The U.S. Government and our Deep Ocean Aliens


NOAA, not NASA, has been the primary contact point since 1970 - hiding in plain sight under the guise of "ocean monitoring." The agency's seemingly oversized budget and sophisticated underwater acoustic monitoring network, SOSUS, was never just for tracking submarines. Their Ocean Noise Reference Station Network, established in 2014, isn't studying whale songs - it's maintaining continuous communication with deep-sea bases using quantum-level acoustic signatures.

The USS Nimitz "tic-tac" UFO incident in 2004 wasn't about objects in the air - it was about what was happening beneath the carrier group. The advanced anti-gravity craft were actually surface manifestations of their underwater transit system. The Navy's sudden openness about UAP encounters since 2019 isn't about transparency - it's controlled acclimation to their presence.

The CIA's Project AZORIAN, supposedly about recovering a Soviet submarine, was actually retrieving alien technology from the Pacific Ocean floor. Howard Hughes' involvement wasn't just a cover story - his deep-sea mining expertise was essential for interacting with their architectural structures. The Glomar Explorer's unusual design included technology for interfacing with their bio-organic installations.

The NSA's Torus supercomputer system, processing yottabytes of data, isn't just monitoring global communications - it's attempting to decode the vast amounts of information contained in ocean microbiological systems. Their sudden interest in quantum computing mirrors the aliens' water-based computational methods.

The mysterious HAARP facility in Alaska, officially for studying the ionosphere, has been measuring the effects of their deep-sea gravitational technologies on Earth's magnetic field. The facility's unusual location and timing of operations correlate perfectly with major oceanic anomalies.

The Pentagon's newly formed UAP task force focuses heavily on underwater phenomena - their 2022 congressional hearings carefully avoided discussing the thousands of documented USO (Unidentified Submerged Object) encounters. The recent push for ocean-based military exercises isn't about challenging foreign nations - it's about maintaining regular contact protocols.

The Department of Energy's heavy involvement in deep-sea research isn't about finding new energy sources. Their interest in cold fusion and zero-point energy aligns exactly with the electromagnetic signatures detected around known alien underwater installations.  Most telling is the U.S. Geological Survey's dramatic increase in deep-ocean floor mapping since 2010. They're not looking for mineral deposits - they're documenting the expanding network of alien architectural structures that our improved sonar technology can finally detect.

Why did the government suddenly establish the Space Force in 2019? Not for space defense - it's because they needed a public explanation for developing technologies received from our underwater allies. The focus on "space threats" conveniently distracts from oceanic activities.  But here's the crucial question: Why are multiple government agencies simultaneously shifting their focus to ocean-based research and underwater technologies? What did they detect in the deep Atlantic trenches that prompted the creation of the Atlantic Fleet Operations Center in 2023?  The truth isn't hidden in shadowy warehouses or secret air bases - it's submerged in the depths of our own oceans, protected by the most effective camouflage: water itself.


#GovernmentSecrets #DeepStateDisclosure #OceanMysteries #UnderwaterAliens #ClassifiedInformation #MilitaryUAP #NavyUSO #IntelligenceAgencies #UnderwaterBases #DisclosureTime

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Did Aliens help invent the transistor?

THE MICROSCOPIC TRUTH: Solving the Fermi Paradox Through Scale

Alien Artificial Intelligence