
© Shutterstock/The Daily Galaxy - Great Discoveries ChannelUnderwater UFO
From the depths of the ocean, UFOs surface as a Navy officer warns of a threat too real to be ignored.
An extraordinary new investigation, originally published by
Popular Mechanics is drawing fresh attention to
a string of unexplained encounters between U.S. Navy personnel and unidentified submerged objects (USOs). These sightings — recorded over decades and across multiple oceans — are now being described by former officers as a legitimate threat and part of a global pattern that defies conventional physics.
Unexplained Encounters During Training MissionsIn 2014,
Lieutenant Ryan Graves, a U.S. Navy F/A-18 pilot stationed off the coast of Virginia Beach, began to detect anomalies during flight training missions. Initially dismissed as radar glitches,
the signals reappeared repeatedly — only this time,
they were backed by infrared and optical confirmation.According to Graves, these
unidentified objects could hover completely still or accelerate to supersonic speeds. They were seen across all altitudes, always above or near the ocean.
Graves reported seeing a particularly strange object: a black or dark gray cube enclosed in a clear sphere, estimated to be 5 to 15 feet in diameter. It passed within 50 feet of one of the jets.
That incident, he later explained, "was the turning point."When Graves later spoke with pilots stationed on the USS
Nimitz and USS
Princeton off the West Coast, he discovered that
similar sightings had occurred for years.
Comment: Two lies in one sentence. The Nato secretary general is outdoing himself. It is not a defensive alliance and yes, they are naive!
The claim that these are drones, makes a mockery of the Danish defence with radars not detecting where they came from or where they disappeared to, the F-16 and F-35 jets not able to either take them down or intercept them over a period of several hours.
See also this article about the incident which happened 48 hours earlier: They're back! Several large 'drones' fly over Copenhagen and Oslo airports, shutting down civilian flights, before 'disappearing'