free web stats Bombshell report reveals Pentagon fueled UFO myths around Area 51 to hide classified weapons program – Zing Velom

Bombshell report reveals Pentagon fueled UFO myths around Area 51 to hide classified weapons program

SOME wild UFO conspiracy theories were actually cooked up and stoked by the Pentagon itself, a bombshell report has revealed.

The U.S. Department of Defense spread claims that aliens were kept at Area 51 to cover up secret weapons projects, according to an investigation by The Wall Street Journal.

"Entering Area 51" sign behind a chain-link fence.
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Some UFO conspiracy theories actually began inside the Department of Defense, the WSJ revealed[/caption]

Satellite view of Area 51 in Southern Nevada.
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The purpose of the alleged cover-up was to use Area 51 for secret weapons testing[/caption]

Illustration of a UFO behind a chain-link fence marked Area 51.
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This was quietly left out of the Department of Defense’s 2024 transparency report[/caption]

In the 1980s, a U.S. Air Force colonel visited a bar near Area 51 in Nevada and handed the owner doctored photos of flying saucers near the military base.

The photos were pinned to the walls – and before long, local legend, followed by the rest of the world, had it the U.S. military was secretly testing recovered alien tech.

This came to light in a shocking review of the 2024 Defense Department report published by The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) on Friday.

The now-retired officer admitted the ruse to Pentagon investigators in 2023.

The goal was to distract from what was really happening at Area 51 – the development of top-secret stealth aircraft, seen at the time as vital to maintaining an edge over the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

But the report released last year by the Pentagon dismissed claims of a government UFO cover-up.

The WSJ, in fact, argues the opposite – that the government not only misled the public but actively fuelled UFO myths.

The report writes: “The Pentagon itself sometimes deliberately fanned the flames, in what amounted to the U.S. government targeting its own citizens with disinformation.”

It includes findings made by Sean Kirkpatrick, the first director of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), who in 2022 was tasked with investigating countless UFO theories.

Kirkpatrick discovered several conspiracies that traced back to the Pentagon itself.


For example, his team found out that the Air Force had initiated new recruits by giving them mock briefings about a fake unit called “Yankee Blue” – which supposedly investigated alien spacecraft.

Under strict orders to keep quiet, many people never discovered that this was a prank, Kirkpatrick’s team claimed.

The strange practice continued until 2023 when the Pentagon finally issued an order across the DoD to put an end to it.

Another finding by Kirkpatrick, reported by the WSJ, was that the government deliberately misled the public about secret military projects.

For instance, Robert Salas, a former Air Force captain, claims he saw a UFO hover over a nuclear missile site in Montana in 1967.

In reality, what he saw was a test of an early electromagnetic pulse (EMP) designed to see if American silos could survive atomic radiation and retaliate if the Soviet Union struck first.

The test failed and Salas was told to never discuss what he saw, the report tells.

A DoD spokesperson admitted to the WSJ that the government has not shared all of AARO’s findings, saying a new report due later this year will be clearer.

Sue Gough said: “The department is committed to releasing a second volume of its Historical Record Report, to include AARO’s findings on reports of potential pranks and inauthentic materials.”

It comes as a photo claiming to show a 1,000ft-wide silver UFO soaring over the US was released by a notorious Pentagon whistleblower.

The picture was allegedly snapped by an airline pilot in 2021 while flying 21,000ft above the Four Corners Monument – spanning New Mexico, Arizona, Utah and Colorado.

Luis Elizondo revealed the photo during a UAP Disclosure Fund event.

But sceptics were quick to challenge the discovery – claiming the photo merely showed irrigation circles that are common in desert climates.

Illustration of two UFOs flying in foggy sky.
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Illustration of two UFOs flying in fog with light below.[/caption]

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