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Old March 7th 19, 04:03 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Miloch
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Default If the Space Force Won’t Fight Aliens, Who the Hell Will?

https://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/if...wil-1833079619

Late last week, military news site Task & Purpose confirmed a disturbing fact:
the newly created U.S. Space Force has no intention of fighting aliens. Despite
the recent uptick of military UFO sightings, the Pentagon appears uninterested
(at least officially) in the possibility of hostile aliens. But if an alien
invasion does take place, which arm of the Pentagon would respond? The answer:
probably all of them.

During a recent Pentagon roundtable, Task & Purpose’s Pentagon reporter Jeff
Schogol asked if the Space Force “is concerned about threats posed by
extraterrestrial intelligence.” The official answer he got back? “No.”

Schogol’s question was asked with tongue firmly planted in cheek, but the
revelation last year that U.S. Navy fighter jets encountered alleged UFO craft
in 2004 and again in 2015—in both instances appearing on radar and leaving
behind video evidence—makes one wonder.

If the unidentified flying objects described by Navy pilots, as well as military
and civilian personnel for the past seventy years, are really of
extraterrestrial origin and unfriendly, how would the Pentagon deal with them?

https://youtu.be/3RlbqOl_4NA

If UFOs suddenly descended from the skies, toasting the Statue of Liberty, the
Great Mall of America, and the Golden Gate Bridge with death rays, the Pentagon
would need to convene some sort of study group to quickly determine what kind of
threat it was dealing with. If that happens, forget the Air Force.

Ironically, the service that would most likely take the lead is the U.S. Navy.

Why the Navy? Aliens would likely come from vast distances, traveling light
years in long distance voyages, to smash puny humans. The U.S. Navy is unique
among the services in planning similar, though much, much shorter voyages. Both
submarines and UFOs deal with pressure—in the case of submarines the pressure is
on the outside, while in space the pressure is on the inside of the vehicle.
From an operational and technical standpoint, aliens and sailors have a few
things in common.

There are other reasons the Navy might take the lead. Seventy-one percent of the
Earth’s surface is covered by water, and if aliens operated from the water
(remember, the 2004 sighting included reports of a 737-sized object on the
surface of the ocean) the Navy is unique in having manned aircraft, surface
ships, and submarines prowling above, on, and below the surface of the ocean.
The Navy could also sail to the most remote locations in the world’s oceans,
establishing a military presence for weeks or months, to investigate and monitor
for enemy activity.

The Air Force could operate against aliens, but the service’s fighters and
bombers could only remain on station for mere minutes or hours before returning
to base. Against a terrestrial threat this isn’t really a big deal, but against
an alien threat we know nothing about—and according to the 2004 incident,
theoretically capable of traveling extraordinary distances in a blink of an
eye—such a force will be less useful.

If humans could lure aliens into a set-piece battle the Air Force could bring a
lot of firepower, but how one lures aliens into battle is anyone’s guess. In the
meantime the Space Force, nestled under control of the Air Force, would
contribute to the alien war by maintaining the U.S. military’s network of
position, navigation, and timing/GPS satellites, communication satellites, and
other space-based assets.

The Army would be the service responsible if aliens attempted a landing in the
United States, or presumably one of our allies. The Army’s 10 combat divisions
would spring into action, attempting to destroy the aliens with fire and
maneuver. It would be in many ways similar to countering an airborne landing,
with the Army attempting to destroy the alien’s landing zone and prevent the
flow of alien reinforcements. The Marines could also get in on the alien
fighting, particularly overseas in Asia, Europe, or even the Middle East—though
one would like to think aliens would be smart enough to avoid that region and
the prospect of their own 18-year war altogether.

Of course, all of this is contingent on the U.S. military being on par with
alien technology... which, frankly, is extremely unlikely. The universe is
billions of years old, and other races could easily have a head start of a
million years or more on us. And certainly, any species capable of interstellar
flight is far more technologically advanced.

Consider that a handful of 21st century tanks could crush an army from the 11th
century, or even the 19th century for that matter. Even a difference of a
thousand years would be ample enough to ensure humanity’s defeat from even a
minor alien expedition/hunting trip/bachelor party.

If aliens do exist, ultimately it may not matter if they are hostile or not. Our
destruction at their hands would be about as inevitable as destruction from an
extinction-level meteor impact. They could even be friendly, the combination of
advanced, destructive technology and violent tendencies leading to intelligent
life self-screening itself from interstellar travel. (That would be bad news for
humanity.) The “UFOs” people are seeing could even be top secret U.S. government
craft. The aliens could be us. In the end, maybe it doesn’t matter if the
Pentagon has a plan to fight aliens after all.




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