A secret office of the CIA has been tasked with recovering UFOs (Unidentified Flying Objects) that have crashed around the world for decades, according to exclusive sources reported by the Daily Mail.
One source stated that at least 9 spacecraft that appear to be non-human have been recovered by the U.S. government, with some vessels damaged after crashes and 2 remaining intact.
Three sources revealed that the Office of Global Access (OGA), a division of the CIA’s Technology and Science Directorate, has played a central role since 2003 in the effort to collect what could be alien spacecraft.
Illustration of an Unidentified Flying Object (UFO). (Source: Getty).
According to the Daily Mail, although these shocking claims may sound like they are taken from a science fiction novel, they provide further evidence that the U.S. government may indeed be concealing advanced non-human vehicles.
In July, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer supported a bill that would allow the public disclosure of “restored data regarding the origins and biological evidence of non-human intelligence,” which has now passed the Senate.
Some sources also shared with the Daily Mail that the CIA has secretly recovered and stored UFOs that have crashed or landed on Earth.
Sources indicated that the CIA has a system capable of identifying UFOs while they are concealed, and if non-human spacecraft land, crash, or are brought to Earth, special military units will be dispatched to recover the wreckage.
Another source with knowledge of the OGA’s role said that this agency specializes in allowing the U.S. military to secretly access areas around the world from which they are denied entry.
“They essentially act like coordinators who facilitate entry and exit for individuals into and out of countries. They are very clever in being able to reach any location in the world they desire,” the source remarked.
Sources familiar with the operations of the OGA revealed that most of the agency’s missions involve conventional recovery tasks, such as lost nuclear weapons, downed satellites, or technologies from adversaries. However, they assert that some missions coordinated by the OGA relate to the recovery of UFOs.
Documents released by the National Archives and Records Administration in December 2016 indicate that the OGA is one of 56 offices within the CIA, with its leaders being two of the 286 senior officials in the agency.