An American intelligence officer who is now a whistleblower has given the US Congress and other authorities classified information about secret programs that, according to him, are in possession of alien craft, based on reports.
David Charles Grusch, the whistleblower, was a combat officer in Afghanistan and is a veteran of the US National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) and the US National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), according to a report by The Debrief.
He led the analysis of unidentified aerospace phenomena (UAPs), which is the official term for UFOs, inside a US Department of Defense agency. He has alleged that the United States has a craft that is of non-human origin.
Grush told The Debrief that the US government, its allies and defense contracts have been making recoveries of partial and fully intact vehicles for many decades. According to him, analysis has determined that those objects are “of exotic origin,” which means that they are either extraterrestrial or of unknown origin.
“They are retrieving nonhuman origin technical vehicles — call it spacecraft if you will — nonhuman exotic origin vehicles that have either landed or crashed,” said Grusch in an interview with News Nation.
While speaking to the two media outlets, Grusch followed protocols and completed a Security Review with the Defense Office of Prepublication and Security Review at the Department of Defense. The office cleared the statements he made for “open publication.” But it also clarified that the approval does not imply that the US Department of Defense endorses the statements, or even that they are factual.
A former U.S. intelligence officer claims a classified program has recovered UFO wreckage of “nonhuman origin.” @rosscoulthart and @BrianEntin report on why the Air Force veteran is taking his claims to Congress: https://t.co/kmQh5lCRiM #VargasReports pic.twitter.com/cEfNumKSwN
— NewsNation (@NewsNation) June 6, 2023
Incidentally, the authors of the report in The Debrief are Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal, who also contributed to the 2016 New York Times article “Glowing Auras and ‘Black Money’: The Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program,” which broke the story about the Pentagon’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program.
Susan Gough, a Department of Defense spokesperson, issued the following statement in response to the reports, according to News Nation, “To date, AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) has not discovered any verifiable information to substantiate claims that any programs regarding the possession or reverse-engineering of any extraterrestrial materials have existed in the past or exist currently. AARO is committed to following the data and its investigation wherever it leads.”