Home/entities/cometa-report Overview
The COMETA Report ("Committee for in depth studies") is a 90-page independent defense document published in France on July 16, 1999. Authored by a collective of former auditors from the Institute of Higher Studies for National Defense (IHEDN) and qualified experts, it was submitted to French President Jacques Chirac and Prime Minister Lionel Jospin before public release.
Key Findings & Hypotheses
The report systematically reviews remarkable cases (French pilots, global aeronautical incidents, ground observations) and analyzes propulsion models including particle beams, antigravity, and microwave radiation effects. It dismisses secret weapons, intoxication, and natural phenomena as primary explanations, concluding that the hypothesis of extraterrestrial visitors is "quasi certain" given the physical reality and intelligent control observed in UFO encounters.
Strategic Recommendations
COMETA emphasizes critical vigilance against destabilizing manipulations and recommends:
1. Informing all decision-makers at the highest levels
2. Reinforcing investigation means at SEPRA (French space/defense agency)
3. Integrating UFO detection into space surveillance agencies
4. Creating a strategic cell at the highest state level for hypothesis development and cooperation agreements
5. Undertaking diplomatic action toward the United States regarding this capital question
6. Studying emergency measures for potential extraterrestrial contact or localized attacks.
Related Concepts
disclosure-project-secrecy-architecture
international-standard
unacknowledged-special-access-programsSources
- Full_text_of_Disclosure_Project_Briefing_Document_-_Internet_Archive_part11.md