Senator Rounds Pushes for UAP Transparency, Cites Firsthand Accounts
U.S. Senator Mike Rounds recently stressed the urgent need for government transparency on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs). In an interview, he revealed he has personally spoken with credible individuals who possess firsthand knowledge—either from involvement in classified programs or from directly seeing and touching objects they could not explain. As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Rounds pointed to videos captured by trusted U.S. military personnel showing objects that defy known physics and engineering.
The senator outlined three main possibilities for these sightings. First, some could be highly advanced U.S. technology still kept secret, similar to how the B-2 stealth bomber was once mistaken for unexplained craft. Second, they might belong to adversaries like China, posing a serious national security threat. Third, and most intriguing, they could represent something entirely outside current human understanding. Rounds insisted the public deserves honesty rather than dismissal or cover stories, warning that premature leaks could harm genuine classified programs.
Rounds has actively supported disclosure efforts, co-sponsoring legislation modeled after the JFK Records Act to create an independent review board for declassifying UAP-related government files. While mainstream outlets frequently frame UAP reports as misidentifications or optical illusions to downplay the topic, whistleblower testimonies in congressional hearings and accounts from pilots describe craft exhibiting impossible maneuvers and possible non-human origins. Independent journalists and researchers continue to highlight withheld evidence that challenges official skepticism.
With growing bipartisan momentum and recent executive actions directing the Pentagon to prepare UAP file releases, Rounds plans to reintroduce transparency measures. He aims to balance national security with the public’s right to know, maintaining an open perspective on whether these phenomena involve non-human intelligence while demanding verifiable answers.
U.S. Senator Mike Rounds recently stressed the urgent need for government transparency on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs). In an interview, he revealed he has personally spoken with credible individuals who possess firsthand knowledge—either from involvement in classified programs or from directly seeing and touching objects they could not explain. As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Rounds pointed to videos captured by trusted U.S. military personnel showing objects that defy known physics and engineering.
The senator outlined three main possibilities for these sightings. First, some could be highly advanced U.S. technology still kept secret, similar to how the B-2 stealth bomber was once mistaken for unexplained craft. Second, they might belong to adversaries like China, posing a serious national security threat. Third, and most intriguing, they could represent something entirely outside current human understanding. Rounds insisted the public deserves honesty rather than dismissal or cover stories, warning that premature leaks could harm genuine classified programs.
Rounds has actively supported disclosure efforts, co-sponsoring legislation modeled after the JFK Records Act to create an independent review board for declassifying UAP-related government files. While mainstream outlets frequently frame UAP reports as misidentifications or optical illusions to downplay the topic, whistleblower testimonies in congressional hearings and accounts from pilots describe craft exhibiting impossible maneuvers and possible non-human origins. Independent journalists and researchers continue to highlight withheld evidence that challenges official skepticism.
With growing bipartisan momentum and recent executive actions directing the Pentagon to prepare UAP file releases, Rounds plans to reintroduce transparency measures. He aims to balance national security with the public’s right to know, maintaining an open perspective on whether these phenomena involve non-human intelligence while demanding verifiable answers.
Senator Rounds Pushes for UAP Transparency, Cites Firsthand Accounts
U.S. Senator Mike Rounds recently stressed the urgent need for government transparency on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs). In an interview, he revealed he has personally spoken with credible individuals who possess firsthand knowledge—either from involvement in classified programs or from directly seeing and touching objects they could not explain. As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Rounds pointed to videos captured by trusted U.S. military personnel showing objects that defy known physics and engineering.
The senator outlined three main possibilities for these sightings. First, some could be highly advanced U.S. technology still kept secret, similar to how the B-2 stealth bomber was once mistaken for unexplained craft. Second, they might belong to adversaries like China, posing a serious national security threat. Third, and most intriguing, they could represent something entirely outside current human understanding. Rounds insisted the public deserves honesty rather than dismissal or cover stories, warning that premature leaks could harm genuine classified programs.
Rounds has actively supported disclosure efforts, co-sponsoring legislation modeled after the JFK Records Act to create an independent review board for declassifying UAP-related government files. While mainstream outlets frequently frame UAP reports as misidentifications or optical illusions to downplay the topic, whistleblower testimonies in congressional hearings and accounts from pilots describe craft exhibiting impossible maneuvers and possible non-human origins. Independent journalists and researchers continue to highlight withheld evidence that challenges official skepticism.
With growing bipartisan momentum and recent executive actions directing the Pentagon to prepare UAP file releases, Rounds plans to reintroduce transparency measures. He aims to balance national security with the public’s right to know, maintaining an open perspective on whether these phenomena involve non-human intelligence while demanding verifiable answers.
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