Another push for us all to put our heads in the sky today as the Pentagon released a report from the AARO (The Department of Defense, All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office) reviewing classified U.S. government programs (back to 1945) that debunked ongoing speculation of UFOs, saying that it officially found no evidence of alien spacecraft, activity or efforts by the U.S. government to withhold or cover up information regarding such things.

Though the report was meant to debunk Americans’ suspicions that the government can confirm the presence of extraterrestrials, after reading it, it’s not entirely convincing. One highlight of the review centered around a program that was to be named “Kona Blue” and aimed to capture an alien spacecraft with the purpose of reverse-engineering the technology.

AARO’s investigation uncovered the full path of the alleged program and found that it never actually got off the ground. But why even suggest the creation of such a project if aliens and alien spacecraft don’t exist, and there has never been any evidence of such?

The Director of the AARO, Tim Phillips, told reporters at a briefing regarding the review that “AARO assesses that alleged hidden UAP (or UFO to laymen) programs either do not exist or were misidentified authentic national security programs unrelated to extraterrestrial technology exploitation.”

The AARO interviewed several individuals regarding their alien spacecraft experiences as well. One individual claimed to have personally seen alien technology being tested at a government facility. The report went on to dismiss this claim as it “almost certainly was an observation of an authentic, non-UAP-related, technology test that strongly correlated in time, location, and description.”

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