
The Wall Street Journal quoted an investigation report based on interviews with government officials, military personnel and thousands of pages of documents, saying that the U.S. Department of Defense has deliberately spread false information about UFOs and alien technology for decades to cover up the existence of secret military plans.
In the 1980s, an Air Force employee deliberately disclosed fake UFO photos to a bar owner near a confidential facility in District 51, Nevada. This is part of a test operation designed to cover up stealth fighter jets, including the F-117 fighter jet, which is similar to an alien spacecraft. According to sources, such manipulation is systematic and not only happened once.
This investigation is led by the United States Congress’s All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). During the investigation, AARO found cases of spreading false documents, “recruiting” new officers in secret projects that simply do not exist in connection with the UFO, and manipulating public opinion.
The investigation focused specifically on events that occurred in the 1960s and 1970s, when Air Force personnel recorded nuclear missile shutdowns allegedly caused by "floating objects." However, according to AARO's conclusion, the cause of such shutdown events is the testing of electromagnetic generators that simulate the consequences of nuclear strikes.
At the same time, many participants in such events still believe that the incident originated from aliens. AARO investigation shows hundreds of military personnel signed confidentiality agreements and have believed for decades that the information they received was from aliens.
Editor: Yuanye