Apollo 20: The Secret Mission to the Moon to Salvage an Ancient Alien Spacecraft
In the shadows of the Cold War space race, a mission took place that never appeared on NASA’s official records. Officially, the Apollo program ended with Apollo 17 in 1972. Unofficially… it didn’t.
According to whistleblowers and leaked documents, Apollo 20 launched in 1976, jointly operated by the United States and the Soviet Union. Its target was not just another scientific landing—its destination was a mysterious anomaly photographed during earlier Apollo missions:
a colossal, cigar-shaped craft lying dormant on the dark, unvisited far side of the Moon.
The “wreck” was said to be ancient—possibly millions of years old—its hull scarred by eons of micrometeorite strikes. Inside, astronauts allegedly found humanoid remains, including a preserved “Mona Lisa EBE” (Extraterrestrial Biological Entity), a female being with delicate facial features and advanced technology integrated into her body.
Reports claim the ship’s interior was a maze of corridors, alien hieroglyphs, and crystal-like control panels. Portions of the craft were salvaged and secretly transported back to Earth for study. Some say this technology quietly influenced later aerospace breakthroughs; others believe it is still locked away in top-secret facilities.
NASA denies Apollo 20 ever happened. But grainy leaked videos, astronaut testimonies, and matching lunar coordinates keep the legend alive. Was this the greatest archaeological discovery in human history—or one of the most elaborate space hoaxes ever devised?