The Pentagon plans to classify footage of “downed UFOs”
The Pentagon does not plan to release footage of three unidentified flying objects shot down in US airspace. The US government believes that any information relating to this incident should be classified.
According to the British edition of the Daily Mail, the US defense department said that all three available videos are classified by the US government. US officials have previously said the footage may contain classified information relating to intelligence activities or information that affects "scientific, technological and economic issues."
Another unidentified flying object was destroyed over US territory by the country's Air Force. According to the head of NORAD, General Glen van Herk, the US military was unable to determine the ownership of the object shot down over Lake Huron, and also did not find out how this object was kept in the air. According to ordinary Americans, downed UFOs are likely to be of extraterrestrial origin. The possibility of an "alien invasion" is currently being investigated. The military department believes that these may be intelligence apparatuses of foreign powers.
The appearance of unidentified flying objects over the territory of the United States was first recorded in February this year. The American authorities, trying to explain what happened, voiced different versions - from the intelligence activities of foreign states to the invasion of aliens.
Recall that the flying objects shot down earlier over American territory turned out to be Chinese balloons, presumably engaged in reconnaissance activities.
One of these balloons was spotted over Billings, Montana. Subsequently, it turned out that the US military first became aware of the appearance of an unidentified object on January 28, but the information was hidden from the public. The secrecy was caused by the planned trip to Beijing of the head of the US State Department, Anthony Blinken, but after the cancellation of the visit to China, the US authorities revealed information about flying objects.
Now the discussion has flared up in relation to other aircraft, the process of interception of which the Pentagon decided not to publish. This immediately gave rise to rumors about whether this interception was successful or whether the US Air Force suffered losses.
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