Jared Isaacman has revealed the agency has captured “imagery” of mysterious objects it still “doesn’t know” how to explain, as UAP files are declassified
A NASA bigwig has made a jaw-dropping confession about “secret” images of unexplained flying objects. Jared Isaacman has admitted the space agency has captured footage that “could not be explained”.
Administrator Isaacman, who took over as NASA chief in December, made the bombshell remarks on The Jack Gordon Podcast on June 30, as the world’s appetite for UFO revelations grows.
“We have captured imagery — and this is what President Trump is very forward-leaning about — that, based on the data that we have within that imagery, we don’t know what it is,” Isaacman told host Gordon. The stunning admission will likely send conspiracy theories into overdrive.
However, Isaacman stopped short of claiming NASA had proof of alien visitors. He stressed the agency has found “zero evidence” that any mystery objects are extraterrestrial spacecraft.
NASA has long insisted it has no evidence that UFOs are alien in origin. And while the internet loves tales of “crashed saucers”, Isaacman said there has been nothing like recovered spacecraft or alien bodies, Fox News reported.
Still, his comments come as high-resolution UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) data is increasingly being declassified, with the Pentagon and US government releasing batches of images, records and files.
In June, dozens of records were published through the Trump administration’s Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters – known as PURSUE – a push to get UAP material out of locked-away files and into the public domain.
Isaacman said: “We did keep a lot of that buried in files somewhere, and the President said, ‘Why? Put it out there.
“‘We don’t have time to study it. Let other people tell us what it is’.
“‘And you’re seeing that effort. And you’re going to continue to see it.”
Isaacman also made a bold prediction about life beyond Earth – saying he believes humans may reach a conclusion in our lifetime that life is widespread in the universe, as per Fox News. He said: “I think there’s a very real possibility we’re going to arrive at a conclusion in our lifetime that perhaps there’s life everywhere out there.”
But if the big breakthrough does come, he suggested it may not be little green men in flying saucers as it could be far smaller, according to Fox News. On the podcast, Isaacman hinted the first “smoking gun” could be microbial life much closer to home, potentially inside our own solar system.
“We got samples on Mars right now,” he said. “If we bring them back, there is a very high probability that they will point to, at some point, microbial life at least on Mars.”
He added: “I can’t hate the subject. In fact, I’m incredibly fascinated by it because that is at the heart of what we’re trying to do at NASA — answer the question, ‘Are we alone?’”
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