A former military officer, previously engaged in the US Army’s arms control, has discussed alien visits to military bases housing nuclear weapons, as reported by the Daily Mirror US.
Robert Salas, an alumnus of the U.S. Air Force Academy, has experience with unmanned aerial vehicles and ballistic missiles and later dedicated over two decades to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. He recently addressed a congressional hearing on UFOs alongside Rep. Nancy Mace.
Salas discussed “strange incidents” at military bases worldwide, suggesting that UFOs might be conveying messages about nuclear weapons. He exclaimed, “What the f***, these are nuclear weapons!” before promptly apologizing to Mace, who took no offense.
“The sky turned red and something appeared in the air that disabled the heads with an electromagnetic pulse.”
At that time, he was 26 years old and stationed at the base on the evening of March 24, 1967, when a mysterious incident took place. “The sky turned red, and an object emitted an electromagnetic pulse that disabled the warheads,” he reported to Congress.
He observed that although no weapons were harmed, it took 24 hours to resolve the issue. “They were a peace-loving species; their intention was to caution us,” he explained, suggesting that the aliens communicated with Earth in this manner.
He asserted that this event was a repetition of an occurrence eight days prior, a detail corroborated by the base commander during a discussion at that time.
He mentioned his decision to come forward was influenced by the establishment of a pertinent state committee, freeing him from the confidentiality agreement he had signed upon entering his position.
The Daily Mirror US echoed a similar sentiment from UFO researcher Robert Hastings, who claimed that alien spacecraft routinely survey major military nuclear sites. Sources from these facilities reportedly informed him of these occurrences.
Furthermore, at an earlier session in the US Congress’s lower house on UFOs, an independent journalist revealed a clandestine American program to investigate extraterrestrial beings, asserting that the U.S. has long been analyzing alien materials.
“Psychic” alleges that the Pentagon’s report on UFOs conceals “disturbing truths”
The self-proclaimed psychic Athos Salome, often referred to as the “Living Nostradamus,” alleges that the Pentagon’s UFO report conceals “disturbing truths.” He arrived at this assertion after examining 757 recent cases of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), writes the British tabloid DailyStar.
The Pentagon report attributes most cases to the misidentification of balloons, birds, and satellites. Yet, it also cites instances that elude straightforward explanations, such as a commercial aircraft’s close encounter with an unidentified object near New York.
Salome contends that the report generates more questions than it resolves. He believes that the US Department of Defense is preoccupied with the incorrect entities, as cryptoterrestrials, representatives of an advanced civilization, might be covertly residing on Earth.
The cryptoterrestrial hypothesis posits that UFOs indicate the presence of a concealed, Earth-based, technologically sophisticated civilization. Conspiracy theorist Aaron John Gulyas postulates that this serves to distract from the beings inhabiting our planet.
According to Salome, cryptoterrestrials, often indistinguishable from humans, dwell underground or in isolated regions, employing incomprehensible technology to stay concealed.
“Such civilizations could be the heirs of an alternative evolutionary lineage, potentially descended from intelligent dinosaurs or hominids who avoided direct interaction with humanity,” he believes.
According to Salome, the Pentagon intentionally dismisses the possibility of extraterrestrial origins to shift focus away from concealed technologies that might be of “terrestrial or interdimensional nature.” He proposed that advancements in drones and unconventional satellites might serve as a smokescreen for interactions with subterranean or interdimensional entities.