It has been revealed that the Pentagon alleges the fact that in case of an alien invasion, the US is not equipped. Check out the latest reports about this mind-blowing subject below.
An alien invasion?
According to internal Pentagon watchdogs, US officials are not equipped to defend America in the event of a hypothetical alien invasion. The Department of Defense (DoD) lacks a comprehensive and coordinated effort to track and analyze UFOs, which have been recently rebranded as Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP).
The Office of Inspector General (OIG) concluded that this gap in the DoD’s defensive capabilities “poses a threat to military forces and national security.” To address the issues highlighted in the report, the OIG has made 11 recommendations, including the enforcement of protection policies and the development of new tools in case of an extraterrestrial attack.
‘DoD efforts to identify and understand UAP has been irregular because of competing priorities, lack of substantive progress, and inconclusive findings,’ reads ‘Evaluation of the DoD’s Actions Regarding Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena’, previously issued August 2023.
‘However, military pilots have continued to report UAP incidents despite the sporadic efforts of the DoD to identify, report, and analyze the events’
The 2023 report was a collection of evaluations on whether the Pentagon, military branches, defense agencies, and counterintelligence organizations conducted actions ‘to detect, report, collect, analyze, and identify UAP.’
‘The DoD has not issued a comprehensive UAP response plan that identifies roles, responsibilities, requirements, and coordination procedures for detecting, reporting, collecting, analyzing, and identifying UAP incidents,’ OIG concluded.
The agency conducted an evaluation from May 2021 to June 2023, interviewing Presidential and DoD policies, directives, and guidance.
In July 2022, the Pentagon established the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) to manage reports of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs).
AARO is responsible for coordinating and standardizing the collection, analysis, and identification of UAP incidents. On Thursday, Inspector General Robert P. Storch announced the declassification of a report on UAPs, citing the ‘significant public interest in how the DoD is addressing UAPs’. However, the OIG report has raised concerns about the nation’s ability to organize and defend itself against UAPs, the Daily Mail notes.