BREAKING: New Details Emerge About UFOs Shot Down By NORAD F-22s Over Canada, Alaska

Daily Report USA

On Saturday, the U.S. military shot down yet another unidentified object over northern Canada. The interception comes just a day after the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) announced the takedown of an unidentified object over the waters of Alaska on Friday and a week following the interception of a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina by F-22 Raptor fighter jets.

NORAD released a statement on Saturday updating the public about their recovery operations of the first UFO.

“At the direction of the President of the United States, fighter aircraft assigned to U.S. Northern Command successfully took down a high altitude airborne object off the northern coast of Alaska at 1:45 pm Eastern Standard Time Feb. 10 within U.S. sovereign airspace over U.S. territorial waters,” NORAD explained.

“Recovery operations continue today near Deadhorse, Alaska. U.S. Northern Command’s Alaska Command and the Alaska National Guard, in close coordination with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and local law enforcement, are conducting search and recovery activities. Arctic weather conditions, including wind chill, snow, and limited daylight, are a factor in this operation, and personnel will adjust recovery operations to maintain safety. Recovery activities are occurring on sea ice. We have no further details at this time about the object, including its capabilities, purpose, or origin.”

The letter went on to explain that NORAD is also continuing recovery operations for the Chinese spy balloon that was shot down off the coast of South Carolina last Saturday.

 

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The Pentagon also said during a press conference on Friday that the object was not similar to the Chinese spy balloon intercepted last week and was about the size of a small car.

Additional details have been coming out regarding what the F-22 pilots, who were responsible for intercepting the object that flew over the northern coast of Alaska, saw, however, there have been conflicting reports from the airmen.

“Some of the F-22 Pilots who Tracked the Aircraft that was downed over Alaska yesterday said that it ‘Interfered with their Sensors’ and that ‘They could see No Propulsion Systems on the Aircraft not knowing how it could possibly be staying in the Air.’” wrote OSINTDefender on Twitter and as reported by CNN.

“The Aircraft before it was shot down would alternate from moving around 20-40 mph in the direction of the North Pole and then would appear to just stop at times and Float in Place,” the pilots explained.

With many questions still being asked and answers still unknown, the American and Canadian public anxiously await more details from the Pentagon. Hopefully, more questions will be resolved once the U.S. military recovers these objects and is able to examine them to determine whether they came from an adversary or perhaps from somewhere else.

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