Unknown aircraft (UFO) with extraordinary speed detected by the Submarine of the United States Navy (US)

United States Navy (US) submarines

United States Navy (US) Navy submarines have detected an "unidentified" aircraft traveling at an unprecedented speed.  This was disclosed by a journalist who claimed to have received information from a trusted US Navy source. Tom Rogan of the Washington Examiner told Fox News' Tucker Carlson that the plane could not have been technology from a foreign power.
United States Navy (US) Navy submarines have detected an "unidentified" aircraft traveling at an unprecedented speed.

This was disclosed by a journalist who claimed to have received information from a trusted US Navy source. Tom Rogan of the Washington Examiner told Fox News' Tucker Carlson that the plane could not have been technology from a foreign power.

"I think what we might see is completely unknown," he explained.

That means an intelligently controlled aircraft engine that the US, China or Russia don't understand, which are the three most advanced countries when it comes to military aviation.

"Examining this, nothing we have, confidential information about what China or Russia has or what we have in Area 51, can do what these things do in terms of variable performance," he continued.

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It is possible that the aircraft originated from an "underwater base" and had the capability to operate in the air and water.

"In the coming months and years, an area we will learn more about is the interaction between US Navy submarines - nuclear ballistic submarines and attack submarines - picking up sonar contact from objects moving at hundreds of knots underwater. "He explained.

"So there is an underwater dimension that the Navy has pushed aside because the pilots talk more about their experiences," he explained.

"That's what I heard from sources, very good sources, and the Navy has the data," he added.

According to nymag.com, the underwater speed record for a submarine is the Soviet nuclear attack submarine K-222 51 meters per hour (44 knots).

Supersonic velocity underwater is theoretically possible by a technique called supercavitation (circling the hull in a giant "bubble" to reduce drag) but this is not expected to be achieved in practice.