Ex-Pentagon Official Claims Government Is Hiding UFO Secrets From Americans
The existence of extraterrestrial beings has been a topic of huge speculation amongst experts and common folks for decades. Many believe the authorities have not been open with the public about their UFO findings.
Luis Elizondo, a former top US military official has confirmed these suspicions in his book Imminent: Inside the Pentagon's Hunt for UFOs, Times reported. The former officer details in his book, that authorities have conducted autopsies on non-human entities.
In the book, Elizondo explains how the state goes about covering up extraterrestrial activities, Indy100 reported. He mentions in the book that authorities have been dealing with instances of non-human visitors for decades.
Elizondo shares in the book that a "super-secret umbrella group" is responsible for dealing with these extraterrestrial occurrences. He claims that this team for almost half a decade has been retrieving technological and biological remains of "non-humans" from various sites.
Elizondo shares that the authorities follow a certain protocol while handling extraterrestrial sightings. This protocol came to being after the Roswell sightings. UFO enthusiasts for years have claimed that the crash of a purported US Army Air Force's weather balloon near Roswell, New Mexico in 1947, was an alien spacecraft.
Elizondo claims, according to his sources, two flying saucers collided that day, which led to the crash, Indy100 reported. He added, that four non-human bodies were found on the site. After this incident, the state made certain rules regarding how such occurrences would be communicated to the public.
As per the UAP playbook, the first step after such instances is to "admit nothing and deny everything," Elizondo stated, Indy100 reported.
Then the authorities "make counter-accusations, intimidate witnesses into saying nothing, discredit those who don’t play along, then stigmatize the topic and threaten anyone who utters a single word about this topic with the US Espionage Act," he specified. In this manner, the state hides facts related to UFOs from the general public.
In his book, Elizondo talks about three events where "non-human cadavers" were collected from the sites of supposed air crashes, Indy100 reported. He also shared that authorities conducted autopsies on many non-human cadavers they had in their custody.
The former military official had personally come across one that stated that "the brain [of the non-human subject] had no convolutions (the wrinkled exterior portion of the brain)," as specified by him in the book.
Elizondo added, that the brain instead had "a smooth surface, similar to lower-functioning animals here on earth. It also described a conjoined gut and liver, and a three-chambered heart, like reptiles," Indy100 reported. This corpse was allegedly analyzed at Fort Detrick, Maryland, a military base involved in the US biological weapons program from 1943 to 1969.
Elizondo before getting involved in the investigation of these UFO incidents, was skeptical when it came to extraterrestrial sightings, Indy100 reported. "I was never particularly interested in UFOs or science fiction. My background was in science," he explained. His opinions shifted after he came across such strong pieces of evidence supporting the existence of aliens, during his work.
Elizondo after running anti-terrorism missions against Islamic State, al-Qaeda, and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah was recruited into the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP) in 2009. While working in the program he came across various investigations conducted by the state on extraterrestrial beings.
Elizondo resigned in 2017 and in a parting letter to Jim Mattis, America’s secretary of defense at the time, urged the government to "take seriously the many accounts by the navy and other services of unusual aerial systems interfering with military weapon platforms and displaying beyond next-generation capabilities," Indy100 reported.
Elizondo spoke about his experience at AATIP because he wanted the public to know the truth, Indy100 reported. "When governments lie to their people, all of democracy is at risk," he said. "Secrets always have expiration dates."