The Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a now-defunct initiative of the U.S. government, previously spent millions of dollars researching unconventional technologies and proposals.
Recently, Vice revealed a collection of nearly 1,600 pages of classified documents, which includes reports, proposals, contracts, meeting notes, and more from AATIP—a secret Pentagon program that operated from 2007 to 2012, led by former intelligence officer Luis Elizondo.
This documentation covers a wide range of research topics on bizarre experimental technologies, including the concept of bombing the Moon.
According to Science Alert, these documents reveal that AATIP’s investigations were not limited to reported UFO encounters, but also included a variety of research topics on strange experimental technologies, such as cloaking devices, anti-gravity equipment, traversable wormholes, and even proposals to “tunnel” through the Moon using nuclear explosives.
Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the documents is the reports discussing the potential existence of various “advanced technologies”, such as “traversable wormholes,” “negative energy and meteors,” “high-frequency gravitational wave communication,” “longitudinal waves – dark energy and manipulating dimensions,” and many other topics reminiscent of science fiction.
One of the assessments regarding cloaking technology, or hiding objects from view, stated it was “inaccessible,” as it requires materials with complex structures or combinations that reach the speed of light. However, the technology still allows objects to “disappear” from microwave-based sensors, such as radar and motion detectors. “This technology is certainly within humanity’s reach,” the report’s author noted.
Additionally, many reports emphasized the impracticality of deploying advanced technologies, yet did not shy away from bold proposals, the most notable being the creation of a tunnel through the Moon’s crust and mantle using thermonuclear explosives.
Luis Elizondo, a former Pentagon intelligence officer, has revealed substantial evidence indicating the existence of UFOs (Photo: Guardian).
Fortunately, the U.S. government ultimately did not pursue this outrageous plan. Instead, NASA’s upcoming Artemis missions will return humans to the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era, aiming to establish a sustainable human presence there.
With this goal in mind, it is clear that shaking the Moon with nuclear explosions will not be a top priority, and may even contradict the safety criteria of the mission.
This latest documentation emerged just three weeks after The Sun obtained over 1,500 pages related to UFO encounters that AATIP had cataloged for research. Among these documents are reports on “biological effects” that UFOs are believed to have on humans.