anomalien.com
Inside the CIA’s Covert UAP Retrieval Missions and Non-Human Technology
According to Christopher Sharp of Liberation Times, new disclosures from Intelligence Community and Department of Defense (DoD) sources suggest the U.S. has conducted covert operations since World War II to recover Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) materials.
Sources allege that the CIA, collaborating with the U.S. Navy and other agencies, has led missions to retrieve non-human materials from land, sea, and even foreign territories.
These missions reportedly involve organizations such as the National Underwater Reconnaissance Office, and submergence vehicles provided by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, with recovered materials sent for analysis to defense contractors, including Lockheed Martin.
Significant figures within the CIA, including former CIA Director of Science and Technology Glenn Gaffney, are implicated in blocking transfers of alleged non-human materials to outside entities.
The CIA’s Weapons and Counterproliferation Mission Center (WCPMC) reportedly plays a key role in studying and categorizing UAP materials, leveraging space-based and technical intelligence from agencies like the National Reconnaissance Office, DIA, NSA, and NGA.
The WCPMC’s operations, while primarily analytical, are linked to historical intelligence on non-human technology, stretching back to the OSS’s WWII-era involvement with the alleged crash of a non-human craft in Magenta, Italy.
The CIA’s lineage of UAP research has evolved through several institutional changes, from the Office of Scientific Intelligence to today’s WCPMC.
The ongoing revelations may intensify calls for greater government accountability, as U.S. officials grapple with potential decades-long coverups of non-human intelligence and technology.
The post Inside the CIA’s Covert UAP Retrieval Missions and Non-Human Technology appeared first on Anomalien.com.