Kexburg, 1965: Military Experiments Or UFOs? - Alternative View

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Kexburg, 1965: Military Experiments Or UFOs? - Alternative View
Kexburg, 1965: Military Experiments Or UFOs? - Alternative View

Video: Kexburg, 1965: Military Experiments Or UFOs? - Alternative View

Video: Kexburg, 1965: Military Experiments Or UFOs? - Alternative View
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The strange events that took place in the small American town of Kexburgh, Pennsylvania, back in 1965, have not yet received any convincing explanation

An analysis of information provided by NASA about the strange events that took place in Kexburg in 1965 did not clarify anything, but exacerbated a lot.

On December 9, 1965, a dazzling fireball swept over the United States and Canada.

It was observed in at least six states in the United States, as well as in the Canadian province of Ontario. Over Western Pennsylvania, the object caused a shock wave.

The culmination of the incident was associated with the small village of Kexburgh, fifty kilometers from the state capital of Pittsburgh - residents heard how something crashed into trees at high speed.

The first eyewitness of "something" was a little boy who told his mother that he saw the landing of some object. She, seeing the bluish smoke rising over the area of the fall, called the police and firefighters.

Further events are known only from the words of local authorities who managed to visit the scene before the arrival of the military and special services.

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In the photo: Memorial sign.

The body that fell on Keksburg, according to them, was an acorn-shaped object the size of a small runabout. On the case were inscriptions very reminiscent of Egyptian hieroglyphs.

The story ended with the arrival of many military personnel. They cordoned off the area, then removed the object on a trailer, after which they announced that "nothing could be found." Information about "something" was classified by NASA.

The Keksburg mystery has not been supplanted by the new cosmic mysteries that have accumulated over the past time. In 2002, American journalist Leslie Kean began to seek disclosure of the incident.

In 2007, referring to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), she through the courts forced NASA to obtain consent to release information about the incident and for this to conduct a search in its archives for all information related to the incident - this NASA in every possible way opposed.

The search, which was supervised by the courts, was completed in August 2009.

According to Space, the final document, titled "The Conclusion of the NASA Lawsuit - Concerning the Kecksburg, PA UFO case of 1965," was presented to the journalist.

According to the journalist, there are no really sensational facts and documents in the report. But there are contradictions that give rise to new "provocative" questions.

The situation is aggravated by the fact that many documents about the incident, as happens in NASA, were destroyed or safely lost.

The connection between the incident in Keksburg and NASA's Project Moondust, in which the agency investigated space objects, including objects of unknown origin, has not been clarified. Information about the project was kept by the US Department of State.

From the analysis of the data collected to date, it is possible to draw a preliminary conclusion that the "something" from Kecksburg was not a Soviet spacecraft or other artificial celestial body of "non-American" origin.

It remains to admit, the journalist believes, that we can talk either about a secret experiment of American structures, or about an object of extraterrestrial origin.