Former Canadian Defence Chief Claims Multiple Alien Species Visited Earth and Dealt With Governments
Paul Hellyer, one of Canada's most senior political figures, publicly claimed UFOs were real and secrecy hid the truth.

Paul Hellyer was no fringe figure. Born in 1923, he served decades in Canadian politics and became minister of defence in the 1960s during the Cold War. He was also the longest serving member of Canada's Privy Council, placing him deep inside the country's political establishment.
That background is why his later statements landed so heavily. Hellyer repeatedly said UFOs were not only real but represented advanced technologies far beyond human capability. He claimed multiple non-human species had visited Earth and that governments were aware of their presence. Few public figures with his credentials had ever spoken so plainly.
Hellyer also showed early interest in the subject while still in office. In 1967, he inaugurated a UFO landing pad in St Paul, Alberta, framing it as a symbol of peace and a hope that space would remain free from warfare. At the time, it was seen as quirky. Decades later, it looked like a clue.
His Claims About Aliens, Governments And Hidden Technology
In interviews and public talks, Hellyer argued that global secrecy around UFOs existed to hide revolutionary technologies. He suggested that extraterrestrial craft possessed energy systems that could transform human life but were suppressed because they threatened existing power structures.
He spoke of interactions between aliens and governments, although he avoided operational details. According to Hellyer, officials feared panic and disruption if the truth became public. He framed disclosure not as science fiction, but as a moral responsibility.
These remarks placed him alongside international disclosure advocates who believe governments have long known more than they admit. His words gained renewed attention through social media clips and archival interviews shared years after his death in 2021.
The Controversy Around How He Reached These Beliefs
A major criticism of Hellyer's testimony is timing. He openly acknowledged that he did not arrive at these conclusions while serving in government. Instead, he said his beliefs formed after retirement through personal research.
Hellyer explained that his information came from interviews and documents that crossed his path. Supporters argue that a former defence minister would naturally have access to well-placed contacts, even after leaving office. Critics counter that post government research lacks the authority of classified briefings.
Some observers believe his insistence that the information did not come from his official duties was deliberate. By drawing that line, Hellyer avoided forcing the Canadian government to respond or deny his claims, protecting institutions while still speaking freely.
Why His Legacy Still Fuels The UFO Debate Today
Hellyer's reputation took hits, particularly when he referenced ideas such as a 'Galactic Federation'. Even some supporters dismissed parts of his claims as speculative or shaped by human concepts applied to unknown phenomena.
Yet his long career complicates easy dismissal. He was not a single issue activist but a veteran politician with decades of service. For many, that makes his statements impossible to ignore, even if not fully accepted.
His legacy sits in a grey zone between whistleblower and believer. Hellyer forced uncomfortable questions about secrecy, authority and who decides what the public can handle. Whether viewed as a truth teller or a man led astray by post-retirement research, his voice remains one of the most powerful ever to enter the UFO conversation.
In the end, Paul Hellyer answered the headline himself. Yes, he claimed aliens visited Earth. Yes, he said governments knew. And by saying it out loud, he ensured the debate would never fully go away.
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