Leaked Claims Expose Hidden UAP Videos with Visible Beings

Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart, citing trusted insiders with top-secret clearances, revealed details of unreleased high-definition videos showing mysterious flying objects, known as unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), held on secure military servers. These include a 13-minute daytime clip from the Persian Gulf six years ago, capturing a glowing white sphere emerging from the ocean near a ship, surrounded by a plasma glow, joined by a second sphere, and tracked by a helicopter without identification.

Sources describe other footage: a large black disk racing underwater in the Gulf of Mexico, three times bigger than an oil rig; a disk pacing a B-52 bomber with non-human beings (NHI) peering out from what look like windows; and a sphere dodging a Reaper drone at 30,000 feet in crystal-clear 4K, forcing evasive moves before speeding away. Whistleblowers like David Grusch and Luis Elizondo corroborate such claims, alleging the government hides crash retrievals and reverse-engineering programs involving nonhuman tech, withheld from Congress.

The Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) denies evidence of extraterrestrial activity, attributing most sightings to balloons, drones, or misidentifications, but insiders accuse it of disinformation to suppress disclosure. Elizondo, former head of a Defense Department UAP program, testified about global monitoring by advanced tech not made by any known government, urging transparency amid reprisals against reporters.

Non-mainstream sources, including congressional hearings, echo these, with Grusch claiming biologics from crashes. Mainstream outlets like NewsNation report leaked drone videos from the Middle East showing orbs in formation, defying physics, while AARO insists no proof exists. Pro-disclosure advocates argue this secrecy erodes trust, calling for releases to reveal potential breakthroughs or visitors.
Leaked Claims Expose Hidden UAP Videos with Visible Beings Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart, citing trusted insiders with top-secret clearances, revealed details of unreleased high-definition videos showing mysterious flying objects, known as unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), held on secure military servers. These include a 13-minute daytime clip from the Persian Gulf six years ago, capturing a glowing white sphere emerging from the ocean near a ship, surrounded by a plasma glow, joined by a second sphere, and tracked by a helicopter without identification. Sources describe other footage: a large black disk racing underwater in the Gulf of Mexico, three times bigger than an oil rig; a disk pacing a B-52 bomber with non-human beings (NHI) peering out from what look like windows; and a sphere dodging a Reaper drone at 30,000 feet in crystal-clear 4K, forcing evasive moves before speeding away. Whistleblowers like David Grusch and Luis Elizondo corroborate such claims, alleging the government hides crash retrievals and reverse-engineering programs involving nonhuman tech, withheld from Congress. The Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) denies evidence of extraterrestrial activity, attributing most sightings to balloons, drones, or misidentifications, but insiders accuse it of disinformation to suppress disclosure. Elizondo, former head of a Defense Department UAP program, testified about global monitoring by advanced tech not made by any known government, urging transparency amid reprisals against reporters. Non-mainstream sources, including congressional hearings, echo these, with Grusch claiming biologics from crashes. Mainstream outlets like NewsNation report leaked drone videos from the Middle East showing orbs in formation, defying physics, while AARO insists no proof exists. Pro-disclosure advocates argue this secrecy erodes trust, calling for releases to reveal potential breakthroughs or visitors.
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