State Secret: Lost In Time Technology can improve secret weapons
However, their exact characteristics remain strictly classified. About it writes Daily Star. Fogbank was first produced in Tennessee in 1975, but after the program was completed in 1989, production was stopped and the documentation and technology were lost. When, almost 20 years later, the military decided to modernize old nuclear warheads, it turned out that almost all knowledge was lost, and the experts who worked on its creation retired.
After the long -standing and expensive 2008 reengineering process, the US National Security Administration (NNSA) was able to re -establish material production. Despite the public recognition of its existence, the details of the composition and production of Fogbank remain state secret. According to experts, Fogbank can be a key component capable of turning into a superheated plasma when exposure to high temperatures, which is an important stage in the operation of thermonuclear warheads.
However, it remains unknown whether this material is used in modern nuclear systems. In parallel with Fogbank exposure, Pentagon has published a report on UFO surveillance since 1945. The document confirmed that most of the observations are connected with the classified military developments such as spy planes and high -tech balloons. For example, in the 1950s and 1960s reports of "flying plates" often concerned tests of aircraft, such as Canadian Vz-9av Avrocar with the form of saucer.
The publication notes that despite numerous studies and reports, no evidence of extraterrestrial technologies has been found. Fogbank remains a mysterious reminder that even the most advanced technologies can be lost in time. Earlier, Focus reported that "Living Nostradamus" predicted that 2025 would be the year of discovery of extraterrestrial life. Atos Salome believes that next year the world governments will formally confirm the existence of extraterrestrial life.