CIA’s bombshell ties to UFOs and alien tech revealed in exposed,
A UFO whistleblower pointed to a declassified intelligence assessment that he said contains evidence of a decades-long government effort to conceal the truth.
Air Force veteran David Grusch stood on the steps of Capitol Hill on Tuesday and called on the White House to release what he described as the ‘smoking gun’ proving UFOs are real.
During his speech, Grusch was asked which documents people should study to better understand what he calls the American Legacy UFO Program.
He pointed to a 1971 Australian intelligence review, which argued that US officials believed some UFOs may have been extraterrestrial craft and secretly sought to understand their propulsion systems.
‘I encourage people to read pages seven through 16, and that was the nuclear branch chief of the Australian government discussing the US cover-up and involvement of the CIA back in the 70s,’ he said.
The report states that between 1948 and 1952, a government agency staffed by rocket, nuclear and intelligence specialists studied UFO reports in an effort to gather information about the design and propulsion of what investigators believed could be ‘interplanetary spaceships.’
The document repeatedly suggests that the agency was ‘almost certainly the CIA.’
The report argues that the government’s interest in UFO propulsion systems reflected a belief among some intelligence officials that the objects were not Soviet technology, but vehicles of possible extraterrestrial origin.
Air Force veteran David Grusch stood on the steps of Capitol Hill on Tuesday and called on the White House to release what he described as the ‘smoking gun’ proving UFOs are real
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Grusch spent 14 years in the Air Force before working as an intelligence officer for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), which builds and launches surveillance satellites for the Pentagon.
From 2019 to 2021, he represented NRO on the UAP Task Force, but eventually became a whistleblower after allegedly learning that elements of the US government had prevented Congressional oversight on matters related to extraterrestrials.
In 2023, he testified before Congress, claiming that secret government departments had been running UFO retrieval and reverse-engineering programs for decades.
On Tuesday, Grusch stood in Washington DC to pressure officials to tell the American people the truth about UFOs, and used the Australian document to argue that intelligence agencies had long believed some sightings could be extraterrestrial in origin.
The report was prepared by O H Turner, Head of the Nuclear Branch in Australia’s Joint Intelligence Organization.
An early Air Force intelligence analysis concluded that some UFO sightings involved real objects displaying flight characteristics far beyond known US aircraft, leading investigators to consider an extraterrestrial origin.
The document further alleged that the CIA’s Office of Scientific Intelligence studied the reports in an effort to understand the propulsion methods behind the unexplained craft.
The Australian intelligence review traced the US government’s involvement with UFO investigations back to 1947, when the Air Technical Intelligence Center near Dayton, Ohio, began examining the first wave of ‘flying saucer’ sightings.
He pointed to a 1971 Australian intelligence review, which argued that US officials believed some UFOs may have been extraterrestrial craft and secretly sought to understand their propulsion systems
Investigators initially suspected the objects could be advanced Soviet technology. But by the end of that year, many working under Project Sign had shifted toward a far more extraordinary possibility that the craft originated beyond Earth.
Project Sign was the first official U.S. government study of UFOs, initiated by the Air Force in late 1947 and active primarily in 1948.
Their conclusions were compiled into a formal estimate and sent to the Pentagon in September 1948.
According to the review, senior officials rejected the extraterrestrial explanation because there was insufficient evidence, triggering a retreat from attempts to solve the mystery.
In February 1949, Project Sign was replaced by Project Grudge, which the review described as an effort to discredit UFO reports and dampen public acceptance of the phenomenon.
The Air Force may have been motivated by fears of public panic or embarrassment over its inability to explain the sightings, Turner suggested.
Meanwhile, another agency staffed by rocket, nuclear and intelligence specialists continued examining UFO reports.
The review identified that organization as ‘almost certainly the CIA’ and claimed its objective was to collect design and propulsion data from what some investigators believed were ‘interplanetary spaceships.’
Despite efforts to dismiss the phenomenon, sightings continued to rise. By 1952, the Air Force had launched Project Blue Book, restoring funding and personnel to analyze thousands of reports.
That summer brought a dramatic surge in sightings, including the famous incidents over Washington DC.
Some intelligence officials reportedly concluded the objects could be extraterrestrial craft, prompting the release of 41 previously classified cases that contradicted earlier explanations dismissing UFOs as simple misidentifications.
‘I encourage people to read pages seven through 16, and that was the nuclear branch chief of the Australian government discussing the US cover-up and involvement of the CIA back in the 70s,’ Grusch said
The CIA viewed the situation differently, as rather than focusing on the origin of the objects, officials were said to be concerned that the flood of reports was overwhelming military communications networks and distracting defense forces from monitoring potential Soviet threats.
In January 1953, the CIA’s Office of Scientific Intelligence convened the Robertson Panel to determine how the government should respond.
While the panel recommended continued investigation, the review argued that the agency ultimately favored publicly downplaying UFOs while quietly expanding intelligence collection behind the scenes.
Under that approach, Project Blue Book was gradually transformed from a significant investigative effort into a small public-facing office whose primary purpose was supplying explanations for sightings.
More sensitive intelligence work, according to the review, was moved elsewhere within the military structure.
Turner further argued that studies conducted under Blue Book showed the most credible sightings were often the hardest to explain, and that officials privately regarded the unexplained cases as fundamentally different from known aircraft, astronomical objects or conventional phenomena.
The review also linked intelligence interest in UFO performance characteristics to government support for advanced aerospace projects, including the Avrocar flying-saucer prototype and anti-gravity research programs.
It suggested that some officials believed the technology behind UFOs was real and feared the Soviet Union might master it first.
Turner ultimately criticized Australia’s own handling of UFO reports, arguing that the country had largely adopted the Air Force’s public position while neglecting serious scientific analysis of the phenomenon.



