The truth is there.
A popular UFO reporting app has recorded thousands of sightings of unidentified underwater objects (UUOs) near US waterways – phenomena that senior US Navy officials warn could pose a threat to national security.
Enigma, which bills itself as “the largest queriable historical database of UFO sightings worldwide,” claims that since its launch in late 2022, it has received reports of more than 30,000 unidentified flying objects and unidentified anomalous phenomena.
But sightings aren't limited to the skies: there are also reports of strange objects rising from the depths of the sea or plunging into the water without a single splash.
As of August, Enigma has also logged more than 9,000 mysterious sightings within 10 miles of U.S. coastlines or major bodies of water — 500 of them within 5 miles — with more than 150 reports describing objects hovering above or descending into waterways, according to the data. Marine Technology News.
The US states with the most reported USO sightings were California (389) and Florida (306) – both of which are among the top three US states with the largest ocean coastlines. One of the strangest reports involves a phone camera video showing unexplained green lights traveling beneath the ocean's surface.
The app released maps showing reported sightings, represented as clusters of orange dots running up and down the east and west coasts.
UFO sightings are nothing new and are often dismissed by much of the scientific community as crazy or relegated to science fiction, but retired Navy Rear Admiral Tim Gallaudet warns that UFOs that can travel from air to sea without crashing or even making a splash could have “world-changing” consequences.
“The fact that unidentified objects with unexplained characteristics are entering U.S. waters without the Department of Defense raising a giant red flag is a sign that the government is not sharing everything it knows about anomalous phenomena across the board,” Gallaudet wrote in his report. March 2024 Report
The alarm was raised in July 2019 when the USS Omaha sighted a UFO/UAP that disappeared into the ocean without a trace after sounding the Navy fleet off the coast of San Diego. Video of the incident was reviewed by the Pentagon and demonstrates capabilities that Gallaudet said “compromise U.S. maritime security, which is already weakened by our relative ignorance of the world's oceans.”
In his 29-page report for the Sol Foundation, a UFO think tank, Gallaudet said there is a documented pattern of such phenomena.
“Pilots, credible observers, and calibrated military instruments have recorded objects accelerating at speeds and crossing the air-sea boundary in ways impossible for anything human-made,” he wrote.






