'I wouldn’t really call it a balloon': Cockpit audio reveals F-16 pilots struggling to describe Michigan UFO

'I wouldn’t really call it a balloon': Cockpit audio reveals F-16 pilots struggling to describe Michigan UFO

Chilling audio has revealed the moment F16 fighter jets locked in on a UFO as they prepared to shoot it down over Lake Huron – while the pilots struggle to define what exactly they are seeing.

  • Chilling audio reveals the moment F16 fighter jet pilots struggled to define the ‘UFO’ they shot over Lake Huron on Sunday
  • Object was third mystifying entity to be downed in US airspace in three day span
  • The pilots can be heard going back and forth over how to describe the object

WILL POTTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

Chilling audio has revealed the moment F16 fighter jets locked in on a UFO as they prepared to shoot it down over Lake Huron – while the perplexed pilots struggle to define what exactly they are seeing.

The object shot down over Michigan on Sunday was the third mystifying entity to be downed in US airspace in three days.

Despite a Pentagon memo describing the flying object as a ‘small, metallic balloon’, audio of conversation from inside the jets revealed that the pilots went back and forth over how to define the UFO.

‘I wouldn’t really call it a balloon… I don’t know what… I can see it outside with my eyes,’ one of the pilots can be heard saying.

The in-cockpit communication came as the US military scrambled two F16 fighter jets to take out the UFO as it flew near sensitive Defense Department bases over the Great Lakes.

Military officials later described the object as an ‘octagonal structure’, which was shot out of the sky because it was ‘a safety flight hazard and a threat due to its potential surveillance capabilities.’

But audio recordings, released by The Drive, have shed light on the puzzling nature of the military operation as it erupted over US airspace.

After coming face to face with the object, one of the pilots first notes: ‘I wouldn’t really call it a balloon.’

‘I can see it outside with my eyes,’ he adds, before attempting to grapple with how to describe the flying object in front of him.

‘Looks like something… there’s some kind of object that’s distended… it’s hard to tell, it’s pretty small,’ he says.

The pilots also note they were concerned about colliding with the object as they could only see it close-up, leading to a confused discussion over what the actual shape was – later described by officials as ‘octagonal’.

‘I’m gonna call it like a container,’ says one of the pilots. ‘Can’t really tell though what the shape is.’

‘The size of it, that would be challenging, it’s so slow and so small, I just can’t see it.’

Notably, the baffling UFO was moving at a far slower speed than the fighter jets, making it difficult for the pilots to grasp exactly what they were looking at.

Later in the muffled audio, the pilots can be heard going into more detail over the size and shape of the flying object.

One of the pilots judges the object to be ‘definitely smaller than a car’, while another says it was around the size of a ‘four-wheeler’.

US military officials have also described the entity as having ‘a tethered payload below it’, something that is repeated in the first looks at the object at 20,000 feet.

‘In the targeting pod, I can’t tell if it’s metallic or what, but I can see like lines coming down below it, but I can’t see anything below it,’ says one pilot.

‘You can definitely see strings below.’

While agreeing that the balloon is somewhat-shiny or metallic, the pilots again struggle to note what the color of the object actually is.

One says it looked ‘black-ish’, while the other says ‘it looks dark, but I can get a pretty good sun glint off of it.’

Following Sunday’s successful downing of the ‘metallic balloon’ over Lake Huron, it emerged that the mission had cost the military nearly a million dollars, as the pilots’ first shot at the UFO missed.

The jets, which were using Sidewinder AIM-9X missiles costing $400,000 a shot, took two attempts to take the object out of the sky.

The misfire was confirmed Tuesday by the pentagon’s top general Mark Milley, noting the dangers posed by the continual UFO sightings within US airspace.

‘Yes, the first shot missed,’ he said.

The Joint Chiefs Chairman added that the missed Sidewinder missile landed safely in the lake, while the second fired by the F16 shot the object out of the sky.

The White House has laughed off suggestions that aliens are involved in the UFO sightings, however officials have come under increased pressure to explain recent developments.

U.S. fighter jets have shot down four high-altitude objects this month, leading the White House to announce it is creating a new UFO task force to study the security threat posed by the unidentified objects invading US airspace.

Since the first ‘spy balloon’ was interceded off the coast of South Carolina earlier this month, three more objects have been discovered, which are yet to be officially identified.

Alongside the object shot over Lake Huron on Sunday, the military also fired at unidentified entities over Alaska on Friday and Canada’s Yukon region on Saturday.

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