Pentagon Spokesperson Dodges Question About Alien Bodies and Crafts
Article by Adam Barnhardt June 5, 2021 (comicbook.com)
• As Congress awaits a report about UFOs or ‘unidentified aerial phenomena’ (UAP) from the American intelligence community, members of the press corps have been pressing Pentagon officials on what the report might contain.
• In one example, a reporter for Task & Purpose’s Jeff Schogol made note that he “was talking to a gentleman” that contended the Department of Defense had alien bodies and craft. Schogol then point-blank asked spokesperson John F. Kirby (pictured above) if the DoD did, in fact, have possession of these items and if so, the location they’re being held at. Kirby side-stepped the question saying, “I’m not going to get ahead of the report that the DNI will submit that we are helping, obviously, and providing input to and I’ll just leave it at that, Jeff.” (see 48 second video clip below)
• At the same time, the New York Times published an article suggesting its sources have been briefed on the UAP report, and it will reveal that intelligence officials have no evidence the UFOs are extraterrestrial in origin. The same exact article goes on to say that intelligence officials insist that these authenticated UAPs (UFOs) are not made by the United States of America, even at a covert level.
• Senator Martin Heinrich (D-NM), a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, is dubious that these highly advanced craft are neither extraterrestrial or American. “I can’t imagine that what has been described or shown in some of the videos is of, belongs to any government that I’m aware of,” said Heinrich. “I’m not really a betting man. But the way these things operate, you know they certainly, you wouldn’t want a human being or any living creature in something that moves that fast and changes direction that quickly. So like I said, I have no idea what it is, but I think we should figure it out.” “[I]f there is a foreign government that had these kinds of capabilities, I think we would see other indications of advanced technology.”
The topics of UFOs and alien have been at the forefront of the news cycle as
Congress awaits a report about UAP — the government’s term for unidentified aerial phenomena — from the American intelligence community. With many talking about it, members of the press corps stationed at the Pentagon have been pressing government officials on what the report might contain. In one example this week, a reporter for Task & Purpose pressed a spokesperson for the Pentagon on whether or not the United States Department of Defense was in possession of alien bodies and crafts.
“The UAP Task Force is really designed to take a look at these unexplained aerial phenomena and try to help us get a better understanding of them,” John F. Kirby, the DoD’s primary spokesperson said in a routine press conference this week. “Again, I’m not going to get ahead of the report that the DNI will submit that we are helping, obviously, and providing input to and I’ll just leave it at that, Jeff.”
Kirby’s response came after Task & Purpose’s Jeff Schogol made note that he “was talking to a gentleman” that contended the Department of Defense had alien bodies and craft. Schogol then point-blank asked Kirby if the DoD did, in fact, have possession of these items and if so, the location they’re being held at.
Around the same time Kirby brushed the question off, the New York Times published a piece suggesting its sources have been briefed on the report, and in it, intelligence officials will reveal they’ve obtained no evidence the UFOs are extraterrestrial in origin. That said, the same exact piece also explains intelligence officials are unaware of the true nature of some UAP sightings, other than the fact they’re not aircraft built by the United States of America, even at a covert level.
48 second excerpt of DoD Press Secretary John Kirby on alien bodies (‘Ryan Ha’ YouTube)
FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. ExoNews.org distributes this material for the purpose of news reporting, educational research, comment and criticism, constituting Fair Use under 17 U.S.C § 107. Please contact the Editor at ExoNews with any copyright issue.