The photo of the UFO shot down by a US P51 fighter in Canadian airspace, released to the public in February 2023, raises new questions. It looks like a photocopied email or an email printout where in the background slightly lighter out of focus cylinder can be seen which was flying freely before the air traffic control brought it down in Yukon, Canada, CTVNews as they were requesting an information to Canada’s national defence department claimed to have found the image.
The North American Aerospace Defense Command last detected the flying object hovering at a height of thirty thousand feet above the Alaska. Jet planes were dispatched to scan the flying object. This is particularly borne out by the report by Fox News, which reported that this particular “high-altitude airborne object” was first sighted by the North American Aerospace Defense Command scooting at about forty thousand feet over Alaska before aircraft were sent out to monitor it. The object moved from Alaskan boundaries and into Canadian air before it was destroyed on February 11, 2023. This happened only a few days after the people of America celebrated the shooting down of some Chinese balloon surveillance and a month where three flying objects were shot down.
‘ Yesterday afternoon I also spoke with President Biden and confirmed together that we can inform the people of both countries: We will make every effort necessary to ensure the integrity of Canadian air space and the air space of the North American continent which we all share. But we will also do everything possible and more to ensure the safety of every one of our people’, was the statement of one of the more prominent estimates of failure of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
An AIM 9X missile launched by one of the US F-22 Raptor aircraft aircraft destroyed the object, thought to be a ‘small metallic balloon with a payload string attached inside’.
President Biden has subsequently stated that the three objects were unrelated to the Chinese spy blimps. The Canadian government released the UFO image early, then subsequently approved the readiness for the image to be made public.
Nonetheless, the senior communications advisor to the acting assistant deputy minister for public affairs said why they should be so granted: “If the image were to be made available, apart from the image itself, it would be done through the Canadian armed forces social media accounts. Right now, in the climate and the statements that the object is harmless, there will be pictures displayed and that will draw more questions. They will not be minimal even with all the disclaimers that will accompany the text post.” The image was, therefore, held back with further relief owing to ‘US government involvement’.