Humans developed special technology to down UFOs “during WW2,” an expert has claimed. Responding to claims that UFOs have been brought down on purpose by “powerful UFO-disabling technology capable of grounding ships,” a United States Army veteran both offered confirmation and went further to clarify just how long we’ve supposedly been doing this for.
The initial comments came from alien-loving lawyer Danny Sheehan, who said: “They’ve (the US Government) developed technology to knock these, some of these things down. It’s an extraordinarily powerful technology, we’ll call it, that is capable of disabling the craft, [and forcing] them down. It’s an extraordinarily sophisticated technology that’s been developed to take them down.”
“Now, that doesn’t mean that they haven’t compensated for that. But there were a number of the vehicles that were recovered, intact vehicles, that were forced down by this technology. And so what I’m saying is that this wasn’t a passive, just go find one that happens to have accidentally crashed and hit by lightning or something.”
And now a US Army vet, who wished to remain anonymous but The Daily Star has verified, told us: “The tech mentioned was initially developed during WWII after it was discovered that EMPs emitted from nuclear testing brought down craft.
“It was used in combination with radar to identify and down craft. Some were intact, and others were damaged or destroyed. Roswell is one such instance.”
The expert cited expert Chuck Wade who spoke at the 14th Annual Aztec UFO Symposium in March 2011.
Wade claimed that three high-powered radar sites across the United States – in El Vado, New Mexico, another near the Continental Divide in the same area and a third station at Moriarty near the centre of New Mexico – “shot down” several UFOs that “crashed and were retrieved in New Mexico between 1945 and 1948”.
Wade has spent his life investigating Roswell, New Mexico and the several alleged UFO crash sites contained in the area.
For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.
This post was originally published on here