Air Force Clams Up on Secret UFO Program, Former Intel Chief Claims
The US Air Force refuses to confirm or deny running a covert UFO-tracking operation.
Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper alleges the program exists. The Air Force gave no answer.
That silence is an answer.
Clapper didn't name the program or say when it ran. He didn't detail what it tracked or what it found. He just dropped the claim and moved on—the way you do when you're saying something true but officially deniable.
The Air Force's non-response is telling. They could have flatly denied it. They could have released documents. Instead: nothing. Standard playbook for classified work the Pentagon doesn't want debated in public.
This lands in the middle of a decade-long push to drag UAP sightings into the light. Congress demanded reports. The Pentagon created an office. Videos of objects moving in ways physics supposedly forbids got declassified. Then everyone went quiet again.
Clapper ran the intelligence apparatus for years. He knows how classification works, what can be said, what can't. If he's saying a program existed, he's probably chosen his words carefully.
The Air Force's refusal to respond suggests he's right.
Source: Liberation Times
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