Denmark JL UFO

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In late September 2025, Copenhagen’s Kastrup Airport in Denmark — the busiest in Northern Europe — suspended all air traffic for nearly four hours after two or three unidentified drones were detected in its airspace, diverting about 50 flights as authorities scrambled to assess the threat. Around the same time, Oslo’s Gardermoen Airport in Norway also shut down operations for roughly three hours following reports of a mysterious drone, forcing flights to be rerouted to alternate airports. Meanwhile, Norwegian officials issued drone alerts over military sites during the incident, heightening fears that these incursions may be targeting sensitive installations rather than merely disrupting civilian aviation.

The Denmark JL UFO was filmed in the skies south of Aalborg, Denmark, on September 25, 2025. The footage, which has drawn attention online, was originally shared by the account @Lkz06332802.

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Denmark had been subjected to “hybrid attacks” and that drones were observed near critical infrastructure in recent days. Authorities raised readiness and coordinated across police and defense while flights resumed only after safety checks. Officials said Russia couldn’t be ruled out, but investigators have not established a definitive origin. Denmark is treating the incidents as an active security risk, not a curiosity.

On September 28, 2025, a video was posted on X showing Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaking with the United Nations building in the background. Lavrov claims that Ukraine and NATO are responsible for the mystery drone incursions, accusing Western powers of staging a false flag to make it appear as though Russia had launched the drones. This moment came during his trip to New York for the U.N. General Assembly, denying that Russia targets NATO or EU states with drones or missiles, while warning that any aggression against Russia would bring a decisive response.

Rep. Eric Burlison warned that the UAP mystery now extends to “potentially anomalous drones” reported over Denmark, stressing that such events can’t be dismissed as ordinary. “There’s a lot of strange stuff going on,” he said, pointing to repeated encroachments on military bases and secure sites. Burlison argued that unidentified phenomena represent more than a curiosity—they pose real security concerns when they intrude on critical locations, and ignoring them could leave nations vulnerable.

On May 7, 2025, at 10:05 PM, Jonathan Simas filmed a mysterious JL-type UFO craft over Miami. At first glance it resembled a commercial plane, but its geometry, lighting, and flight behavior didn’t match known aircraft. The sighting matters because the same type of craft had been recorded earlier in New Jersey, suggesting an intentional pattern rather than coincidence.

On December 12, 2024, a strange aerial object was reported in New Jersey showing illuminated lights that formed the letters “JL.” A witness aimed a spotlight at the UFO JL craft as it moved overhead, suggesting it was flying below 1,000 feet. The event was noted alongside nearby flights of a Piper PA-31 Navajo C, raising speculation about monitoring UFO crash activity. Its proximity to the decommissioning Oyster Creek Nuclear Plant and connections to other UFO sightings in the state added to concerns, especially since official responses offered little clarity.

In the “Groundbreaking New Jersey UFO Footage” post, it’s reported that on December 8, 2024, a video was recorded showing a spherical “orb” UFO enveloped by a luminous “field” that distorts light, masking its true shape. The footage was captured with extreme zoom (×208 magnification) and settings optimized for low-light imaging—underexposed to better reveal the glowing object. This is compelling evidence of advanced aerial phenomena (often called UAPs), suggesting these orbs may be metallic in nature and possibly part of a broader, global network of such craft.

Donald Trump told Pod Force One that he knows the identity of the drones flying over New Jersey but isn’t able to disclose it, while reassuring listeners that there’s “no cause for concern.” Later, in August, Tulsi Gabbard appeared on the same podcast and expressed her belief in the possibility of alien life, calling for more serious investigation into such aerial phenomena.

John A. Keel, in Operation Trojan Horse (1970), noted that “pirate aircraft” have been reported worldwide since 1896, often defying aviation rules by flying without markings and showing brightly lit cockpits at night. In one striking case from July 22, 1968, a massive, unmarked plane circled low over an Argentine airport. Witnesses, including pilots and police, described its unusually long fuselage, short wings, and impossibly slow speed—features that challenged basic aerodynamics. For Keel, sightings like this suggested a long-standing, global mystery that conventional explanations couldn’t easily resolve.

The string of incidents from Copenhagen to Oslo, from Miami to New Jersey, points to a mystery that defies borders. Governments deflect blame, officials issue warnings, and witnesses describe craft that elude explanation, echoing reports stretching back more than a century. Yet as Uri Geller cautions, the danger may not be the phenomena themselves but how humanity responds to them. He argues these sightings point to a peaceful intelligence, a presence meant to awaken us to the reality that we are not alone and to steer us away from nuclear escalation. Whether seen as drones, UAPs, or “pirate aircraft,” they confront us with a choice: use them as fuel for conflict, or take them as an invitation to rethink our place in the cosmos and the divine nature of peace.