
On the 25th of June, 2021, a
report
called Preliminary Assessment: Unidentified Aerial Phenomena had been released by ODNI – Office of the Director of National Intelligence. It contained only 9 pages, and left many people disappointed. While the report did not include anything specific, it also did not include ridicule of the topic. In fact, it was acknowledged that there were numerous reports of UAP sightings, and that limited data leaves most UAP unexplained.
What the report, at least unclassified version of it, doesn’t mention is the history of official UAP research done by US governmental agencies. The book Skinwalkers at the Pentagon tells a story of the program called AAWSAP – Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program – a study of UAP and all paranormal events connected directly with UAP. The program was active between 2008 and 2010 and was contracted by Defense Intelligence Agency of the Department of Defense.
At the beginning of the book there’s a story about an investigator who witnessed a paranormal phenomenon at a place called Skinwalker ranch. After he got home hundreds of miles from the ranch, what started happening could only be referred to as ‘poltergeist activity’.
At first, the story seems to be almost certainly made up. However, as the reader is being introduced throughout the book to the history of the project and key people working on it, one starts to realize, that the investigator could hardly get away with making up that story.
The book provides details about several investigations into UAP sightings. Apparently, paranormal activity often accompanies UAP sightings. And close encounters with those phenomena often leave physical traces in human bodies – rare tumorous and autoimmune diseases have been studied and documented by the AAWSAP investigators.
It might be a little bit boring to read about technicalities and formalities of the AAWSAP project – at least one third of the book is comprised of that information spiced up by a very large number of three- and four-letter acronyms. However, that information gives the necessary understanding of the precision and seriousness of the AAWSAP project and its credibility.
The stories about UAP sightings, related paranormal activity and even Men in Black are fascinating and often spine-chilling. If those stories are true, then there’s only one thing that we can be certain of: we know nothing about the nature of our physical reality. But people trying to make the big discoveries in this field should be warned. Perhaps a good example is Marie Curie, who was researching radiation and eventually died of the exposure to it. Researchers who will be studying those phenomena will run the similar risk, because it is clear that close encounters with those phenomena can be dangerous.