r/UFOB 6d ago

Testimony New Army Witness - Former Intelligence officer Caison Best shares his UFO experience - "Massive, perfectly still, elliptical object". The panels on the object seemed to be moving and rippling. “I can relate to… being a caveman and seeing an iPhone for the first time. It was just a shocking object.”

Caison was ignored by his chain of command, they tried burying this story, until he was connected with Ryan Graves' organization "Americans for Safe Aerospace".

https://x.com/uncertainvector/status/1962972294470627385

https://twitter-thread.com/t/1962970646222180738

In 2022, near Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Base, Caison and four colleagues witnessed a UAP. What happened next reveals how institutions fail those who serve.

The next day, Caison filed a formal intelligence report with corroborating witness accounts.

Instead of urgency, he was met with indifference. Reporting channels were buried. Official replies were dismissive. This was over one of America’s most sensitive security sites.

That could have been the end. But in 2023, Caison connected with ASA (Americans for Safe Aerospace. By 2024, he was leading our reporting program. Since then, he has helped process nearly 800 reports and interviewed 50+ credible witnesses, many of them aviators and intelligence officers.

The lesson is clear.
Institutions are failing credible witnesses. Civil society must step in.

https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOs/comments/1n7ce8u/new_army_witness_former_intelligence_officer/

453 Upvotes

15 comments sorted by

View all comments

2

u/Dexbova 2d ago

Is it just me or does it seem that all the whistleblowers seem to be coming out of the intelligence community? I find that to be quite suspicious

3

u/Edwardshakyhands2 2d ago

People have been coming out from all walks of life since the 4os or so. Military and intelligence officials are taken more seriously because they have to go through rigorous testing to be able to join. It's hard to find more credible witnesses than the people who have access to highly classified info

2

u/AAAStarTrader 🏆 2d ago

They are legally designated whistle-blowers, who have raised the alarm through a legitimate process to Congress or AARO. They are obliged to tell the truth since their evidence can be used to improve national security/prosecute crimes. If they lie they can be criminally charged. So, no, legally designated whistle-blowers are the least suspicious, regardless of where they work. 

Your comment is suspicious for throwing doubt on the people who are courageous enough to come forwards, in the face of potentially deadly Legacy Program opposition.  

If you don't support whistle-blowers, you don't support Disclosure. 

1

u/ExistentialAnhedonia 17h ago edited 17h ago

Because that’s the only sector from which people with little monetary stake interacting with these things come from. You think any researcher or contractor making a multiple six-figured salary are gonna risk that? Well maybe not, but the overworked, paid/just-enough officers willl.

These folks are more inclined to step forward becuase they don’t have near as much money to lose. Maybe their reputation but if these guys have any integrity at all then they view stepping forward about mind-bending things more important that a 80K, maybe 100K, salary with benefits. There must be a couple ideologues out there in the officer corps.

1

u/bibbys_hair 14h ago edited 14h ago

Thousands of people who have come forward over the last 70+ years come from all walks of life. The object this individual described has been reported by hundreds and hundreds of civilians. You just choose to listen to the intel folks.

What does the intelligence community have to gain from this guys story? All he said was that he seen some weird shit like thousands of others and that Kirkpatrick's AARO is a fraud.