UFO Secrecy Creating Constitutional Crisis
- Cristina Gomez
- 2 hours ago
- 4 min read
In a series of interesting revelations that have sent shockwaves through the UFO disclosure community, retired Navy Rear Admiral Tim Gallaudet has made unprecedented claims about government UFO secrecy, alien technology, and what he describes as an ongoing constitutional crisis. Speaking to The Baltimore Sun and testifying before Congress, Gallaudet — a former head of NOAA and the Navy’s top oceanographer — has become one of the most credible voices calling for transparency on what may be the most significant cover-up in modern history.
Gallaudet’s credentials make his statements impossible to dismiss. With a PhD in oceanography and decades of military service, he served as the Oceanographer of the Navy and later as acting administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. When someone with his level of security clearance and scientific background speaks about government UFO programs, it demands attention. “The government has a trove of UFO videos and materials that they’ve been hiding from the public and Congress for decades,” Gallaudet stated bluntly in his recent interview, adding that while there may be national security reasons for some secrecy, “the American people have a right to know the nature of reality.”
The turning point in Gallaudet’s understanding of the UFO phenomenon came in January 2015, during what should have been a routine naval exercise. While serving as commander of Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command, Gallaudet received an email that would fundamentally alter his worldview. The message, sent through the Navy’s secure network from the operations officer of Fleet Forces Command, carried an urgent subject line in all capital letters: “URGENT SAFETY OF FLIGHT ISSUE.” The content was even more alarming, with words to the effect of “If any of you know what these are, tell me ASAP. We are having multiple near midair collisions, and if we do not resolve this soon, we are going to have to shut down the exercise.”

The email involved the USS Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group during pre-deployment exercises off the U.S. East Coast, overseen by a four-star admiral who was also Gallaudet’s superior officer. Attached to the message was what is now known as the “Go Fast” video — declassified footage captured by a Navy F/A-18’s forward-looking infrared sensor showing an unidentified object exhibiting flight and structural characteristics unlike anything in the military’s arsenal. The implication was clear: someone was asking if any recipients knew of classified technology demonstrations that could explain these mysterious objects, though Defense Department policy requires rigorous deconfliction of such demonstrations with live exercises.
What happened next has become a recurring theme in UFO disclosure accounts. The very next day, the email disappeared from Gallaudet’s account and those of other recipients without any explanation. More concerning still, the incident was never discussed again, even during weekly meetings specifically designed to address exercise issues. As Gallaudet testified before Congress, this lack of follow-up was deeply troubling, especially considering his role as the Navy’s Chief Meteorologist, where his primary duty was reducing safety-of-flight risks. “It was evident that no one at the Flag Officer level was addressing the safety risks posed by UAPs. Instead, pilots were left to mitigate these threats on their own, without guidance or support.”
The admiral’s claims extend beyond Earth’s atmosphere and into the largely unexplored depths of our oceans. Gallaudet reveals that he knows people who have seen classified video of underwater UFOs, often referred to as unidentified submerged objects (USOs). Given that humanity has explored less than five percent of Earth’s oceans, the implications are staggering. If these craft operate beneath the waves, they could have maintained hidden bases in the deep ocean for decades or longer, using the planet’s most inaccessible regions as perfect cover for their operations.

Perhaps most disturbing are Gallaudet’s accusations against AARO, the Pentagon’s official UAP investigation office. During a meeting with AARO’s acting director in 2024, Gallaudet claims he was subjected to what he describes as “an hours-long influence operation” designed to convince him that AARO’s flawed historical report was accurate, question well-known UAP cases like the USS Nimitz “Tic Tac” encounter, and disparage former government officials who have spoken publicly about UAP programs. This led Gallaudet to conclude that AARO represents “Project Blue Book 2.0” — a reference to the Air Force’s 1950s-60s program that was later revealed to be more focused on debunking UFO reports than investigating them seriously.
The admiral’s most explosive recent statements involve direct contact with non-human intelligence. Speaking to News Nation, Gallaudet declared that the government needs to “disclose that we are in contact with non-human intelligence,” explaining that “we’re being visited by non-human intelligence with technology we really don’t understand and with intentions we don’t understand either.” While acknowledging that some technological aspects might legitimately remain classified for national security reasons, he draws a clear line at hiding the existence of contact itself.

Gallaudet frames the entire disclosure issue as a moral imperative, arguing that “unelected officials in the U.S. government do not have an exclusive right to this knowledge about the nature of reality. The American people have a right to that knowledge.” His congressional testimony concluded with a powerful statement about moral leadership and the courage of whistleblowers who risk their careers to expose the truth. As more credible voices like Gallaudet continue speaking out, the question shifts from whether UFOs exist to what happens when enough people in positions of authority start demanding answers. The admiral’s revelations suggest we may be approaching a tipping point where congressional action on UFO disclosure becomes not just possible, but inevitable.
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