No problem. And you have to admit that St. Elmo's Fire sounds a heck of a lot like what people were describing with Foo Fighters.I was mistaken in what I was thinking St. Elmo fire is.
Numerous UFO sightings recorded during Project Blue Book period were spy planes.Not correct. Sure some sightings can be unidentified military planes. But even if you don't know what the plane us, you still know it's a plane. I remember my first time seeing the Phantom. Had never seen one before, didn't know what to call it, but I knew it was a damn plane. We have a pretty good grasp on when something is outside our capability.
C.I.A. Admits Government Lied About U.F.O. Sightings (Published 1997)
They know it's a drone because they damn near hit it and because it's basically just a souped-up version of a regular drone. My point is they damn near hit the thing with a military helicopter and yet they still lost track of it and can't figure out where it came from.That's not a military installation and they still know it's a drone.
If that's true for just a little souped-up version of an off-the-shelf drone, then how much more true for high-tech military drone with far greater capacity? Especially when:
1. American forces out in the ocean during military exercises are limited to launching off their carrier thus have very limited search capacity, especially when they're in the middle of another assignment.
2. Any time they're worried of being exposed they can just crash the shyt in the ocean and sink it and it would be impossible for the American military to recover.