(60 Minutes) Drone swarms inside the U.S. could be spying — and the ability to detect, track them is lagging

(YouTube) Drone swarms inside the U.S. could be spying — and the ability to detect, track them is lagging.

60 Minutes promotes the credible theory that the

  • swarming of joint base Langley-Eustis by drone swarms for 17 days
  • subsequent New Jersey sightings
  • U.K. RAF events
  • detections surrounding naval exercises
  • similar events noted in (Wikipedia) 2024 drone sightings

were incursions by China. In the naval cases, this is particularly credible, and was addressed in US intelligence community UFO report; Reverse Engineering a Chinese Tic Tac; Part 2 and US intelligence community UFO report; Steam Powered UFOs; Getting Metaphysical, Part 3. Quoting from Part 3,

An entity which can field UFOs of such amazing ability would hardly need submarines, nor enjoy the corrosion of salt water.  Which is easier to envision:

      • An intelligence failure relating to submarines and drones circa 2003?
      • Physics so far out of the box, we haven’t a clue?

There is a fundamental difference between the naval events and land incursions into the territory of the U.S. The naval events do not breach sovereignty, while the land incursions do. The foreign power that

  • chooses land incursions over sensitive installations of lengthy duration
  • employs en-masse numbers
  • displays running lights
  • has predictable patterns
  • operates on regular hours, 7 p.m. to midnight — “shift work”
  • has supreme confidence that the U.S. would not risk the use of heavy weapons proximal to civilians
  • has supreme confidence of no mechanical failure

is not China. The likelihood of discovery and the penalty are too great.  Indeed, if we consider the risk associated with foreign execution versus a U.S. black project, black clearly wins, since black can  have real time awareness of what the target is thinking.

Langley-Eustis is 5 square miles. With any conventional sensor, it does not take 17 days of 40 drones per night to characterize 5 square miles. This points to an unconventional sensor, which points to a black project.

This was discussed in New Drone Insight; Black Program? Quoting,

I have a pretty good idea of the purpose of such a program. However, discussion raises an ethical dilemma. The program, if it exists, is a good one, beneficial to U.S. national security, and harmless to New Jersey residents.  Discussion, even  if it derives from open source, would damage our common national interest.

This does not exclude the presence of multiple actors with different motives.