I want everyone to take a second and read in-between the lines here.
The United States Space Force recently confirmed the launch of a highly classified spacecraft known as the X-37B into orbit above our planet. According to sources, the X-37B is an unmanned plane that can fly missions in orbit.
I am sure that the people at Space Force have been working tirelessly on this project, because, well, that’s what it takes to launch rockets and orbital planes into outer space.
We, as human beings, work so hard to place any object in space, and once the objects are placed they typically need a lot of maintenance.
Why would we work so hard to blast chemical rockets, a fairly primitive technology, into space if we were really building UFOs that could go from space to 50 ft above sea level in less than one second with no sonic boom?
Doesn’t make very much sense, does it? The X-37B is supposed to represent the cutting edge of human technology. This is where we are at in aerospace—working our behinds off to launch chemical rockets into space.
It takes teams of hundreds, if not thousands, of people to do this and billions of dollars in funding.
One guy, Elon Musk, is so ahead of the curve that he is building reusable chemical rockets! I say all of this to paint a vivid picture of exactly where we are as a species. Human beings are not responsible for the UFO phenomenon.
These things are not foreign drones or top-secret U.S. tech. Yes, governments probably possess downed UFOs, but they have no idea how to build one to the correct specifications. That tech is thousands of years beyond where we are now.
Something out there is building trans-medium craft that can go thousands of miles per second without creating sonic booms and it isn’t us. If it were us then the Space Force would not be launching rockets into orbit.
On Friday, the United States Space Force announced: “USSF-52 launched an X-37B on a Falcon Heavy rocket, marking the seventh space flight for the X-37B program and its first launch on a Falcon Heavy.”
USSF-52 launched an X-37B on a Falcon Heavy rocket, marking the seventh space flight for the X-37B program and its first launch on a Falcon Heavy.
#X37B #USSF52 #SSChttps://t.co/e7qisIUUdb pic.twitter.com/bM1MEtJ6OL
— United States Space Force (@SpaceForceDoD) December 29, 2023
Sputnik reports: “The X-37B is one of the most secret US military projects, and its mission objectives are strictly classified. The Space Force only disclosed that the spaceplane would have to conduct “a wide range of tests and experiments.”
Earlier, it was reported that the Pentagon is planning to deploy a new constellation of spy satellites, with the aim of keeping a close watch on Russian and Chinese space projects.
Moscow has repeatedly excoriated the very idea of militarizing space. In 2017, Pentagon specialists referred to space as another “war-fighting domain”. In 2019, Washington created the Space Force, the first new branch of the armed services since 1947.”
SpaceX's Falcon Heavy launches US Space Force’s unmanned X-37B spaceplane into orbit
The X-37B is one of the most secret US military projects, and its mission objectives are strictly classified. The Space Force only disclosed that the spaceplane would have to conduct "a wide… pic.twitter.com/jsSjMTFQaA
— Sputnik (@SputnikInt) December 29, 2023
https://twitter.com/vicktop55/status/1740802509185183821
Space Force posted this press release:
The Department of the Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office, in partnership with the United States Space Force and SpaceX, is making final preparations to launch the seventh mission of the X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle.
Due to launch delays and pad availability, USSF-52 will now launch on Dec. 10, 2023.
The seventh mission of the X-37B, also known as OTV-7, will be the first to launch on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket—designated USSF-52—with a wide range of test and experimentation objectives.
These tests include operating in new orbital regimes, experimenting with space domain awareness technologies and investigating the radiation effects to NASA materials.
These tests are key to ensuring safe and responsible operations in space for all users of the space domain.
Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall said about the mission, “this seventh flight of the X-37B continues to demonstrate the innovative spirit of the United States Space Force.”
The X-37B, which first launched in April 2010, has accrued a total of 3,774 days in space.
The previous missions have successfully experimented with Naval Research Laboratory technology designed to harness solar energy and transmit power to the ground; tested the effects of long-duration space exposure to organic materials for NASA; and provided an opportunity to launch a spacecraft designed and operated by cadets at U.S. Air Force Academy.
ADVERTISEMENT
One individual shared this speculation from the Head of the Russian Space Policy Institute:
“Ivan Moiseev, head of the Russian Space Policy Institute, told Sputnik. “It was sent into a high elliptical orbit, meaning somewhere around 40,000 kilometers and with an orbital period of 12 days.”
According to Moiseev, the X-37 orbital test vehicle used with the US Space Force is primarily for military purposes. That means it deploys small satellites that provide video surveillance, communications and navigation to U.S. forces on the ground.
The expert does not rule out that the sudden change in the height of the probe could be related to possible spying on Russian regions and the Arctic. He emphasized that this hypothesis can be confirmed or refuted after the parameters of the spacecraft’s orbit are specified.”
Was the US Space Force X-37B launched into a high elliptical orbit to spy on Russia?
"The recent launch [of the X-37B] is special and stands out from the overall picture," Ivan Moiseev, head of the Russian Space Policy Institute, told Sputnik. "It was sent into a high elliptical… pic.twitter.com/dFRUENazIQ
— Peacemaker (@peacemaket71) December 29, 2023
The Epoch Times provided more details on the classified project:
Officially dubbed USSF-52, the unmanned vehicle will venture into different types of orbit around the Earth and serve as a testing ground for NASA’s study of the effects of long-duration exposure to space on organic materials.
The mission will also include experiments with technology for “space domain awareness,” which the USSF defines as the ability to “rapidly detect, warn, characterize, attribute, and predict threats to national, allied, and commercial space systems.”
Join the conversation!
Please share your thoughts about this article below. We value your opinions, and would love to see you add to the discussion!