Last week, President Trump caused a stir when he ordered the Pentagon to resume nuclear weapons tests.
The directive came after a visit to China where the president was apparently made aware that America’s rivals are expanding their own nuclear arsenals.
It was a blunt acknowledgement that decades of nuclear disarmament were a one-sided affair.
Following the destruction inflicted upon Japan in WWII, a Cold War buildup that ultimately proved self-defeating (MAD), and the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States decided it was time to cool things down.
Unfortunately, it’s now clear that Russia and China didn’t feel the same way. Neither did rogue nations like North Korea and Iran, which are determined to build out their own nuclear arsenals to challenge the western world.
It’s a monumental shift — one that puts us in a new era of blatant nuclear rearmament. The stigma around nuclear weapons has eroded. They’re now back in play as a viable tool of defense. Nuke is no longer a four-letter word.
But if nuclear tests are back on the table, is it possible that we’ll attract some unexpected — even otherworldly — attention?
After all, nuclear weapons aren’t the only taboo that’s been broken these past few years.
UAP — unexplained aerial phenomena — have gone mainstream.
Once relegated to the fringe — the realm of crackpot theory, conspiracy, and lunacy — UAP sightings and the belief that intelligent life outside our own exists have gained newfound credibility.
With the emergence of testimony from military personnel and fighter pilot footage even the U.S. government has come to acknowledge what it’s denied for decades: UAP are real.
In fact, shocking accounts from whistleblowers like David Grusch even suggest the United States has a UFO recovery task force that competes with familiar foes like Russia and China to capture and reverse engineer alien technology.
And of course, another interesting footnote to all this is that UAP sightings frequently occur near sites associated with nuclear power, weaponry and technology.
“All of the nuclear facilities — Los Alamos, Livermore, Sandia, Savannah River — all had dramatic incidents where these unknown craft appeared over the facilities and nobody knew where they were from or what they were doing there,” says investigative journalist George Knapp, who has studied the UAP-nuclear connection for more than 30 years.
Indeed, Knapp interviewed more than a dozen workers from the Nevada desert atomic test site, where scores of A-bombs were detonated in the 1940s, '50s, and '60s. And he says they all told him UFO activity was so commonplace that employees were assigned to monitor the activity.
In 1948, for example, “green fireballs” were reported in the skies near atomic laboratories in Los Alamos and Sandia, New Mexico, where the atomic bomb was first developed and tested.
In another instance, a declassified FBI document from 1950 mentions “flying saucers” measuring almost 50 feet in diameter near the Los Alamos labs.
Some reports also claim UAP interfered with or disabled nuclear weapons systems, such as an alleged 1967 incident at Malmstrom Air Force Base
Even in just the past week, a pair of new peer-reviewed scientific papers claim to have detected the presence of UFOs in numerous photographs from the 1950s — before the space race.
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Beatriz Villarroel, an astronomer at the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics, claimed in two papers that “transients” — fleeting star-like objects of unknown origin — appear in “historic photographic plates” of the night sky providing the earliest known physical evidence of UAP.
Again, these plates were taken before the 1957 launch of Sputnik, so the usual explanation of satellites or space junk doesn’t fly.
“You don’t get that kind of solar reflections from round objects like asteroids or dust grains in space… only if something is very flat and very reflective and reflects the sunlight with a short flash,” Villarroel said.
Also, according to Villarroel’s research, these sightings correspond to well-known UAP incidents and nuclear tests.
In fact,of the 106,000 flashes of light they analyzed, researchers found that they were 68% more likely to occur the day after a nuclear weapons test than on days without. In addition, the number of flashes increases by an average of 8.5% for each report of a UFO sighting.
This dovetails with research from the University of Columbia that shows that transients were 45% more likely on dates within 24 hours of a nuclear test. And the final date on which a transient was observed within a nuclear testing window in the dataset was March 17, 1956 — the day after the “Joe 21” nuclear test in Russia.
A second peer-reviewed study published in Nature’s Scientific Reports reached a similar conclusion as Villarroel.
For that study, researchers analyzed roughly 2,000 photographic plates which were taken between 1949 and 1958 at the Palomar Observatory in California as part of the Palomar Sky Survey — one of the first detailed astronomical surveys of the sky, called.
“We speculate that some transients could potentially be [unidentified aerial phenomena] in Earth orbit that, if descending into the atmosphere, might provide the stimulus for some [unidentified aerial phenomenon] sightings,” the study says.
All of this is to say that new nuclear tests could beget more UAP activity.
That activity could be alien in nature or it could simply be an undisclosed military program associated with nuclear assets.
But in either case, I know the company that’s most likely to be involved with it.
It’s the same company that ran point on the Manhattan Project and continues to operate on dozens of American military bases throughout the world.
It also manages America’s nuclear energy program.
And its archives are so top-secret that even the president can be denied access to them.
So if any company is involved with nuclear testing and UAP, this one is.
And if you want to find out more about it — and the massive profit opportunity that abounds — check out my latest report here.
Fight on,

Jason Simpkins
Simpkins is the founder and editor of Secret Stock Files, an investment service that focuses on companies with assets — tangible resources and products that can hold and appreciate in value. He covers mining companies, energy companies, defense contractors, dividend payers, commodities, staples, legacies and more… He also serves as editor of The Crow’s Nest where he analyzes investments beyond the scope of the defense sector.
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