A RETIRED US admiral has warned governments to pay more attention to unidentified subs as they pose the "real threat" to international maritime security.
Rear Admiral and oceanographer Tim Gallaudet said Unidentified Submersible Objects - or USOs - need urgent and focused research as they could be lurking in the unexplored depths of our oceans.
US Rear Admiral Timothy Gallaudet said unidentified subs are 'the real threat' to maritime securityCredit: navy.milDespite not technically qualifying as a USO, bizarre footage of a large 'cube' hovering above the ocean sparked a number of fresh theoriesUFO Enthusiast Scott C Waring claimed he saw this odd shaped figure while watching livestreams from the International Space StationIn his latest report, Rear Admiral Gallaudet explained how this is an under-researched phenomenon, and not aliens hiding under our oceans.
The ex-US military described USOs as "large lighted craft", often seen under the sea surface on their own "or as part of a group in formation."
In a chilling warning, Gallaudet said these unknown bodies can sometimes travel in the deep ocean waters without ever emerging.
R&B star Anita Pointer of The Pointer Sisters dies aged 74And because most research focuses on what is going on up in the sky, it means that major powers could be making moves underwater without barely anyone knowing.
Gallaudet said: "We have less research on transmedium UAP and USOs than is ideal.
"These underwater anomalies jeopardise US maritime security, which is already weakened by our relative ignorance about the global ocean.
"Their presence in the oceans at the same time presents an unprecedented opportunity for maritime science.
"To meet the security and scientific challenges, transmedium UAP
and USOs should be elevated to national ocean research priorities."
Rear Admiral Gallaudet has therefore urged the US government and the international community to take action and prioritise the research on UAPs and USOs.
This would be to mainly meet the maritime security challenge posed by what he described as "hard" threats.
Such "proliferating and overwhelming" threats are said to be mainly stemming from Putin's war in Ukraine, the Israel-Hamas war, as well as Iran's proxy conflicts in the Red Sea, North Korea's ever-increasing nuclear arsenal, and China's dangerous moves towards Taiwan.
"'Hard' security threats appear to be proliferating, and an overwhelming majority affect the maritime domain," Gallaudet said.
"Russia is continuing its brutal conflict in Ukraine, where the Black Sea is the scene of a hot naval war. Another war is raging between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas, which prompted the deployment of a US Navy aircraft carrier strike group to the region.
London, New York and Europe welcome New Year; plus pics from around the world"Those same US Navy assets are intercepting strike after strike by Iran’s proxies on international shipping in the Red Sea.
"Meanwhile in the Indo-Pacific, North Korea is ramping up its nuclear saber-rattling at the West, and China is persisting in its military aircraft incursions in Taiwan’s Air Defense Identification Zone."
The ex-US Navy also mentioned the abundance of "soft" challenges.
"China is the dominant actor in this arena," he said.
"Whether by economic coercion through state-owned enterprises or environmental degradation of all kinds, such as marine pollution, coral reef destruction, illegal fishing, and unchecked greenhouse gas emissions.
"One threat that may be even greater than all these is largely unseen: the worldwide network of undersea cables that provide the backbone of global communication and information transfer.
"This vast complex of seabed infrastructure underpins global commerce, military readiness and logistics, and the internet itself.
"To be sure, this threat and the others outlined above paint a problematic picture for maritime security."
Gallaudet, who previously urged the American government to take action in international UFO research, labelled the under-sampling of the world's oceans as an "unsettling" and "critical concern" for maritime security.
That is because despite the ocean covering 71 per cent of the Earth's surface, less than 25 per cent of the seabed has been mapped, and a mere five per cent of the ocean volume has been explored.
It means that more is known about the surfaces of Mars and the moon than that of our own planet’s seafloor.
Gallaudet went on to claim that the US government is allegedly "not sharing all it knows" on UAPs and USOs - making it difficult to tackle security threats across the planet's oceans.
He said: "The geophysical undersampling of the world’s ocean is a critical concern for maritime security, as obtaining and maintaining knowledge of threats on and under the sea remains a perpetually unfinished task.
"The fact that unidentified objects with unexplainable characteristics are entering US water space and the DOD is not raising a giant red flag is a sign that the government is not sharing all it knows about all-domain anomalous phenomena.
"An effective and complete approach to maritime security must seek to uncover the “unknown unknowns” associated with transmedium UAP and USOs."
The Rear Admiral argued that further knowledge on these unidentified objects roaming the world's waters could transform "virtually any economic sector - not to mention defence".
These include air and maritime transportation, energy generation, agriculture, communications, computing, manufacturing, and space travel.
"Further study of UAP may lead to discoveries that make those of the scientific revolution in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries look like baby steps," he said.
Gallaudet also mentioned how pilots, "credible observers" and ultra-modern military technology have recorded objects "accelerating at rates and crossing the air–sea interface in ways not possible for anything made by humans."
It comes after odd sightings were also reported by locals and UFO enthusiasts.
In June 2022, dramatic footage appeared to show a series of bright lights hovering over San Diego.
The mysterious video shared online on Monday fueled locals to wildly speculate if UFOs were flying over the Pacific Ocean.
Other bizarre footage of a large "cube" hovering above the ocean sparked a number of fresh UFO theories.
Theorist Scott C Waring claimed he saw an odd shaped UFO while watching livestreams from the International Space Station (ISS).
Posting on YouTube, the UFO hunter, who is best known for making the eccentric claim he saw a 10,000 year old alien face carved on Mars, believes the mysterious "craft" was getting ready to leave the ocean for space.
The footage from ISS taken in October 2021 showed a cloud-like substance staying motionless right above the ocean.
USOs could be lurking under our oceans without ever emerging, the Rear Admiral warnedCredit: Twitter / @AlextuelMost research focuses on phenomena up in the sky, such as this series of bright lights spotted in San DiegoCredit: Twitter / @gabegunlock