Ex-official who revealed UFO project accuses Pentagon of 'disinformation' campaign
The former Pentagon official who went public about reports of UFOs has filed a complaint with the agency's inspector general claiming a coordinated campaign to discredit him for speaking out — including accusing a top official of threatening to tell people he was "crazy," according to documents reviewed by POLITICO.
Lue Elizondo, a career counterintelligence specialist who was assigned in 2008 to work for a Pentagon program that investigated reports of "unmanned aerial phenomena," filed the 64-page complaint to the independent watchdog on May 3 and has met several times with investigators, according to his legal team.
The claim that the government is trying to discredit him comes weeks before the director of national intelligence and the Pentagon are expected to deliver an unclassified report to Congress about UFOs and the government's strategy for investigating such encounters. The report is expected to include a detailed accounting of the agencies, personnel and surveillance systems that gather and analyze the data.
"What he is saying is there are certain individuals in the Defense Department who in fact were attacking him and lying about him publicly, using the color of authority of their offices to disparage him and discredit him and were interfering in his ability to seek and obtain gainful employment out in the world," said Daniel Sheehan, Elizondo's attorney. "And also threatening his security clearance."
Previously:
Pentagon's UFO Investigation Program Revealed
UFO Existence 'Proven Beyond Reasonable Doubt': Former Head Of Pentagon Program
Newly-Released Video Shows 2015 U.S. Navy Sighting of UFO
The US Navy is Drafting New Rules to Report UFO Sightings
US Navy Spokesman Acknowledges UFO Videos
The Pentagon Releases Official Footage of UFOs. No, Seriously!
The Pentagon Has Continued to Investigate UFOs Under Renamed Program
You Can Now Easily Download All CIA UFO Documents to Date
(Score: 4, Interesting) by Runaway1956 on Thursday May 27 2021, @10:17PM (1 child)
Yes, and no. In the pilot's favor, yes they are free to maneuver to get a better look at things they can't understand. And, they are trained to identify stuff in the sky. They aren't trained to interpret stuff that their eyes, their radar, and their cameras can't make sense of.
Within the scope of his training, you can probably believe most of what a pilot reports. Outside that scope, a pilot is just like anyone else. He is left floundering for explanations. When it comes to hi-tech, potentially alien technology, a Navy pilot is little more of an expert than you or me.
If a pilot comes back from a mission, and reports that he saw something that he can't explain, you can believe him without reservation.
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(Score: 2) by takyon on Thursday May 27 2021, @10:35PM
If it is "hi-tech" (drones or aliens), that's big news no matter which one it is. The skeptics don't believe this is highly technological at all, and are putting forward explanations such as weather balloons, distant passenger jets, oil rig flares, ball lightning, etc.
The pilots are gathering data with cameras, infrared sensors, etc., which is why we have these crappy videos. They are potentially seeing more than what the videos show too. Do they know if they are looking at a metallic or solid object?
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