The Pentagon's secret program once suggested 'bombing' the Moon

The US government's now defunct Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP) spent millions of dollars researching unrealistic proposals and technologies.

Vice recently revealed a secret document with nearly 1,600 pages including reports, proposals, contracts, meeting notes . of AATIP - a secret program of the Pentagon, deployed. from 2007 to 2012, run by former intelligence officer Luis Elizondo.

Picture 1 of The Pentagon's secret program once suggested 'bombing' the Moon
This document covers a wide range of research topics on strange experimental technologies, including the bombing of the Moon.

According to Science Alert, these documents show that AATIP is not simply investigating reported UFO encounters, but includes a wide range of research topics on exotic experimental technologies, such as cloaks, devices subject to antigravity, the wormhole could pass through, or suggested "tunneling" through the Moon with a nuclear bomb.

Perhaps most intriguing of all are the reports, which discuss the possible existence of various "advanced technologies", such as "passable wormholes", "meteorites and solar energy". polarity", "high-frequency gravitational wave communications", "vertical drive - dark energy and the manipulation of dimensions". and many topics like the field of science fiction.

One of the notes that the technology of stealth, or hiding objects from view, is "unattainable", because they require materials with complex textures, or combinations at the speed of light. light reaches infinity. However, the technology still allows the object to "disappear" before microwave-based sensors, such as radar and motion detectors. "Certainly this technology is within the reach of humans," the report's authors said.

In addition, many reports emphasize the impracticality of deploying advanced technologies, but do not shy away from bold proposals, most notably creating a tunnel through the shell and layers. mantle of the Moon using thermonuclear explosives.

Picture 2 of The Pentagon's secret program once suggested 'bombing' the Moon
Luis Elizondo, a former Pentagon intelligence officer, has revealed a lot of evidence that shows the existence of UFOs (Photo: Guardian).

Fortunately, the US government ultimately did not implement this crazy plan. Instead, NASA's upcoming Artemis missions will return humans to the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era, with the goal of establishing a sustainable human presence there.

With this goal in mind, it is clear that rocking the Moon with nuclear explosions would not be a priority, or even go against the mission's safety criteria.

The latest documents come just three weeks after British newspaper The Sun obtained more than 1,500 pages of documents relating to UFO encounters that have been cataloged by AATIP. Among the documents were reports of the alleged "biological effects" of UFOs on humans.