Pentagon admits to carrying out tests on futuristic ‘UFO debris’, expert says
The Pentagon has recovered UFO debris and conducted tests on futuristic materials which are a "quantum leap" ahead of current technologies, a flying saucer investigator has claimed.
ET expert Tony Bragaglia submitted a FOI request to the US defence department on December 26 2017.
He has recently shared links to a Defense Intelligence Agency's belated response more than three years on.
A letter dated January 8 this year provided partial responses to his request for "all information on test results on UAP material from Bigelow Aerospace".
Mr Bragaglia claims the futuristic materials could have the power to make things invisible, 'compress' electromagnetic energy and may even slow down the speed of light.
Writing online, Mr Bragaglia said: "Now officially referred to as UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena) rather than UFOs, some of this material was placed with a defense contractor for analysis and storage in 'specialized facilities'.
"Incredibly, part of the information released discusses material with shape recovery properties, much like the 'memory metal' debris found fallen at the Roswell UFO crash in 1947."
He added: "Although much of the reports' details are redacted, what can be gleaned is that these technologies represent a literal quantum leap beyond the properties of all existing material known to man."
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Mr Bragaglia claimed: "The information provided in the FOIA response seems to represent reports that are directly relevant to what was learned from the study of the UFO debris, and how insight gained from those studies might be applied in the future, but does not include a detailing of the found debris itself.
"Disappointingly, the reports do not include much of what was requested, such as a physical description and the composition of the material, the origin of the material, and the names of the involved scientists. That remains classified.
"But technical pursuit areas derived from the study of those materials (i.e. invisibility, energy concentration, light speed control, intelligent metal) were, in part, released.
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"The released documents help to inform us of the potential applications of the materials, but do not offer deep insight into precisely what the debris is made of.
"They speak of 'recent experiments' that 'provide new concepts' and of 'theoretical developments that might result in new materials'."
Mr Bragaglia went on to say how more than 40 witnesses mentioned a metal-like material that could 'remember itself' following the Roswell crash. It would return to its original state instantly after being folded or deformed.
He added: "The DIA believes it is being responsive to the FOIA request by acknowledging UFO debris, its storage by Bigelow, and by identifying areas of future applications of these materials without having to actually name responsible parties, of what elements the material is comprised, how it is processed, etc."
It said some of 154 pages of documents which contained a response to his query were withheld, as it shared declassified files on Metallic Glasses – Status and Prospects for Aerospace Applications; Biomaterials; Materials for Advanced Aerospace Platforms; Metallic Spintronics; and Metamaterials for Aerospace Applications.
The Defense Intelligence Agency has been contacted for comment.
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