Navy Rear Admiral to give bombshell testimony to Congress about underwater UFOs that have been tailing US nuclear subs
A retired rear admiral who served as the Navy’s chief oceanographer will testify before Congress about the risks of UFOs that seem to roam Earth’s seas with impunity.
Vice Admiral Tim Gallaudet (ret.) has publicly testified in the past to ‘an interesting correlation’ […] where we see so many potential interactions from UAP [i.e. UFOs] and nuclear ships” – but has never previously discussed the issue under oath.
And increasingly, Admiral Gallaudet has also given voice to growing concerns among military officials that these strange apparent vessels possess “capabilities.” […] that goes beyond our current understanding of science, technology and engineering.’
“We need to explore this more and get a better understanding of it,” as he put it this week, “both because of the national security implications and just because of the science.”
But despite Admiral Gallaudet’s openness on the once-fringe subject of UFOs, the substance of what he plans to reveal Wednesday before the House Oversight Committee’s final public UAP hearing remains a mystery.
However, the Navy oceanographer revealed two surprising UFO encounters on Monday, as reported to him by Navy personnel prior to his testimony.
A submariner told Admiral Gallaudet about an encounter an American submarine had in the 1980s with a bizarre underwater object, which stopped on a dime as it sped deep beneath the Atlantic Ocean.
“It had all the characteristics of a Russian torpedo,” said Admiral Gallaudet, “because it was approaching a fast speed. But then it slowed down, which torpedoes don’t do.”
Retired Vice Admiral Tim Gallaudet (above) has publicly testified in the past to “an interesting correlation […] where we see so many potential interactions from UAP [‘Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena’ or UFOs] and nuclear ships,” but has never previously discussed the issue under oath
Vice Admiral Gallaudet explained that this US Navy submarine – which was “sailing at a greater depth during a very severe North Atlantic storm” – had performed evasive maneuvers to escape what the crew initially thought was a Russian torpedo.
“Because of the fast approach, they went to ‘crush depth.’ That was their SOP, standard operating procedure,” the retired rear admiral said NewsNation.
The term ‘crush depth’, also known as ‘collapse depth’, is used to indicate a level in the deep ocean where the density and pressure of water threaten the structural integrity of a given submarine’s design.
But the dense water at “crush depth” can also help a submarine avoid torpedoes tracking it by confusing the weapon’s onboard sonar, which is used for “acoustic homing.”
In other words, the sound waves emitted as sonar pings can be slowed, scattered, or otherwise disrupted as they pass through dense water at these depths.
“It was also an old submarine,” Admiral Gallaudet said of the risky defensive move, which could have imploded the submarine and killed its crew. “So they weren’t happy about that and didn’t feel comfortable.”
“They really believed it was a Soviet submarine,” he told NewsNation correspondent and veteran investigative journalist Ross Coulthart, “launching an attack on them.”
“And then, of course, this object stopped and went to their stern and followed them,” he continued. “Then it quickly disappeared from the scene.”
‘In the 1980s we don’t know of any technology that could do that. What was that?’ as the Vice Admiral put it rhetorically to Coulthart. “I can’t explain it either.”
In his appearance on NewsNation, Admiral Gallaudet also discussed “an extraordinary story from a petty officer on the USS Eisenhower,” in which an entire multi-ship aircraft carrier strike group witnessed a giant UFO. Above, a fighter jet aboard the Eisenhower
Still images from a leaked video showing a spherical UFO diving into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California. Investigative journalist Jeremy Corbell says the video ‘FLIR [forward looking infrared] data’ that is supplemented by the US Navy’s unreleased radar images
Above, Deputy Admiral Gallaudet while serving as deputy administrator at the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), during a tour of a National Weather Service office
In his appearance on Coulthart’s NewsNation program, Admiral Gallaudet also discussed “an extraordinary story from a petty officer on the USS Eisenhower,” in which an entire multi-ship aircraft carrier strike group witnessed a giant UFO.
“On a previous deployment, about 20 years ago, the senior leadership, this NCO, all witnessed a UAP in the middle of the strike group,” he said.
The retired vice admiral, who also spent three years as deputy administrator at the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), also noted that he has begun “a correspondence with Robert Hastings.”
Hastings, author of a doorstop book on the subject entitled “UFOs and Nukes,” has helped bring many U.S. military witnesses to similar past UFO events to the public.
But Vice Admiral Gallaudet noted that some of the most compelling testimony he has heard relates to the classified sensitivities of the U.S. nuclear submarine fleet.
“I’ve heard there are others,” he said, “but submarine information and operations are so highly classified, with non-disclosure agreements signed by everyone in the force, that they are difficult to track down.”
Rear Adm. Gallaudet will speak on Wednesday, November 13, 2024, at the UAP hearing organized by HThe Oversight and Accountability Committee plans to host the hearing on November 13.
According to a committee spokesperson: ‘The Cyber Subcommittee and the National Security Subcommittee will hold a joint hearing on UAPs on November 13. Cyber Subcommittee Chairman Nancy Mace (R-SC) and National Security Subcommittee Chairman Glenn Grothman (R-WI) will co-chair the hearing,