earth-lt
GET-header-rt30th

Could the Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force be the Eve of Discovery...

The Final Steps Toward Disclosure?

 

INTELLIGENCE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR  FISCAL YEAR 2021

June 17, 2020. – Ordered to be printed

Mr. Rubio, from the Select Committee on Intelligence, submitted the following REPORT together with MINORITY VIEWS

[To accompany S. 3905]

… “Advanced Aerial Threats”

The Committee supports the efforts of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force at the Office of Naval Intelligence to standardize collection and reporting on unidentified aerial phenomenon, any links they have to adversarial foreign governments, and the threat they pose to U.S. military assets and installations. However, the Committee remains concerned that there is no unified, comprehensive process within the Federal Government for collecting and analyzing intelligence on unidentified aerial phenomena, despite the potential threat. The Committee understands that the relevant intelligence may be sensitive; nevertheless, the Committee finds that the information sharing and coordination across the Intelligence Community has been inconsistent, and this issue has lacked attention from senior leaders.

Therefore, the Committee directs the DNI, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense and the heads of such other agencies as the Director and Secretary jointly consider relevant, to submit a report within 180 days of the date of enactment of the Act, to the congressional intelligence and armed services committees on unidentified aerial phenomena (also known as 'anomalous aerial vehicles'), including observed airborne objects that have not been identified.

The Committee further directs the report to include:

1. A detailed analysis of unidentified aerial phenomena data and intelligence reporting collected or held by the Office of Naval Intelligence, including data and intelligence reporting held by the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force;

2. A detailed analysis of unidentified phenomena data by:


a. geospatial intelligence;
b. signals intelligence;
c. human intelligence; and
d. measurement and signals intelligence;



3. A detailed analysis of data of the FBI, which was from investigations of intrusions of unidentified aerial phenomena data over restricted United States airspace;

4. A detailed description of an interagency process for ensuring timely data collection and centralized analysis of all unidentified aerial phenomena reporting for the Federal Government, regardless of which service or agency acquired the information;

5. Identification of an official accountable for the process described in paragraph 4;

6. Identification of potential aerospace or other  threats posed by the unidentified aerial phenomena to national security, and an assessment of whether this unidentified aerial phenomena activity may be attributed to one or more foreign adversaries;

7. Identification of any incidents or patterns that indicate a potential adversary may have achieved breakthrough aerospace capabilities that could put States strategic or conventional forces at risk; and

8. Recommendations regarding increased collection of data, enhanced research and development, and additional funding and other resources.

The report shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

Continue Reading…

 

 

 

COVID-19 Tsunami Coronavirus

 

“There are moments in our history so grim, so heart-rending, that they’re forever fixed in each of our hearts as shared grief. Today is one of those moments…To those hurting, I’m so sorry for your loss.”

 


Joe Biden Memorial Day 2020“I think I know how you’re feeling. You feel like you’re being sucked into a black hole in the middle of your chest. It’s suffocating.”

“This is a fateful milestone we should not have reached; it could have been avoided...”

 

 

Photo Credit: Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden is seen at War Memorial Plaza during Memorial Day, amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in New Castle, Delaware, U.S. May 25, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

 

This virus, those infected families that have suffered a loss, first responders and healthcare providers are putting themselves on the line as I speak for others… I’d like to thank those who are already making sacrifices to protect us, whether that’s self quarantine, self quarantining themselves or canceling events and closing campuses; because whether or not you’re infected or know someone who is infected or have been in contact with an infected person, this is going to require a national response. Not just from our elected leaders or our public health officials, but from all of us.


We must, all of us, follow the guidelines of health officials and take appropriate protections to protect ourselves and critically, to protect others, especially those who are most at risk for this disease.


It’s going to mean making some radical changes in our personal behaviors: more frequent and more thorough hand washing, staying home from work if you’re ill, but also altering the deeply ingrained habits in our country like handshakes and hugs and avoiding any large public gatherings. That’s where earlier this week on the recommendation of officials, my campaign canceled election night rallies that we had planned to hold in Cleveland, Ohio. We’re also re-imagining the format for large crowd events we had planned in Chicago and Miami in the coming days. And we’ll continue to assess and adjust how we conduct our campaign as we move forward and find new ways to share our message with the public while putting the health and safety of the American people first, above everything else.


Yesterday, we announced the public health advisory committee of experts who will continue to counsel my campaign and me. [They will] help guide our decisions on the steps to minimize further risks, and we also, we will lead by science. The World Health Organization has now officially declared COVID-19 a pandemic. Downplaying it, being overly dismissive or spreading disinformation is only going to hurt us and further advance the spread of the disease, but neither should we panic or fall back on xenophobia. Labeling COVID-19 a “foreign virus” does not displace accountability for the misjudgments that have been taken thus far by the Trump administration.


Let me be crystal clear. The coronavirus does not have a political affiliation. It will infect Republicans, independents and Democrats alike and will not discriminate based on national origin, race, gender or zip code. It will touch people in positions of power as well as the most vulnerable in our society, and it will not stop. Banning all travel from Europe or any other part of the World may slow it, but as we’ve seen, it will not stop it, and travel restrictions based on favoritism and politics rather than risk will be counterproductive.


This disease could impact every nation and any person on the planet. We need a plan about how we’re going to aggressively manage here at home. You all do know the American people have the capacity to meet this moment. We’re going to face this with the same spirit that has guided us in through previous crises, and we’ll come together as a nation. We’ll look out for one another and do our part as citizens. We have to harness the ingenuity of our scientists and the resourcefulness of our people and we have to help the world, help the world to drive coordinated global strategy, not shut ourselves off from the world. Protecting the health and safety of the American people is the most important job of any president. And unfortunately, this virus laid bear the severe shortcomings of the current administration.


Public fears are being compounded by a pervasive lack of trust in this president, fueled by adversarial relationships with the truth that he continues to have. Our government’s ability to respond effectively has been undermined by hollowing out our agencies and the disparagement of science, and our ability to drive a global response is dramatically, dramatically undercut by the damage Trump has done to our credibility and our relationships around the World. We have to get to work immediately to dig ourselves out of this hole. And that’s why today we will combat and overcome the coronavirus.


The full details of the plan, if you want to see them go to JoeBiden.com where I lay out the immediate steps we have to take to deliver one decisive public health response to curb the spread of the disease and to provide treatments to those who need it, and a decisive economic response that delivers real relief to American workers, families, and small businesses – and protects the economy as a whole, are offered as a roadmap, not for what I will do as President 10 months from now, but for the leadership that I believe is needed and required at this very moment.


President Trump is welcomed to adopt all of it today. The core principle is simple. Public health professionals must be the ones making our public health decisions and communicating with the American people: public health professionals. It would be a step toward reclaiming public trust and confidence in the United States government as well, towards stopping the fear and chaos that can overtake communities faster than this pandemic can overtake them. And it’s critical to mount an effective national response that will save lives, protect our frontline health workers, and slow the spread of the virus.


First. Anyone, anyone who needs to be tested based on medical guidance should be tested at no charge, at no charge. The administration’s failure on testing is colossal and it’s a failure of planning, leadership, and execution. The White House should measure and report each day, each and every day, how many tests have been ordered, how many tests have been completed, and how many have tested positive. By next week, the number of tests should be in the millions, not the thousands. We should make every person in a nursing home available for testing. Every senior center or vulnerable population has to have easy access to the test and we should establish hundreds of mobile testing sites, at least 10 per state and drive-through testing centers to speed testing and protect the health of our workers.


The CDC, private labs, universities, and manufacturers should be working lock step to get this done and get it done correctly. No effort should be spared. None. No excuses should be made. Tests should be available to all who need them and the government; the government should stop at nothing to make that happen. We must know the true extent of this outbreak so we can map it, trace it and contain it. Nor should we hide the true number of infections in hopes of protecting political interests or the stock market. The markets will respond strong, to strong, steady and capable leadership that addresses the root of the problem, not efforts to cover it up.


Secondly, we need to surge our capacity to both prevent and treat the coronavirus and prepare our hospitals to deal with this influx of those needing care as I’ve been saying for weeks. This means not just getting out testing kits and processing them quickly, but making sure communities have the hospital beds available: The staff, the medical supplies, the personal protective equipment necessary to treat the patients. The president should order FEMA to prepare the capacity with local authorities to establish temporary hospitals with hundreds of beds in short notice. The Department of Defense should be planning now and should have been planning to prepare for the potential deployment of the resources provided: medical facility capacity on logistics support that only they can do.


And a week from now, a month from now, we can need an instant 500 bed hospital to isolate and treat patients in any city in this country. We can do that, but we are not ready yet and the clock is ticking. As you take these steps, state, federal and local authorities need to ensure that there’s accurate up to date information available to every American citizen; to everyone so everyone can make an informed decision about when to get tested, when to self quarantine, when to seek medical treatment – and the federal government should provide States and municipalities with clear guidance about when to trigger more aggressive mitigation policies such as closing schools.


Thirdly, we need to accelerate the development and treatment of a vaccine. Science takes time and it will still be many months before we have a vaccine that can be proven safe for public use and producing sufficient quantities to make a difference. But therapeutics can and should come sooner. This will save lives. When I put together and we passed the Cures Act of 2016 to accelerate work at the National Institute of Health, but now it has to be made available, [we need to] make available resources to speed up…speed that process along. We have to fast track clinical trials within NIH while closely coordinating with the FDA, the Food and Drug Administration on trial approvals so the science is not hindered by the bureaucracy; and when a vaccine is ready to go, it should also be made widely available and again, free of charge.


We should also immediately restore the White House Security Council directorate for global health security and biodefense with a full time dedicated, coordinator to over see that response. Our administration, our last administration, we created that office to better respond to future global threats after the Ebola crisis of 2014. It was designed for exactly this scenario, but for some reason I still don’t understand, President Trump eliminated that office two years ago. Look, here’s the bottom line: We have to do what’s necessary to beat the challenge, beat this challenge sooner rather than later. We will beat it. I assure you, if we wait for it to worsen, then scramble to catch up, the human and economic toll will grow faster, larger and more dangerous.


Congress gave this administration eight billion [dollars] last week to fight the virus. We need to know exactly what that money is going to be used for. How quickly it’s going out the door, and exactly how it’s being spent.


This brings me to the second half of the challenge in terms of economic dislocation that coronavirus is going to cause in our country. We must do whatever it takes; spend whatever it takes to deliver for our families and ensure the stability of our economy by taking immediate bold measures to help Americans who are hurting economically right this minute. It means we’ll need bigger and broader measures to shore up the economic demand, protect jobs, keep credit flowing to our job creators, and make sure we have economic firepower we need to weather the storm and get the people and this economy back to full strength as soon as possible.


This crisis will hit everyone, but it’ll hit folks who live paycheck to paycheck the hardest, including working people and seniors. Another tax cut to Google or Goldman or millionaires won’t get the job done. Another tax cut to these folks will not get the job done. Indiscriminate corporate tax subsidies won’t effectively target those who really need the help, now. We need to place our focus on those who are struggling just to get by. People are already losing jobs. We need to replace their wages. That includes workers in the gig economy who lack unemployment insurance; parents already struggling with childcare costs. We need to give them relief. Children who rely on school lunches, we need to provide food for them. Schools will need to help in ensuring children who don’t have easy access to computers can still learn if their schools shut down; people who have difficulty paying their rent or mortgage because they’ve been laid off or had their hours cut back. We need to help them to stay in their apartments, and their homes.


Small businesses will be devastated as customers stay home and events are canceled. And we need to make sure they have access to interest free loans, not loans with interest, interest free loans. It’s a national disgrace that millions of our fellow citizens don’t have a single day of paid sick leave available to them. You need both a permanent plan for paid sick leave and an emergency plan for everyone who needs it due to the outbreak, now.


Beyond these national measures, my plan also calls for the creation of a state and local emergency fund to make sure governors, mayors, and local leaders who are battling the coronavirus on the ground as I speak, have the resources necessary to meet this crisis head on, now. These funds can be used at the discretion of local leaders for whatever they need most. From expanding critical health infrastructure, hiring additional healthcare and emergency service personnel or cushioning the wider economic blows this virus is going to create in their communities. We need smart, bold, compassionate leadership that’s going to help contain the crisis, reduce the hardship to our people and help our economy rebound.


Let me be very clear. Unfortunately, this will just be a start. We must prepare now to take further decisive action, including relief that will be large in scale and focused on the broader health and stability of our economy. Look, you can only protect the health or our economy if we do everything in our power to protect the health of our people.


The last point I want to make is this, we will never fully solve this problem if we’re unwilling to look beyond our own borders and engage fully with the rest of the world. A disease that starts any place in the planet can get on a plane to any city on Earth within a few hours. We have to confront a coronavirus everywhere. We should be leading a coordinated global response just as we did to the Ebola crisis that draws on the incredible capability of the U.S. Agency for International Development and our State Department to assist vulnerable nations in detecting and treating the coronavirus wherever it’s spreading. We should be investing in rebuilding and strengthening the global health security agenda, which we launched during our administration specifically to mobilize the world against the threats of new infectious diseases.


Look, it can be hard to see the concrete value of this work when everything seems to be going well in the world. But by cutting our investment in global health, this administration has left us woefully unprepared for the exact crisis we now face. No president can promise to prevent future outbreaks, but I can promise you this: when I’m president, we will be better prepared, respond better and recover better. We’ll lead with science. We’ll listen to the experts. We’ll heed their advice and we’ll build American leadership and rebuild it to rally the world to meet global threats that we are likely to face again.


You know…and I’ll always tell you the truth, this is the responsibility of a president. That’s what is owed the American people, now and in difficult days ahead. I know that this country [will stand with] the spirit, the empathy, the decency, and the unity needed. Because in times of crisis, the American people, always, always stand as one if told the truth. Volunteers raise their hands to help, neighbors look out for neighbors. Businesses take care of their workers. So we’ll meet this challenge together. I’m confident of it. We have to move and move now. – Thank you all for taking the time to be here and God bless our troops. Thank you. - Vice President and Presidential Nominee Joe Biden

Photo courtesy of NBC News Video - Transcribed in part by Global ET Research and video transcriber services

Top of Page

Sample of Photos of UAPs / UFOs

 

USO-UAP-operation mainbrace

Operation Mainbrace

 

Turkey UFO Closeup

Turkey 2008 UFO Incident

Turkey UFO

 


Undersea UFO ETs

Swimmers of Lake Baikel

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 1993-2023 Puzzle Publishing. All Rights Reserved

Disclaimer & Terms of Use