UFOs were blasted over North America.
In the last week, the US has gunned down one Chinese surveillance balloon and three unknown flying objects. Is this evidence of a vast Chinese spy program, or is the United States being invaded by aliens? ββπΈπ½πΈββ

In the last week, the US has gunned down one Chinese surveillance balloon and three unknown flying objects. Is this evidence of a vast Chinese spy program, or is the United States being invaded by aliens? ββπΈπ½πΈββ
The United States has shot down three unidentified flying objects and one Chinese spy balloon in the last week. Is this proof of a significant Chinese spy operation, or are aliens invading the US? Social media is rife with reports of Chinese spy balloons, which were then shot down alongside numerous real-world UFOs. The discovery of a huge Chinese balloon carrying a payload comparable to three city buses in size set off the craze. President Joe Biden immediately issued an order to shoot it down after it was first spotted drifting over the west coast. The Defense Department, on the other hand, suggested delaying a shoot-down due to worries about the civilian populace and local infrastructure. Since then, we've learned that the DoD may have been more concerned with gathering its own intelligence than ensuring the safety of the general public, as US aircraft immediately began monitoring the balloon and continued to do so throughout its entire journey across the US.
As the balloon passed over at least a portion of one US nuclear missile field, concerns over data collection arose right away. The DoD assured that the balloon was unable to send any information back to its Chinese handlers, most likely due to the use of electronic warfare resources to prevent either transmission from the balloon or reception by loitering satellites. We must make assumptions because the DoD is notoriously secretive about its EW capabilities, but the fact that it was certain that the balloon should be allowed to cross the US shows that there were no significant concerns regarding intelligence gathering. Furthermore, it's doubtful that much intelligence was gathered that wasn't already accessible via satellites.
The discovery of another unidentified flying object over Alaska's northern coast, however, really caught everyone's attention. The US military disclosed that it had tracked an object at a height of about 40,000 feet over Alaskan airspace on February 10. Despite the fact that information is still incredibly scarce, the object was spotted by at least two separate American planes that were sent up to investigate. The object was shot down during the second intercept, probably by an AIM-9X missile. The alleged accounts, which some of the pilots are said to have given to national media, have people scratching their heads. Most notably, one pilot allegedly claimed that the object interfered with the electronics of his F-35 and had no obvious means of propulsion.
The object, which was described as being the size of a small car, immediately brought to mind the US Navy aircraft intercepting a tic-tac-shaped UFO in 2004 videos. The very next day, NORAD discovered yet another unidentified object, this one flying over Alaska and into the Yukon region of Canada. US fighters intercepted this third enigmatic object at the request of the Canadian government, and they were able to shoot it down. More information was lacking, but the Canadian defense minister did confirm that the object was cylindrical, which immediately attracted the attention of many UFO watchers. Eyewitness reports of UFOs typically fall into two categories: traditional round saucers and long, cylindrical, or cigar-shaped objects.
These two categories account for more than a century's worth of UFO sightings. Then a bombshell was dropped on Fox News by an anchor who claimed that his sources had spoken to the pilots involved in the intercept and had directly compared it to the infamous tic-tac-toe UFO that US planes had pursued in 2004 over the Pacific. The DoD immediately shut down all civilian traffic in the area the following day, February 11, after an object was spotted over Montana's airspace. After some time, the airspace was reopened, but on February 12th, only civil aircraft were allowed to fly over the Great Lakes. A fourth object was brought down by an Air Force F-16 several hours later.
On the same day that it discovered one flying directly outside of the port city of Qingdao, China announced that it was using artificial intelligence to track unidentified flying objects. This served as additional fuel for the fire. Chinese military personnel were getting ready to shoot the object down as this script was being written. The military in Uruguay, meanwhile, was responding to bright lights seen hovering over its skies. The Defense Department has been extremely silent, citing ongoing recovery operations off the coast of Alaska and in the Canadian Yukon, and the entire world has turned to them for answers.
The mechanism by which these objects were able to fly, however, was unknown, according to a DoD press briefing on February 12. This could indicate that the craft either have an unidentified propulsion system or that they are rigid-hulled airships, a type of craft that both the US and Chinese militaries have previously employed. Only two of these things appear to be truly free-floating, if they are airships or balloons.



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