The truth is out there — and late President George H.W. Bush apparently knew it — telling a federal official that an alien made contact with humans at a secretive New Mexico air base in 1964, according to testimony in an explosive new documentary.
Eric Davis, an astrophysicist who was a scientific advisor on the since-disbanded Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, created by Congress in 2007 by late Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV), claimed that Bush confirmed to him in a private conversation details of contact between the military and an alien creature at Holloman Air Force Base in Otero County.
Bush told him that three spaceships were seen approaching the base and that an interstellar being emerged from one ship and had a face-to-face encounter with military and CIA officials, Davis said during an interview in “The Age of Disclosure,” a documentary by filmmaker Dan Farah that went live on Amazon Prime on Friday.
“One of them landed on the tarmac and a non-human entity deboarded the craft that landed and interacted with uniformed Air Force and civilian CIA personnel,” Davis claimed.
“And when [Bush] asked for more details he was told that he did not have a need-to-know,” he relayed.
Bush, a former decorated Naval aviator and director of the CIA, was allegedly informed of the encounter after his term as president, according to Davis, who said the two spoke in a series of private conversations in 2003.
Davis didn’t describe the alien craft or the aliens, or discuss any material evidence for the claims.
The eagerly-awaited documentary focuses on a supposed top-secret government UFO-retrieval operation dubbed the “Legacy Program,” and features US officials who claim direct knowledge that aliens exist and have visited Earth — without actually providing new physical evidence.
Davis claims in the film that alien bodies were recovered in Russia in 1988, pulled from the wreckage of a large tic-tac shaped UAP, or unidentified anomalous phenomena.
Hal Puthoff, a former AATIP member, quantum physicist and longtime disclosure advocate, claimed there were several different types of ETs.
“The bodies recovered are not all the same type,” Puthoff said in the documentary, though he declined to detail them.
“Whoever it is — they’re here,” he said. “And they’ve been operating here for a long time.”
Others interviewed detailed injuries sustained by military personnel who claimed to have come into physical contact with UAPs.
Gary Nolan, an immunologist and cancer researcher at Stanford University’s School of Medicine, evaluated several military personnel who were brought to him by representatives of the CIA and an unnamed aerospace company, he claimed.
The injuries sustained by the military members included “horrific” burns and “internal scarring” which manifested inside the patients’ brains, Nolan said.
Mike Flaherty, a retired US Navy and Air Force intelligence officer, alleged he suffered medical complications and “biological effects” from coming into contact with a craft.
The Legacy Program, the film claims, is operated by elements of the CIA, the US Air Force, the Department of Energy and unnamed private defense contractors — who have allegedly retrieved several crashed vehicles and alien bodies.
The existence of the program is even kept from US presidents, leading several lawmakers to sound the alarm that deep-state bureaucracy is holding back critical information regarding potential national security threats, according to the documentary.
“We’ve had repeated instances of something operating in the airspace over restricted nuclear facilities and it’s not ours. And we don’t know whose it is. That alone, just that statement alone, deserves inquiry, deserves attention, deserves focus,” said then-Sen. Marco Rubio.
“I think that there’s this assumption that presidents can walk into the Oval Office on day one and say ‘Alright, take me to Roswell, show me the alien bodies, I want to see the video of the autopsy, I want to see the whole thing – open it up,’” he continued, referring to the alleged UFO crash in New Mexico in 1947.
“I think that really is a naive understanding of how our government works.”
Sen. Kristin Gillibrand (D-NY) warned that the public should be more concerned about threats our nation’s terrestrial enemies pose rather than threats from outer space.
“If you have objects in the sky that you cannot identify — that’s a problem. Because it could be China, it could be Russia, it could be any adversary,” New York’s junior senator said.
Director and producer Dan Farah told The Post that he is hoping the film pushes forward the UFO disclosure movement.
“I think this film puts us in a different place,” he said. “It sets the table for a president to step to the microphone and more comfortably tell all of humanity that we’re not alone in the universe.”
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