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A retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral has shattered decades of silence about mysterious underwater objects that have been tracking American nuclear submarines — and the evidence he’s presenting to Congress is impossible to ignore.
Tim Gallaudet, who served as the Navy’s top oceanographer and later as deputy administrator of NOAA, has gone public with explosive testimony about encounters that “demonstrate engineering capabilities we haven’t yet developed.”
The revelations come as Congress passed unprecedented legislation acknowledging potential “nonhuman intelligence” for the first time in U.S. history.
The most shocking incident Gallaudet confirmed involves the USS Nimitz carrier strike group in November 2004.
Navy F/A-18 pilots witnessed a Tic Tac-shaped craft that dropped from 80,000 feet to sea level in less than one second — a feat that would require technology beyond any nation’s capabilities.
“No nation has craft that can move like that,” Gallaudet stated in his Sol Foundation report.
The object showed no wings, no exhaust, no sonic boom.
Just impossible physics.

In a bombshell revelation to Congress this month, Gallaudet disclosed a classified 1980s encounter reported by a U.S. submarine crew.
The sub detected what appeared to be an incoming Russian torpedo while operating at crush depth during a North Atlantic storm.
“It approached at rapid rate,” Gallaudet revealed. “But then it slowed down, which torpedoes don’t do.”
The object stopped completely, hovered near the submarine, then accelerated away at speeds that defied explanation.
Ryan Graves, a former Navy F/A-18 pilot who founded Americans for Safe Aerospace, says his organization has received over 800 credible reports from military personnel.
“We started treating it as a safety issue,” Graves explained after his squadron recorded near-daily sightings in 2014.
The objects his squadron encountered could hover motionless, then accelerate to Mach 1.2 instantly.
No heat signature.
No propulsion trail.
“What I saw was not our technology,” Graves testified.
In July 2019, the USS Omaha captured infrared footage that Pentagon officials later verified as authentic.
The spherical object moved swiftly over the Pacific Ocean before dropping into the water.
No splash. No debris. No wake.

“The fact that unidentified objects with unexplainable characteristics are entering U.S. water space and the DoD is not raising a giant red flag is a sign that the government is not sharing all it knows,” Gallaudet wrote in his March 2024 white paper.
A sailor who witnessed the incident aboard the USS Omaha contacted Gallaudet directly.
He confirmed the object was “just one of many” — and that he’d witnessed similar events aboard the USS Jackson in 2023.
One of the most perplexing encounters occurred in April 2013 over Aguadilla, Puerto Rico.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection captured three minutes of infrared footage showing a spherical object traveling at 40 to 120 miles per hour.
The object entered the Atlantic Ocean without decelerating.
Then it did something impossible: it split into two separate objects while underwater, then resurfaced.
“It’s not that they break the laws,” Gallaudet explained. “It’s that they demonstrate engineering capabilities we haven’t yet developed.”
In the 1990s, a Navy CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter crew experienced an encounter that defied explanation.
While retrieving a 20-foot BQM target drone off Puerto Rico, something massive rose from below.
The pilot watched as a “large, dark mass” pulled the drone violently back into the ocean just as they were about to lift it.
Commander David Fravor, who witnessed the 2004 Nimitz incident, later shared this account on Joe Rogan’s podcast after the Sea Stallion pilot contacted him directly.
The evidence has prompted historic legislative action.
In 2023, Congress passed the UAP Disclosure Act — legislation requiring federal agencies to catalog and disclose records related to “recovered nonhuman craft and biologics.”
This marks the first time U.S. law has openly acknowledged the potential existence of nonhuman intelligence.

Gallaudet has proposed a theory that challenges everything we think we know about Earth’s oceans.
“Maybe they lived here for a long time, before we even evolved, and sought safety from the Earth’s atmospheric and geologic cataclysms by creating a habitat beneath the seafloor,” he stated.
Consider this: we’ve mapped more of Mars than our own ocean floor.
Less than 25% of Earth’s seabed has been mapped to modern standards.
Only 5% of the ocean volume has been explored.
Gallaudet revealed that the Navy possesses classified underwater detection systems capable of tracking these objects.
He’s interviewed multiple personnel with sonar recordings of craft demonstrating “physics-defying” underwater maneuvers.
The objects show no correlation with known marine life, geological phenomena, or human technology.
They can transition from air to water without slowing.
They generate no turbulence.
They leave no heat signature.
The Department of Defense created the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) to investigate these phenomena.
But Gallaudet and other officials call their reports “underwhelming” and incomplete.
“We’re at a unique moment in history,” Graves told Congress. “People have access to tools that can reveal things. The momentum is building.”
Former intelligence officer David Grusch testified in 2023 about alleged secret programs to reverse-engineer recovered craft — claims that remain unverified but have fueled demands for transparency.
Gallaudet has noted an “interesting correlation” between UAP sightings and nuclear vessels.
The pattern is consistent: objects appear most frequently near ballistic missile submarines and nuclear-powered carriers.
Multiple carrier strike groups have witnessed massive UFOs simultaneously, including an incident aboard the USS Eisenhower that Gallaudet called “extraordinary.”
The Sol Foundation, a newly formed think tank dedicated to studying these phenomena, has elevated the issue to academic circles.
A 2025 research paper titled “The New Science of Unidentified Aerospace-Undersea Phenomena” calls for structured scientific investigation.
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics has formed its first UAP Integration Committee, chaired by Ryan Graves.
Over 30,000 aerospace professionals are now formally engaged in studying the phenomenon.

Gallaudet and Graves continue briefing Congressional officials and pushing for transparency.
The Safe Airspace for Americans Act, currently under consideration, would create protected reporting channels for civilian pilots.
NASA has been tasked with developing new detection systems.
Academic institutions are launching dedicated research programs.
But the biggest question remains unanswered: if these objects aren’t ours, and they’re not from any other nation, what are they?
We’re dealing with objects that can:
“This is the biggest story of the 21st century,” Gallaudet declared.
After decades of denial, the U.S. military is finally admitting what pilots have been seeing for years.
The ocean isn’t empty.
Something is down there.
And it’s watching us.
For the latest updates on this developing story, follow AboutDarwin.com