Biden Admin Used $500,000 Missile to Shoot Down ‘UFO’—That Turned Out to Be Boy Scouts Balloon
Newly released military footage is shedding light on a remarkable incident that occurred in the aftermath of the Chinese spy balloon controversy, when a U.S. fighter jet reportedly destroyed what was later identified as a Boy Scout research balloon using a missile worth roughly half a million dollars.
According to a report by the New York Post, the U.S. Air Force dispatched an F-16 over Lake Huron on February 12, 2023, to intercept what officials initially believed could be an unidentified aerial threat. The object was destroyed by what was likely an AIM-9 Sidewinder missile.
The footage, released last month by the Department of Defense as part of a new batch of declassified UFO-related records, shows a dark orb-like object with a string attached appearing briefly in the fighter pilot’s targeting system before being blown apart.
“The F16 shot at a balloon over Lake Huron. After the [Chinese spy] balloon embarrassment, DOD was shooting at every [Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena] they detected,” Tim Phillips, a former interim director of AARO, told The Post.
The object was later identified as belonging to a Boy Scout group, according to Sean Kirkpatrick, the former head of the Pentagon’s All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).
“[The balloon] had circumnavigated the globe eight times before we shot it down with a half-million-dollar missile,” Kirkpatrick said at a conference on April 27.
“You can imagine the response on the Hill when I briefed that,” he said at that conference.
Kirkpatrick added that the balloon had been part of an ongoing research initiative, though he did not provide further details about the project.
The incident occurred just days after the Chinese spy balloon crossed the United States, a controversy that generated intense criticism of the Biden administration’s handling of the situation and led to heightened sensitivity regarding unidentified objects in American airspace.
The Lake Huron incident was not the only costly interception during that period. On February 11, 2023, a U.S. F-22 reportedly fired a missile costing approximately $439,000 to destroy a hobbyist research balloon over Alaska.
According to The Guardian, that balloon belonged to the Northern Illinois Bottlecap Balloon Brigade and reportedly cost just $12 to build.
Kirkpatrick also recounted another episode involving a military pilot who reported encountering an object with what appeared to be advanced stealth characteristics. After receiving authorization to engage, the pilot ultimately destroyed what turned out to be a star-shaped Mylar party balloon purchased at Walmart bearing the message “Happy Birthday.”
Many of the military videos depicting unidentified aerial phenomena, some of which have been released by the Trump administration, have ultimately been traced to ordinary man-made objects that were initially misidentified by drone operators and military personnel.
“They’ve been on mission and they’ve got to get back to base to rearm and refuel. And you’ve got a bored operator looking around. And they pick something up and aren’t sure what it is,” Phillips said.
Phillips argued that the reporting system has improved significantly in recent years and that military personnel are increasingly willing to document unusual sightings for further analysis.
“We’re actually seeing, good reporting coming out of the fleet, coming out of the operation wings and squadrons, where they’re willing to report this stuff. And this is part of that outreach where we get our scientists to talk to the Reaper operators and actually go side by side and try to do some education,” he said.
{Matzav.com}
