Is the first UFO crash on Earth actually in Italy and not Roswell, New Mexico? A researcher from Italy says he has evidence to support recent reports that a crashed UFO was found in Italy in 1933. Even in the face of widespread scientific skepticism, it contributes to a growing interest in Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs) which now includes political leaders and a NASA panel. Italian ufologist Roberto Pinotti claims that Italian leader Benito Mussolini acquired a flying saucer after it crashed on June 13, 1933, in an interview with the Daily Mail. However, according to Pinotti, American forces at the end of World War II managed to capture the alien craft and bring it to the country.
“I and my colleague began investigating the story of the 1933 UFO crash in Lombardy in 1996 when we received some original secret documents”
Pinotti showed documents to the newspaper that he claims are evidence of both the crash and a secret department set up by Mussolini to study the alleged saucer. “I and my colleague Alfredo Lissoni began investigating the story of the 1933 UFO crash in Lombardy in 1996 when we received some original secret documents about the case,” Pinotti told the newspaper. If Pinotti’s allegations hadn’t coincided with the spectacular accusations of former U.S. intelligence officer David Grusch, who recently claimed that the Italian flying saucer was the first of its kind to be discovered by the United States, they might have gone unnoticed in the sea of UAP chatter. The former employee of the National Reconnaissance Office claimed to have proof of a covert American program that acquired numerous ‘non-human’ flying saucers.
“I thought it was totally nuts, and I thought at first I was being deceived, it was a ruse,” Grusch said. “People started to confide in me. Approach me. I have plenty of senior, former, intelligence officers that came to me, many of which I knew almost my whole career, that confided in me that they were part of a program.” A hearing to go through Grusch’s charges is being planned by the House Oversight Committee. According to Florida senator Marco Rubio, several members of the intelligence establishment have come forward with “firsthand” accounts of UFO hardware in addition to Grusch. The supposed Italian flying saucer is just one aspect of the revived UAP interest.
An independent NASA team has been investigating the puzzling phenomenon and stated in May that research is being hampered by a scarcity of high-quality data and a pervasive stigma. Additionally, a Pentagon analysis discovered photographs of unidentifiable objects but did not draw the conclusion that the images involved extraterrestrial life. Even with scant research findings, some legislators seem keen to learn more about these UAPs. The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, which is entrusted with investigating and analysing UAPs, will receive more cash under the Senate Armed Services Committee’s draught of the 2024 National Defence Authorization Act, according to Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York.
“Dave [Grusch] claims that the US has ‘quite a few’ alien craft that crashed or landed,” West tweeted. “Why, then, is the evidence of their alienness only ‘isotopic ratios’ and ‘strange heavy atomic metal arrangements?’” It’s typically a good idea to investigate unexplained events, but it’s crucial to keep in mind that all something needs to do to qualify as a “unidentified flying object” is to fly and be impossible to identify. Additionally, the term “unidentifiable” just means “unknown,” not “extraterrestrial.” Most likely, we won’t be called to report to our boss any time soon.