Military witnesses share a shocking UFO testimony at the Congress Panel

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We could write on a possible closure of the government.
We could detail the changing procedures of the Senate to confirm the candidates.
We could even fight against Epstein files.
But frankly, all of this would be boring.
Especially when you can rather write on UFOs.
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The American Air Force veteran Jeffrey Nuccetelli, the American navy of the American navy Alexandro Wiggins, the journalist George Knapp, the American veteran of the Air Force Dylan Borland and the government surveillance project, the main political advisor Joe Spielberger, is sworn to testify in an American committee of surveillance and reform of the United States “on Capitol Trust, Transfer of the UAP, transparency and whistleblower. (Elizabeth Frantz / Reuters)
“There were four lights in total,” recalled the former Air Force intelligence officer Dylan Borland before a house panel investigating UFOs on Tuesday. “I could immediately feel static electricity on my whole body.”
“The chaos followed on the radio when the object was quickly approaching. I heard my friend shouting:” It comes to us! It comes well to us! “” Said Air Force retirement officer Jeffrey Nuccetelli.
“There is something there, and we have to know what it is,” said the American navy chief, the chief of the navy, Alexandro Wiggins.
A testimony of shocking eye witnesses came this week to the Congress on close meetings, especially since the testimony came from the denunciators who served in the army.
“He stopped at around 100 feet in front of me and about 100 feet above me. My phone has become extremely hot. Completely frozen, “said Borland about his experience.
Quite the quirks of space.
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“I did not jump to the conclusion that I believe that there are extraterrestrials coming from another planet,” said representative Eric Burlison, R-MO., During the hearing. “But I’m open to that.”
Burlison may not be entirely on small green men. But testimony was enough to convince at least one legislator on UFOs that were skeptical.

Representative Eric Burlison, R-Mo., Leaves Capitol Hill Club on March 25, 2025 (Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
“Growing up, I really never believed in UFOs or all that. I always thought it was a little Kooking,” said representative Eli Crane, R-Ariz. “But after hearing your testimony from the honorable soldiers and watching videos, I must admit that I became a believer.”
Burlison showed an alarming information video at the hearing. The Missouri republican said that he had been disclosed to him anonymously. He argues that he reveals the video of an American drone drawing a Hellfire missile on an unidentified object off the coast of Yemen last fall.
“It was a Hellfire missile that struck this UFO and simply rebounded right away, and he continued,” said UFO investigation journalist George Knapp at the hearing.
Burlison provided color comments.
“(The UFO) swivel a certain way. And then it seems that it is debris of the missile. The missile is deflected. And then there are a few pieces of debris which seem to move alongside this object at high speed,” said Burlison.
In other words, Knapp and Burlison believe that the United States has pulled a drone missile in a UFO, the UFO miraculously dotted it, then the “captured” drone of the remains of the missile, as if it had been caught in a tractor beam. The UFO then zipped without changing course and without losing speed.
Not exactly the big space coatter.
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KLAS-TV journalist George Knapp, of Las Vegas, takes place for the working group of the Chamber’s Supervisory and Government Reform Committee on the hearing of the Federal Sub-Committee of Secrets at the Capitol Visitor Center on Tuesday, September 9, 2025. (Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
Here is another problem: how devil (or another world) will the congress will ever go to the bottom of these mysteries if the legislators cannot even agree on the nomenclature?
“UAPS or UFOs?” asked the representative Dina Titus, D-NEV.
The UAPS is the term that has won money in recent years, abbreviated by “unidentified air phenomena”.
Disinfected. Calming. Washington-Speak.
But “UFOs” are code: “unidentified flying objects”.
When you hear “UFOs”, you can practically see people fleeing apartments after the Martians landed in Grovers Mill, in New Jersey, during “World War”.
“UFO” involves conspiracy. Roofers. Special visitors from another galaxy. All garnished with a suspicion of Roswell and the Blue Book project.
This is why the congress, the soldiers and the aeronautical industry have watched occasionally on UFO complaints for decades.

A newly published image shows the UFO which was shot dead by an American fighter in Canada in 2023. (Department of National Defense; News CTV)
“I still don’t want to say UAP,” said representative Tim Buchett, R-Tenn. “I recently introduced the law on the protection of UAP denunciators to help provide protection against federal personnel to have disclosed the use of federal taxpayers to investigate UFOs.”
Legislative remedies such as the UAP Denunciators’ Protection Act reflect a recent change in the Congress.
The legislators held the first audience on UFOs in two generations in 2022. Such congress surveys now appear at a rate of one or two per year. In a thrust of transparency, the congress has created an office which is necessary to probe reports of unidentified objects in the sky when reported by the army, as well as civil and commercial pilots.
The intervention of the congress helped to reduce the stigma associated with the declaration of UFOs. But not to the extent that some would like. A witness said that the agency responsible for investigating them is regularly based on a practical shield to reject potential extraterrestrial meetings from the outset.
Or tentacle.
“(They say) the only way to prove scientifically (that something is) extraterrestrial is that we have to go to this planet, acquire technology, bring it back and compare it to what we have here,” said Borland.
“So you say they will not let anything come out … unless they go to the planet and confirm its origin?” When questioned Burlison.
“It would be scientific evidence. Yes,” said Borland.
And before participating in a wider discussion on and we must note that a witness in the panel was Joe Spielberger, with the project on government surveillance.
“How can we get to these other planets? How to pass the Van Allen radiation belt safely?” asked the representative Lauren Boebert, R-Colo.

Representative Lauren Boebert is chatting with journalists after leaving the house floor at home at the American Capitol on June 21, 2023, in Washington, DC (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Astronauts on board Apollo missions to the Moon managed to sail in the risk of Van Allen radiation. But radiation elsewhere in deep space has a difficult problem for humans.
Be that as it may, legislators believe that witnesses at the hearing were credible because of their positions in the army.
“The story has changed. It would be (would be) politically practical for the government if you were not all soldiers in costume. It would be much better if you stopped in Winnebagos and wearing hats (aluminum foil),” said representative Jared Moskowitz, D-FLA.
Burchett reported its legislation to protect UAP denunciators. Representative Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., Who called the audience, thinks that these types of denunciators are a special class and deserve additional protection.
“For most of our expression, the first thing that happens is their security authorization,” said Luna. “Security authorization is their livelihood.”
“If I say the bad word, technically, I can be accused of spying,” said Borland.
Legislators are therefore found in the same posture as members of Congress in the 1950s and 1960s. Many questions. Few answers. But in the social media era, there are competing influences to fuel skepticism and simultaneously inhibit the government’s ability to cover things.
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US Capitol Building in Sunset on January 30, 2025. (Fox News Digital)
“I think it clearly emerges from the audience that there are advanced technologies that take place in our airspace. The question is, is it ours or is it from another world?” asked the representative Andy Ogles, R-Tenn.
“I don’t really know what is true,” said Moskowitz. “But I know when we are lied to.”
“It is not science fiction or speculation creation. It is national security,” said Luna.
This means that the United States is again in a space race. He competes against China, Russia, North Korea, Iran and maybe others to determine who can first resolve the UAP mystery.
And coming to the truth would be a giant jump to humanity.