Pentagon officially released three encounters with an Unidentified Flying Object that have happened late last month.
This is not fake news. The unknown aircraft appeared to be small in size, approximately the size of a suitcase, and silver in color,” one report describing an incident from March 26, 2014, said. During that encounter one of the Navy F/A-18 jets “passed within 1000′ of the object, but was unable to positively determine the identity of the aircraft,” the report added, saying the US Navy pilot “attempted to regain visual contact with the aircraft, but was unable.”
The Navy Safety Center Documents also back this up saying, in a recently declassified document from a previously Official Use Only document.
The novel reports share an analysis, apparently, designating the mysterious aircraft in question as “Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS),” which the early reports from a November 2013 a Navy F/A-18 pilot “was able to visually acquire a small aircraft.
The aircraft had an approximately 5 foot wingspan and was colored white with no other distinguishable features.
“Due to the small size, the aircraft was determined to be a UAS,” the report said.June 27, 2013, another report from an incident is said to have reported an encountere with an “aircraft was white in color and approximately the size and shape of a drone or missile,” according to the report.
But the reports say that even when the unidentified flying objects are assessed to be drones the military was unable to identify who was operating the drone, presenting a major safety and security challenge to the Navy jets training in the area which
“Post flight, the controlling agency contacted numerous local UAS operators, but none claimed knowledge of” the unidentified aircraft, the November report said.
“I feel it may only be a matter of time before one of our F/A-18 aircraft has a mid-air collision with an unidentified UAS,” one of the authors of a report warned.
“In many ways” drones “pose a greater midair risk than manned aircraft.They are often less visually significant and less radar apparent than manned aircraft,” the report said.
There is also the possibility that the drones could be operated by an adversary such as Russia or China who may have been seeking to collect information about the US military’s operations.
The Navy now has formal guidelines for how its pilots can report when they believe they have seen possible UFOs.
The videos of the encounters were first released between December 2017 and March 2018 by To The Stars Academy of Arts & Sciences, a company co-founded by former Blink-182 musician Tom DeLonge that says it studies information about unidentified aerial phenomena.If you liked this article, please LIKE SHARE AND COMMENT below! And don’t forget to check our other articles along the way!
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