Guadalupe Island UFO Base

Dall·e 2024 10 22 13.26.58 A Photorealistic Image Of A Large White Tic Tac Candy Flying Horizontally Above The Ocean, Completely Smooth And Seamless With No Visible Seams Or Log

At the Global Disclosure Day event, which took place on October 20, 2024, Danny Sheehan, a prominent attorney and disclosure advocate, made significant claims regarding the existence of Non-Human Intelligence (NHI) bases on Earth. Sheehan specified one such location between Baja California and Guadalupe Island, potentially beneath the ocean floor. According to Sheehan, vehicles have been observed flying in and out of this base, with some events captured on film.

Guadalupe Island, located about 150 miles off Baja California, Mexico, has earned a reputation as a significant site for UFO and USO (Unidentified Submerged Object) activity, attracting attention from both local observers and the global UFO community. Its isolated location and minimal human presence have turned this volcanic island into a mysterious and speculative focal point for researchers studying anomalous aerial and underwater phenomena.

The most well-documented UFO event associated with the island is the USS Nimitz encounter in November 2004. During routine naval training exercises, the USS Princeton, part of the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group, detected unidentified aerial phenomena on radar. These objects performed erratic and seemingly impossible maneuvers, descending from 80,000 feet to just above the water’s surface within seconds. Over the course of several days, radar operators observed these objects appearing and vanishing in and around the waters near Guadalupe Island. The event culminated in a dramatic encounter when Commander David Fravor and Lt. Commander Jim Slaight were dispatched to intercept one of the objects. They witnessed a “Tic Tac” shaped craft, roughly 40 feet in length, that moved without any visible propulsion, displaying extraordinary speed and agility. The object rapidly shifted directions, accelerated to hypersonic speeds, and disappeared without a trace. Subsequent tracking showed it reappearing 60 miles away in under a minute. The encounter is backed by radar data, infrared footage from the jets’ targeting pods, and testimonies from the pilots, making it one of the most credible UFO cases in history​.

“All 100 of them, to the best of my knowledge, disappeared in the same spot in the sky. And that spot was about 60 miles north of an island off the coast of Mexico called Guadalupe Island,” said Kevin Day in a Daily Mail article, a Senior Chief and radar operator aboard the USS Princeton.

However, sightings of unusual craft in the region precede the Nimitz incident by many years. Local fishermen and sailors have long reported seeing mysterious lights and objects emerging from the waters around Guadalupe Island, leading to speculation that the island is a hub for USOs. These craft are said to transition seamlessly between air and water, displaying erratic movements similar to those of the Nimitz “Tic Tac” object. Eyewitness accounts often describe strange lights darting beneath the ocean’s surface, which then rise into the sky before vanishing. Given the depth of the waters and the island’s rugged underwater topography, some researchers hypothesize the existence of underwater bases or hidden structures​.

​Adding to the island’s intrigue is its restricted access. Guadalupe is part of a biosphere reserve, meaning that civilian entry is highly regulated. The Mexican Navy has a presence on the island, and the restricted nature of the location has fueled theories of covert military testing or extraterrestrial activities taking place undetected by the general public.

Guadalupe Island is not alone in its UFO associations along the Pacific coast. The region has a history of sightings stretching back to the 1940s, including many in nearby Catalina Island. These incidents involve both military and civilian witnesses, who have reported seeing flying discs, strange lights, and other unusual phenomena performing incredible maneuvers over the ocean. This has led some to propose that the entire area, from Catalina to Guadalupe Island, is part of a larger corridor of UFO and USO activity​.​

Historically, Operation Wigwam was an underwater nuclear test conducted by the United States on May 14, 1955, approximately 500 miles southwest of San Diego, California. The test’s objective was to assess the impact of deep underwater nuclear detonations on submarines and surface vessels. A 30-kiloton Mk-90 “Betty” depth bomb was detonated 2,000 feet below the ocean’s surface, involving 6,800 personnel and 30 ships stationed about 5 miles upwind. The explosion generated a massive plume of water and radiation, though the contamination levels quickly dispersed. The test site was about 300 miles west of Baja California and 250 miles northwest of Guadalupe Island.

The Global Disclosure Day event on October 20, 2024, serves as a pivotal moment in the ongoing effort to uncover the truth about UAPs and Non-Human Intelligence (NHI). Danny Sheehan’s claims about an NHI base near Guadalupe Island not only intensify speculation but also coincide with a historic mandate. Under the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, federal agencies were initially required to review, catalog, and identify UAP-related records by October 20, 2024. However, the full public disclosure and transfer of these records have been extended to September 30, 2025. This legal mandate shifts the narrative: for the first time, the responsibility is on the government to release what it knows, marking a transformative step toward public transparency.

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