Notably, the objects are impervious to electronic jamming efforts, indicating that they are not off-the-shelf hobbyist drones.
On their face, these incidents pose an alarming intelligence and espionage risk. In the most brazen incidents in recent years, the unknown craft displayed bright flashing lights as they hovered over sensitive facilities and assets.
Such conspicuous tactics are the opposite of basic intelligence collection tradecraft, which calls for stealth. Once exposed, any foreign surveillance operation is not only at risk of compromise, but of sparking a major geopolitical crisis.
Despite this, “dozens” of unknown, brightly illuminated objects hovered and flew with complete impunity over a critical Air Force base for 17 nights in 2023. Ditto for a series of audacious incursions over sensitive American military bases in the United Kingdom last year. In those incidents, witnesses reported dozens of brightly-lit craft “hovering” and exhibiting extreme performance characteristics while evading detection and multiple advanced counter-drone systems.These enigmatic craft also demonstrate baffling flight dynamics that surpass any known technologies. For several months in 2019, for example, objects with bright flashing lights swarmed some of the Navy’s most advanced warships off the coast of southern California, often well over 100 miles offshore.
In the most detailed publicly available footage of one of these craft, the perplexed crew of the USS Omaha watched their infrared video display as a spherical object moved against strong winds before descending slowly into the ocean. The sphere was one of many “drones” tracked on radar swarming their ship that evening. Meanwhile, sailors positioned outside on the ship’s deck recorded multiple objects with bright flashing lightshovering and maneuvering around the Omaha.
The Omaha incident was not unique. The following day, several unknown objects swarmed another Navy vessel, the USS Paul Hamilton, with one descending (“splashing”) into the ocean.
More recently, law enforcement officers observed similar “swarm” dynamics in rural Ohio, Indiana and Wyoming. In late January, federal officials informed Mercer County, Ohio, Sheriff Doug Timmerman that the unknown airborne objects operating in his county engaged in “swarming” tactics.
Timmerman, who observed the craft himself, stated that the mystery “drones” reported to his department were the size of “picnic tables or hot tubs” and moved at speeds of up to 80 miles per hour at altitudes as low as 100 feet. Some of the incidents occurred in the vicinity of farms battling outbreaks of bird flu.
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