Sailors on a fleet of U.S. Navy warships cruising off the coast southern California coast apparently saw several ships in the convoy get "swarmed" by a host of unknown flying items (UFOs).
" The incident went on for hours, and then occurred again and again throughout the month, with craft hovering and zipping around near the fleet with flashing multicolored lights," the Daily Mail reported about the July 2019 incident.
U.S. officials have dismissed the incident, with the Deputy Director for Naval Intelligence Scott Bray saying he was "fairly confident" the UFOs were drones.
" But documentary filmmaker Jeremy Corbell, in a special interview with DailyMail.com, says that team from the ships have told him the swarms of 'a minimum of 100' UFOs had unexplainable capabilities far beyond conventional drones. And he alerted that unless the government can determine who was behind the swarm, the intelligence failure would 'dwarf our mistakes made surrounding the events of 9/11,'" the Mail reported.
" I don't care if these were 'drones' or real UFOs, pyramids, triangles or perhaps seagulls with lights strapped onto their wings. I want the basic concern to be responded to. Do we know the controllers of these systems?" he told the U.K. paper.
On the other hand, the U.S. Air Force has apparently fired at UFOs in active war zones, according to another new report.
"' The Air Force routinely observes, and sometimes, even kinetically engages UAP [unidentified aerial phenomena] in operationally delicate locations worldwide to this day,' a service member with direct knowledge of recent UAP Air Force engagements said," according to The Sun.
" While some UAP are eventually recognized, frequently others are hastily dismissed outright due to a failure to appropriately categorize, based on characteristics displayed and observed," the service member told the paper.
Throughout a recent House hearing, Bray was asked about the military shooting at UAPs. "And I presume we've never discharged any armaments against a UAP, remedy?" Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) asked Bray. " That's appropriate," Bray said.
But Corbell said no one knows where the UAPs come from. "I have actually gotten paperwork that these UAPs are not other nations' possessions-- such as Russia's-- because the U.S. Air Force has actually recorded events where nations fired on the same UAP," Corbell informed the paper. " So whoever is managing these units, it's not the usual suspects, they're not ours or Russia's.".