[Conspiratorial Take] Why Grusch didn’t chase AARO and why AARO didn’t chase Grusch


Let me start by saying that I am absolutely not a conspiracy theorist, but the more I think about it, the more this angle makes sense to me.

It was Kirkpatrick’s congressionally directed duty to make proper contact with Grusch and get him in to testify to ARRO and it is clear Kirkpatrick had little interest in doing this. He did not contact Grusch directly, he did not pass his number to Grusch’s lawyer, he ignored Grusch’s multiple suggestions to contact him and instead went with the line that Grusch refused to come in when he in fact did not.

We are led to believe that AARO did not follow up with Grusch upon his first contact before Grusch blew the whistle and if true you have to ask the obvious question, why? Why would the man who’s job it was to contact those who claim to want testimony from insiders supposedly with knowledge not want to go to the man at the very centre of it?

Put your tinfoil hats on, because there’s only one conclusion I can draw and it isn’t anything to do with bad blood between the two of them and this is a game of chess.

Before we begin, it needs to be mentioned that Kirkpatrick postponed his planned retirement to take up the position of head of AARO.

Firstly, it is curious that AARO are operating on title 10 clearance predominantly concerning the DoD. Grusch’s testimony apparently relates to title 50 access surrounding the likes of the DoE. Despite claiming Kirkpatrick has access to any UAP-related information he was unable to get cleared to Grusch’s UAP/NHI testimony to the IG’s nor does it seem he got the transcription from elsewhere as per the FOIA release. This is proof that the claim there are no barriers to their information is false.

On the basis that AARO is a honey pot, Kirkpatrick is a stooge and information must be concealed from congress, the absolute last thing AARO would want to do is to interview Grusch. For whoever is pulling the strings it probably isn’t important to find out what Grusch knows in the sense that the risk involved outweighs the reward. If it’s something Kirkpatrick doesn’t know, they likely wouldn’t want him learning it. Certain higher-level individuals are very probably fully aware of what it could be but if Grusch testifies to AARO then that information needs to be conveyed to congress. This is the last thing they’d want because if Grusch doesn’t testify to AARO then it is easier to attempt to keep him out of a SCIF with them to prevent them learning what he knows.

So why then wouldn’t Grusch push testimony to AARO himself?

Aside from running the risk of falling foul of the law and disclosing information to people who aren’t cleared to have it, he doesn’t actually have to. He’s already testified and forced things in motion by blowing the whistle. At the moment, it is known to very, very few what he actually said. There can be suspicions but would that be enough to close programs and have to physically move all the evidence? I’m not so sure. I think this one is really big, over quite a wide geographical area concerning different facilities managed by multiple separate parties and contains craft that are difficult to transport in secret, particularly if we’re talking double didgit amounts as has been claimed. It would also be too important to simply be destroyed. Not only that, but I very much doubt the aerospace companies holding them would willingly destroy this technology if there’s a chance of them retaining it.

If he’s discovered something Kirkpatrick doesn’t actually know about why would he want to tell Kirkpatrick about it? If the program name and a load of other information gets burned and congress are made aware the program will certainly have to get shut down, moved or buried and then everything behind his whistleblower testimony collapses. The evidence is gone and he looks crazy.

But there are 40 other whistleblowers who’ve gone to AARO? I don’t think they know what Grusch knows. They might know a little something about a little something, and it’s a good way to keep AARO busy while investigations from the whistleblower complaint continue.

I think the ones who went to Rubio are the cream of the crop, they’re probably the ones who know what Grusch knows and are staying away from AARO.

For those at the head of the program the risk of finding out what he’s uncovered can only lead to the worst outcome for them, exposure of the program and loss of the technology. Its a position whoever is heading the program doesn’t want. So what do you do?

You get yourself a Kirkpatrick, keep everything at title 10 when your program is title 50, you find out as much as you can and hope it isn’t the crown jewels that’s been burned and then you give Kirkpatrick a nice little office job for good service at the end.

He’d planned to retire but he hasn’t retired. He now works for the DoE, who are title 50.

Thoughts?

submitted by /u/Strange-Owl-2097
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