I am not aware of any extraterrestrial remains or signs of extraterrestrial life or technology in our possession, said Sabrina Singh, deputy spokeswoman for the Pentagon, in response to the testimony of a former ministry official.
“I am not aware of any evidence that the Department of Defense has any remains or signs of extraterrestrial activity or technology,” Pentagon deputy spokeswoman Sabrina Singh said at a Pentagon briefing on Thursday.
She also stated that the Pentagon's AARO office, which investigates cases of “unidentified anomalous phenomena” (UAP), has not detected any cases in which the extraterrestrial origin of unexplained phenomena has been proven.
Testimony before joint committees of the House of Representatives
During a hearing before a joint House committee on Wednesday, former Pentagon official and UAP investigation team member Luis Elizondo claimed that the Pentagon was conducting a secret program to recover UFO remains.
Retired Admiral Tim Gallaudet said he believes at least some of the unexplained phenomena are signs of alien intelligence.
The congressional hearing was the second such event after former AARO member David Grusch testified last year, who also claims that the government USA is in possession of the remains of extraterrestrial vehicles and has come into contact with aliens.
The Pentagon has recorded hundreds of observations of unexplained phenomena
On Thursday, the Pentagon submitted its annual UAP report to Congress, which noted that of the more than 757 recorded observations of unexplained phenomena between May 2023 and June 2024, no evidence was found indicating the extraterrestrial origin of objects or technologies.
118 of these cases turned out to have prosaic explanations (70 percent of the mysterious objects were balloons, 16 percent – drones), another 174 are close to closure, and the analysis of the remaining cases is ongoing.
The authors of the report noted that the main obstacle to solving the cases is the lack of sufficient data.
Main photo source: defense.gov