America’s most sensitive nuclear facilities have reportedly been covertly infiltrated by thousands of unidentified flying objects, according to a bombshell report.
The crowdsourced platform Enigma Labs shared that more than 2,800 “unidentified aerial sightings”—or UAPs—have occurred over or near roughly 90 U.S. nuclear power plants and weapons sites across the past 80 years.
In related news, there seems to be an arms race involving the US, China, and Russia related to alien craft in their possession. Could this be connected to all of the strange drones people are seeing everywhere in the United States?
Join Ben Chasteen and Rob Counts on this Edge of Wonder Live as they cover all of this, plus the Mandela Effect and Metaphysical Minute segments.
The United States military led precision strikes Saturday on the three major nuclear facilities in Iran — Fordow, Esfahan and Natanz. President Donald Trump announced the strikes in a press conference in the East Room at the White House, flanked by Vice President J.D. Vance, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
This follows weeks of intense fighting between Israel and Iran. Israel begged the United States to join the attacks, lacking the capability to do much direct damage on the three underground, heavily fortified nuclear sites. All three sites are to the south of Iran’s capital city of Tehran.
“Tonight, I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success,” Trump said in his roughly four-minute speech. “Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.” Here’s more from MJTruth.
Iran elevated its missile assault against Israel overnight. A barrage of between 25 and 30 ballistic missiles hit Haifa and other sites in the northern and central regions of Israel. How might Iran also strike back against the United States?
Here, former U.S. military officer Dan Caldwell breaks down some possible scenarios. He tells Tucker Carlson what comes next.
(EDITOR’S NOTE:Caldwell was fired from the Pentagon in April. The former Marine officer who worked for Concerned Veterans of America said he had not been leaking any data. He told Tucker he was fired because of his opposition to open-ended military conflict in the Middle East.)