UFOs Go Mainstream: Congress to Hold Hearing on Government Evidence
Ex-Intelligence Official David Grusch, to Testify Before House Committee on Claims of Alien Vehicles
Pentagon’s ‘UFO’ tracking efforts still find no alien origins
The extraordinary accusation that the US government is harboring alien spacecraft will be examined at a public congressional hearing in Washington Today. The hearing comes as more US elected officials appear more receptive than ever to the idea that aliens are real.
How to create a propaganda
In June, David Grusch, a former intelligence official, made a shocking claim that the US government has possession of “intact and partially intact” alien vehicles. Grusch, who led the analysis of unexplained anomalous phenomena (UAP) within the US Department of Defense Agency until 2023, alleged that the government and defense contractors had been recovering fragments of non-human craft, and in some cases, entire craft, for decades.
Some of these crafts were “very large, like a football field of size. He added that there had been “malevolent events” connected to UFOs.
Grusch has not seen the alien craft himself, but said in an interview with The Debrief that his claims are based on “extensive interviews with high-level intelligence officials.”
Wednesday’s hearing was sparked by Grusch’s allegations that information on these alien vehicles was illegally withheld from Congress. Grusch said that the government had a crash retrieval program that had collected downed UFO craft and that his investigation into that program was stymied.
This prompted the House oversight committee to order an investigation and hearing into what the government knows or does not know about UFOs.
Hearing was scheduled to occur on July 26, 2023. Grusch is expected to testify, along with other witnesses, to his claims and the government’s response to them.
Hearing is likely to generate much public interest, and it will be interesting to see what information is revealed. It is possible that a hearing could lead to further investigations into UFOs and the government’s knowledge of them.
UFO Hearing
Sedley David Grosch, a former intelligence official who claims the US government possesses “unsound and partially intact” alien vehicles, will testify before the House Oversight Committee today. Grosch, who led the analysis of unexplained anomalies (UAP) within the US Department of Defense until 2023, suggested that the US government had collected the “dead pilots” from these vehicles.
Groch’s claims are unusual and have not yet been independently verified. However, they sparked much public interest and were sure to be the main focus of Wednesday’s session.
The hearing will be conducted by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, which is chaired by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY). The committee is expected to ask Grosch about his allegations, and they may also ask him about the government’s general policy regarding UFOs.
Groch’s testimony is likely to be controversial and challenged by members of the committee. However, his testimony is also likely to be a major event, and it will be interesting to see what information he reveals.
The hearing was scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m. EST on Wednesday, July 26, 2023. It will be streamed on the House Oversight and Reform Committee website.
Will we get proof of UFOs?
It seems unlikely, but hearing is likely to raise some questions. We can expect to hear Grusch give a detailed version of his allegations regarding what the government knows about UFOs and potentially more claims of evidence of aliens.
We may even hear new information. Since the oversight committee began its investigation, Burchett, without naming his sources, has not been shy in claiming that the US has proof of extraterrestrials.
On the Event Horizon podcast, Burchett was asked if he had seen “compelling evidence” that the US was seeing things in the sky “that might not be of this earth.”
“Oh, 100%. 100%. No question,’ he said.
Burchett also said that the US has evidence of technology that “defies all of our laws of physics,” and speculated that extraterrestrial craft could be dangerous.
“If they’re out there, they’re out there, and if they have this kind of technology, then they could turn us into a charcoal briquette,” Burchett said.
Of course, this is a speculation. There is no concrete evidence suggesting that UFOs are real, let alone that they are piloted by aliens. However, this does not stop people from believing in it. After all, it is a lot more fun to imagine that we are not alone in the universe than to accept that we are just a tiny speck in the vastness of space.
Therefore, will we obtain proof of UFOs at hearing? Probably not. But that doesn’t mean we can’t have a little fun and speculate about what might be out there.”
Former Air Force official says he knows of colleagues injured by UAPs
David Grusch, a former member of a U.S. Air Force panel on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs), told a congressional hearing on Tuesday that he knows of “multiple colleagues” who were injured by UAPs. He also said he interviewed individuals who have recovered “nonhuman biologics” from crashed UAPs.
Grusch did not provide any specific details about the injuries or biologics, but his testimony adds to the growing body of evidence that UAPs may be more than just unidentified objects.
Asked by Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., to substantiate the crashed UAPs claim, the former intelligence official said that he could not divulge specific details, claiming that the information was too sensitive to share with the public.
He did, however, describe the nature of what he saw: “I have to be very careful here … [but] what I personally witnessed, myself and my wife, was very disturbing.”
A Pentagon spokesperson told NBC News that Grusch’s claims were false.
UFO spotted accelerating to ‘supersonic speeds’
David Fravor, a former Navy commander, said he and three fellow military pilots spotted a white Tic-Tac-shaped object in 2004, hovering below their jets and just above the Pacific Ocean.
As he descended to inspect the sighting, he claimed the unidentified aircraft, which he said bore no visible rotors, wings, or exhaust, began to ascend and approach his fighter jet.
He claimed that the UAP then vanished, only reappearing a few seconds later, but this time it was spotted 60 miles away.
Fravor told the committee that the technology he and his team encountered would defy logical explanation.
“The technology that we faced is far superior to anything that we had,” Fravor claimed. “And there’s nothing we can do about it, nothing.”
Congressional hearing calls for more reporting and study of UAPs
Rep. André Carson (D-IN), chairman of the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, and Counterproliferation, said at a congressional hearing on Tuesday that the hearing was “not the end of this discussion, but a new chapter and start.” He called for more reporting and study of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs), saying “the more we understand, the safer we are.”
Carson’s comments came after a number of witnesses testified about their experiences with the UAPs. One witness, retired Navy pilot Ryan Graves, said that he and his colleagues had seen UAPs “on a regular basis” while flying in the Navy. He said that the UAPs were “difficult to track” and “moved in ways that defied the laws of physics.”
Another witness, astrophysicist Eric Davis, said that he had seen classified government reports on UAPs that were “very concerning.” He said that the reports “raised the possibility that these objects are not of this world.”
Carson said that hearing was “an important first step” in the government’s efforts to understand the UAPs. He said that he hoped that the hearing would “encourage more reporting” and “lead to more study.”