A self-titled UFO expert claims an “alien drone” could be seen as a NASA lunar module takes off from the surface of the moon. The “drone” is seen in a video.

Scott Waring, a known UFO hunter, claimed that an alien drone could be seen briefly as one of NASA’s lunar modules was taking off from the surface of the moon. In an entry on the ET Database, he explained that he saw the “drone” in an old video found in NASA’s archives.

Waring claimed that by slowing the video down, he was able to see not just one but “several UFOs shoot past” the lunar module. He, however, focused on one particular “UFO” in the video.

This “UFO,” he said, measured about 1 meter in size. He further claimed that while the “UFO” looks like it is all “metal in construction,” it does have some “whitish” areas he believes could be areas where scanners are placed.

Despite saying the video was taken from NASA’s archives, Waring refused to identify what lunar mission it was taken from. Although he placed the words “UFO Over Apollo 8 Orbiting Moon” on the video he uploaded to YouTube, he said the video is from Apollo 10, indicating that he has no intention to say where it is actually from.

“I will not cite the source because I fear it will be deleted by NASA,” he said.

“Where is your UFO?”

The video, which Waring claimed was “found Feb. 6, 2012,” showed what Waring claimed to be the lunar module as it was taking off from the surface of the moon. A few seconds into the video, something would quickly flash on the screen. This “something” is what Waring claimed to be the “UFO.”

The video, however, appeared pixelated. Some people who commented on the YouTube link simply dismissed the video as another “fake” UFO video, with one specific comment saying “where is “your” UFO?”

It is also worth noting that Waring called the object an “alien drone” in 2019, while he never called it that way when he first discovered the video in 2012.

UFO
Two airline pilots traveling over Arizona claim they were passed by unidentified flying objects while flying at over 30,000 feet in the air, March 27, 2018. Above is a representational image. PhotoVision/Pixabay