CONGRESS GETS SECRET WARNING ON UFO INVASION!
What Pentagon brass revealed at historic hush-hush hearing
TOP military minds believe UFOs are monitoring U.S. defense installations in preparation to either land or launch an interplanetary assault on humanity, The National ENQUIRER has learned exclusively.
The bombshell disclosure came during a top-secret briefing given by Pentagon brass to the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence and Counterproliferation — the first such hearing in nearly 50 years!
According to a whistleblower linked to the closed-door session, one Department of Defense official told lawmakers the Pentagon has been actively planning for the possibility of an alien landing or attack. “The reports are deeply classified and weren’t disclosed in detail to Congress,” says the source, “but they conclude there is a high probability alien life forms have been monitoring Earth and that they have hostile intent.”
Photographs of unearthly objects being moved between military facilities in the last two years have led theorists to believe the
U.S. has obtained extraterrestrial craft and weaponry and scientists are studying them to figure out how to defend against a potential attack. The extraordinary closed-door admissions came after Deputy Director of Naval Intelligence Scott Bray publicly acknowledged American military personnel — mostly airmen — are reporting UFO contacts in unprecedented numbers— with sightings increasing. Over the last year alone, Bray says the Pentagon has logged 256 UFO encounters compared with only 144 reported over the prior 18 years.
“We have seen an increasing number of unauthorized and/or unidentified aircraft or objects in military controlled training areas and other designated airspace,” Bray notes.
Although none of the sightings can yet be definitively classified as nonterrestrial in origin, Bray admits “there are a number of events in which we do not have an explanation.”
Meanwhile, House subcommittee chairman Rep. André Carson says, “Unidentified aerial phenomena are a potential national security threat, and they need to be treated that way. For too long the stigma associated with [them] has gotten in the way of good intelligence analysis. Pilots avoided reporting or were laughed at when they did. DOD officials relegated the issue to the backroom or swept it under the rug entirely.
“Today we know better. They are real, and the threats they pose need to be mitigated.”