The U. S. Intelligence Office U. S. Aviation Tracking Adds and then UFO Logo

The firm says the workplace “mistakenly posted an unofficial logo and”

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Related Video: Top 10 UFO Sightings Shown by the Government

A UFO added and then removed from the logo of an American intelligence agency.

The transience logo, which the company said was published by mistake, also gave the impression of coming with a Russian fighter jet, leading many other people to think it was a joke, CyberScoop reported this week.

A spokesman for the National Intelligence Manager for Air Domain, a workplace that reports to the Director of Aviation Tracking National Intelligence, told CyberScoop that the workplace, also known as NIM-Aviation, “mistakenly displayed an unofficial logo. “

The Office is the Principal Advisor to the Director on matters related to the aviation domain. Locate and analyze risk intelligence in the sky.

In June last year, he co-authored a report to Congress detailing unidentified aerial phenomena.

It’s still unclear when the logo was first released, but documentary filmmaker and UFO enthusiast Jeremy Corbell tweeted the logo on Saturday night.

“This is not a bad new logo for the National Intelligence Manager for Aviation. A Lazar UFO on the official seal? Hahahaha. Radical. I still can’t, they did that,” he wrote.

On the Army’s Sandboxx website, one user wrote that “it is not unusual for government agencies (around the world) to come with depictions of foreign aircraft in official graphics, but it is incredibly unlikely that ‘an aviation intelligence organization will make such a mistake. ‘

They noted that the plane in the logo was similar to a Russian Sukhoi Su-57 Felon, while some Twitter users also noted that it looked like an Adobe symbol.

The U. S. Navy The U. S. Department of Health showed in 2019 that leaked photographs revealing unidentified items tracked through the pilots were genuine but visual to the public.

One object, named Tic Tac for its resemblance to candy, was filmed as it fell from 60,000 feet (18. 2 km) to 50 feet (15 meters) in a matter of seconds in California in 2004.

Pilot Chad Underwood told New York Magazine in 2019 that “the component that caught our attention did not behave in accordance with the general legislation of physics. “

The word used for those things through the public, UFOs or Unidentified Flying Objects, is not used through the military that calls them UAP – Unidentified Aerial Phenomena.

A UFO added and then removed from the logo of an American intelligence agency.

Screenshot / Twitter / Jeremy Corbell

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