Wierd

UFO sighting: US Navy pilots spot ‘fast-flying objects’ during late-night training


Incredible infrared cockpit-camera footage taken by US Navy pilots have shown a succession of fast-flying UFOs, some spinning in mid-air and moving against a 120-knot wind, and often accompanied by commentary from shocked airmen. Although the footage features only one of these objects, one pilot is heard to say: “There’s a whole fleet” showing up on his monitors. And a shocked voice is later heard to say: “Look at that thing! It’s rotating!”

Newly declassified Pentagon data indicates UFOs were spotted almost every day over the skies off the US East Coast, between the summer of 2014 and March 2015.

And highly experienced US Navy pilots, flying from the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier while training for active duty, reported to their superiors the UFOs defied the laws of physics.

The 30-40ft (10-15m) long UFOs had no wings, rotors, or any discernible means of propulsion.

However, they could be seen to both hover in the sky, halt suddenly and instantaneously accelerate to hypersonic speeds of a mile a second.

READ MORE: Slowed-down Comet P67 audio is ‘ALIEN BROADCAST

Commander David Fravor and his colleagues described seeing a large object just below the surface of the water, and another, 50ft above, hovering erratically.

They described it as 40ft long, white, wingless and shaped like an oblong pill.

As Cmdr Fravor flew towards it the second object rose to meet him at a fast speed and acceleration.

He said: “The hair on the back of my neck was standing up.

READ MORE: HD video shows ‘reflective and rotating’ DIAMOND UFO

“I was thinking: ‘I’m going to be watching a disaster here.’ You’re wondering: ‘How can I possibly fight this?’”

Instead, the object suddenly peeled away at a speed that Cmdr Fravor admits left him feeling “pretty weirded out.”

And his radar showed the object had reappeared under a minute later, 60 miles away at the planes’ precise rendezvous point.

UFO sceptics have questioned whether the planes’ imaging systems experienced glitches, or whether the pilots were tricked by atmospheric effects and reflections.

However, Kevin Day, the Princeton’s senior radar operator at the time, says his screen showed well over 100 UFOs over the course of that week.

He said: “Watching them on the display was like watching snow fall from the sky.”

Cmdr Fravor added: “There is a capability out there, I don’t know where it is from.

“I’m not saying it’s from outer space, but I’m not saying it’s from here either.”



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