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Sunday, April 26, 2026

How to interpret the latest UAP whistleblower to Congress - Quartz

The truth is out there, but it’s not here, at least not yet.

In sworn testimony before Congress, a former US intelligence officer named David Grusch said that the US government operated “a multi-decade [unknown anomalous phenomena] crash retrieval and reverse engineering program” that worked on “non-human technology.”

Grusch said that despite being authorized to investigate this program, he was denied access to further information. He reported the existence of the programs to independent government auditors and became a whistleblower, only to suffer undetailed retaliation from his superiors.

These claims attracted global attention, building upon several years of new transparency around US military pilots who have reported seeing objects with inexplicable maneuvering capabilities, some of which have been recorded by various sensors on fighter jets and Navy ships. Some of the videos may be misleading—an object in a video dubbed “GOFAST” was only going about 40 mph, according to NASA analysts, while UAP skeptic Mick West argues that another, called “GIMBAL,” in fact reflects glare on the sensor in question.

Sean Kirkpatrick, the head of the Pentagon office collecting these claims, says there have been 800 reports since 1996, and just 5% can’t be explained, mostly due to a lack of information.

That organization, the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), issued a statement saying that, to date, it has “not discovered any verifiable information to substantiate claims...



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