![]() Unexplained phenomena continue to puzzle US officials who can't really explain where they come from. One document shows that a $12 million contract was awarded to Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies (BLASS) to study 'advanced aerospace weapon threats from the present out to 40 years in the future.' It was the only company to bid for the project. In a letter from 2009, Reid said the program had identified 'several highly sensitive, unconventional aerospace technologies' requiring 'extraordinary protection.' Harry Reid of Nevada asking for the project to remain a secret. The trove of documents also included letters from former US Sen. The report was obtained by The Sun as part of a 1,500-page cache that the British tabloid first asked for in December 2017, days after Elizondo revealed the existence of the AATIP program to freelance journalist Leslie Kean. Officials said that the UFOs are 'from unknown provenance that may be a threat to United States interest.' ![]() Harry Reid of Nevada asked for the UFO project to remain a secret in letters recently released by the Pentagon The list was compiled in 1996 by the Mutual UFO Network and covers the time period from 1873 to 1994.Īmong the effects are: apparent abductions (129 reported cases), electromagnetic effects on vehicles (77), perceived time loss (75), burns (41), electrical shocks (23), force field impacts (18), and sexual encounters (5).Įlizondo, who headed up the $22 million Pentagon program studying UFOs, told GQ magazine about some of these effects in an interview in November.įormer US Sen. 'Classified information exists that is highly pertinent to the subject of this study and only a small part of the classified literature has been released,' the document states.Īttached to the report is a list of physiological effects experienced by those who have come in contact with UFOs or UAPs, Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. The study is titled 'Anomalous Acute And Subacute Field Effects on Human and Biological Tissues.' It is dated March 11, 2010. The report was released by the Defense Intelligence Agency (above) to The Sun as part of a FOIA request filed in 2017 It was written for the secretive AATIP program, the existence of which was revealed by whistleblower and former head of the program Luis Elizondo that same year. The report was released to The Sun as part of a Freedom of Information Act request from 2017. ![]() 'Sufficient incidents/accidents have been accurately reported, and medical data acquired, as to support a hypothesis that some advanced systems are already deployed, and opaque to full US understandings,' the report reads. The document is part of 1,500 pages from the now-defunct Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program (AATIP) that were released to The Sun by the Defense Intelligence Agency. The 2010 report compiled 42 cases of adverse effects from medical files and 300 from 'unpublished' cases. It also includes a summary of UFO-induced effects that was compiled by a private nonprofit in 1996, ranging from the most common one - abduction - to paralysis, eye injuries, electrical shocks and even sexual encounters. The study classifies different types of encounters with unidentified objects, including ones accompanied by sightings of ghosts, yetis or spirits and others that result in injury, death and even 'permanent healing.' He also underscored the Regulation’s role in halting biodiversity loss in the EU by 2020.US intelligence officials have evidence that UFO sightings have lead to adverse health effects like radiation burns, paralysis and even brain damage, according to a newly released report from a shadowy Pentagon program that closed in 2012. He explained that the Regulation is carefully targeted to focus on “the most serious threats from invasive species,” a problem that costs the EU €12 billion annually in fish stock losses, damage to protected species, infrastructure and river navigability, and health care and animal care costs. “This new Regulation fills a long-recognized gap in EU biodiversity protection,” said European Environment Commissioner Janez Potočnik. The EU will develop a list of species for listing within the IAS system, including information on species’ socio-economic benefits and commercial sector concern. IAS can cause adverse impacts on the economy, environment and human health, according to the EU. The Regulation enables the EU to develop and implement a system to prevent the introduction and spread of IAS, with a focus on the species that cause the most damage. 29 September 2014: The European Union (EU) adopted legislation to address invasive alien species (IAS), in line with its EU 2020 biodiversity targets and its commitments under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).
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