The History Channel will cover an infamous Tri-State UFO encounter0
- From Around the Web, UFO News
- February 6, 2020
At first it looked like a monkey. Maybe even an old man.
At first it looked like a monkey. Maybe even an old man.
‘We’ve just gently been asked to sweep it under the carpet. It didn’t happen – that’s what they said. But we know what we saw.’
The incidents interrupted Exercise Mainbrace, a massive set of NATO war-game maneuvers.
The truth is out there… but you’re still not allowed to see it.
An intelligence report newly declassified by the CIA sheds new light on a nearly 50-year-old UFO mystery, revealing details gathered from an experimental missile range in present-day Kazakhstan.
REPORTS of UFO activity in Bradford over the last five years have included a fast-moving oblong object with flashing lights over Horton Bank Top and a craft-like white ball near Wyke.
There’s been an interesting, if not terribly informative development in the story of those UFOs encountered by the Nimitz aircraft carrier battle group back in 2004.
Amid reports of flying saucers swarming the nation’s capital, the intelligence agency realized it needed a P.R. strategy.
In the 15 years since Chad Underwood recorded a bizarre and erratic UFO — now called “the Tic Tac,” a name Underwood himself came up with — from the infrared camera on the left wing of his F/A-18 Super Hornet, he’s become a flight instructor, a civilian employee in the aerospace industry, and a father. But he has not yet spoken publicly about what he saw that day, even now, two years after his video made the front page of the New York Times. As he explained before speaking with Intelligencer, Underwood has mostly wanted to avoid having his name “attached to the ‘little green men’ crazies that are out there.”
The frozen prairies of Canada have always been home to strange events and mysterious encounters. So it’s perhaps appropriate that the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg has just accepted a large donation of documents from a prolific UFO researcher confirming the province’s “unnatural history.”