Sean Kirkpatrick’s letter, printed on his private LinkedIn web page and circulated on Friday throughout social media, criticises a lot of the testimony from a retired Air Force intelligence officer that energised believers in extraterrestrial life and produced headlines all over the world.
Part of what the US has recovered, Grusch testified, were non-human “biologics”, which he said he had not seen but had learned about from “people with direct knowledge of the program”.
A career intelligence officer, Kirkpatrick was named a year ago to lead the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, which was intended to centralise investigations into UAPs.
The Pentagon and US intelligence agencies have been pushed by Congress in recent years to better investigate reports of devices flying at unusual speeds or trajectories as a national security concern.
Kirkpatrick wrote the letter on Thursday and the Defence Department confirmed on Friday that he posted it in a personal capacity.
Kirkpatrick did not return messages seeking comment.
“I cannot let yesterday’s hearing pass without sharing how insulting it was to the officers of the Department of Defense and Intelligence Community who chose to join AARO, many with not unreasonable anxieties about the career risks this would entail,” he wrote in part.
“They are truth-seekers, as am I,” Kirkpatrick stated.
“But you certainly would not get that impression from yesterday’s hearing.”
In a separate statement, Pentagon spokeswoman Sue Gough denied other allegations made by Grusch and other witnesses before a House Oversight subcommittee.
The Pentagon “has no information that any individual has been harmed or killed as a result of providing information” about UFO objects, Gough stated.
Nor has the Pentagon found “any verifiable information to substantiate claims that any programs regarding the possession or reverse-engineering of extraterrestrial materials have existed in the past or exist currently”.
Kirkpatrick wrote, “AARO has yet to find any credible evidence to support the allegations of any reverse engineering program for non-human technology”.
He had briefed reporters in December that the Pentagon was investigating “several hundreds” of latest reviews following a push to have pilots and others come ahead with any sightings.
Kirkpatrick wrote in his letter that allegations of “retaliation, to include physical assault and hints of murder, are extraordinarily serious, which is why law enforcement is a critical member of the AARO team, specifically to address and take swift action should anyone come forward with such claims”.
“Yet, contrary to assertions made in the hearing, the central source of those allegations has refused to speak with AARO,” Kirkpatrick stated.
He didn’t explicitly identify Grusch, who alleged he confronted retaliation and declined to reply when a congressman requested him if anybody had been murdered to cover details about UFOs.
Messages left at a telephone quantity and e mail handle for Grusch weren’t returned Friday.
Source: www.9news.com.au