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originally posted by: ConMi27
And surely there's some pilot on ATS that has thoughts on this. I mean its Abnormally weird....
"There is a [military] publication called JANAP 146E that has a section that says you will not reveal any information regarding the UFO phenomenon under penalty of $10,000 fine and ten years in jail. So the secret has been kept."
Lieutenant Frederick Fox.
Pilot Statements
originally posted by: Factory
a reply to: ConMi27
There has been several attempts but no one is willing to risk pilots and hardware from being damaged or put put out of commission anymore.
Everything from 60-70 has been non aggressive excluding non American air assets.
Search for foreign reports and you might get a better understanding of "why not".
originally posted by: karl 12
There is a [military] publication called JANAP 146E that has a section that says you will not reveal any information regarding the UFO phenomenon under penalty of $10,000 fine and ten years in jail. So the secret has been kept.
That quote is probably misleading because the JANAP-146E document doesn't specify the penalties. It's also misleading because it doesn't say "you will not reveal any information regarding the UFO phenomenon", since you could reveal lots of information about the UFO phenomenon if it didn't fall within the narrow criteron specified, without any penalty. The reference is specific to CIRVIS reports, which include both identifiable threats to the US, and also "aircraft of unconventional design, or engaged in suspicious activity or observed in a location or on a course which may be interpreted as constituting a threat to the United States, Canada or their forces." I suppose "aircraft of unconventional design" could be interpreted as "UFO" but it doesn't really say "UFO".
originally posted by: Ophiuchus1
originally posted by: karl 12
There is a [military] publication called JANAP 146E that has a section that says you will not reveal any information regarding the UFO phenomenon under penalty of $10,000 fine and ten years in jail. So the secret has been kept.
Karl…..I’ve gone to several online postings of the JANAP 146E in pdf format…..and I can’t find that warning statement…..
Can you provide a link to where JANAP 146 states that warning?
👽🛸🍺
SECTION III - SECURITY
208. Military and Civilian. Transmission of CIRVIS reports are subject to the U.S. Communications Act of 1934, as amended, and the Canadian Radio Act of 1938, as amended. Any person who violates the provisions of these acts may be liable to prosecution thereunder. These reports contain information affecting the national defense of the United States and Canada. Any person who makes an unauthorized transmission or disclosure of such a report may be liable to prosecution under Title 18 of the US Code 793, Chapter 37, or the Canadian Official Secrets Act of 1939, as amended. This should not be construed as requiring classification of CIRVIS messages. The purpose is to emphasize the necessity for the handling of such information within official channels only.
It was the Panel's opinion that some of the Air Force concern over U.F.O.'s (notwithstanding Air Defense Command anxiety over fast radar tracks) was probably caused by public pressure. The result today is that the Air·Force has instituted a fine channel for receiving reports of nearly anything anyone sees in the sky and fails to understand. This has been particularly encouraged in popular articles on this and other subjects, such as space travel and
science fiction. The result is the mass receipt of low-grade reports which tend to overload channels of communication with material quite
irrelevant to hostile objects that might some day appear.
SECTION I - GENERAL
201. Information to be Reported and When to Report.
a. Sightings within the scope of this chapter, as outlined in paragraphs 102b(1), (2), (6) and (7), are to be reported as follows:
(1) While airborne and from land based observers.
(a) Hostile or unidentified single aircraft or formations of aircraft which appear to be directed against the United States or Canada or their forces.
(b) Missiles.
(c) Unidentified flying objects.
(d) Hostile or unidentified submarines.
(e) Hostile or unidentified group or groups of military surface vessels.
(f) Individual surface vessels, submarines, or aircraft of unconventional design, or engaged in suspicious activity or observed in a location or on a course which may be interpreted as constituting a threat to the United States, Canada or their forces.
(g) Any unexplained or unusual activity which may indicate a possible attack against or through Canada or the United States, including the presence of any unidentified or other suspicious ground parties in the Polar Region or other remote or sparsely populated areas.
(2) Upon landing.
(a) Reports which for any reason could not be transmitted while airborne.
(b) Unlisted airfields or facilities, weather stations, or air navigation aids.
(c) Any airborne, seaborne, ballistic or orbiting object which, the observer feels, may constitute a military threat against the US or Canada, or may be of interest to military and civilian government officials.
I'm not sure if any posed such a threat
originally posted by: PorteurDeMort
I think the reason they don't shoot them down is due to what you said. They're scared of a retaliation that based on the UAP tech could most assuredly wipe us out. Orrrrrrr, they're working with these beings and allow the to fly freely because we are receiving some sort of tech in exchange for allowing them to operate unimpeded. Both are rather frightening in my opinion.
originally posted by: Paulzx
originally posted by: PorteurDeMort
. They also went on to say they had discovered a frequency that can be used to contact the intelligence operating the craft. Elizondo declined to confirm whether American authorities had also tried this method of contact, which means they of course had done but he didn't want to break his security oath by confirming it.
originally posted by: Paulzx
In fact if you followed Lue Elizondo's show unidentified...