The sightings of what the report calls unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) "probably lack a single explanation," said the report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

"We currently lack sufficient information in our dataset to attribute incidents to specific explanations."

The report made no mention of the possibility of — or rule out — that some of the objects sighted could represent extra-terrestrial life.

The report was ordered after more UFO sightings by military pilots became public and pilot and radar videos leaked out showing flying objects behaving strangely with no explanation.

It stressed that pilots and their aircraft are ill-equipped to identify out-of-the-ordinary objects floating around the skies.

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