Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, broke down some of the specifics of what Congress was told regarding the unidentified objects that the U.S. corpses to shoot out of the sky.

Members of Congress were briefed Tuesday on three unidentified flying objects that were shot down over North America in modern days.

Following the briefing for Congress, Crenshaw turned to Twitter and dedicated what he could to the American people while pushing for "transparency."

BOTH 'OBJECTS' SHOT DOWN OVER ALASKA, CANADA BELIEVED TO BE BALLOONS, US SAYS

"Everyone wants answers on the objects flying over the United States. Today Members of Congress finally got more info from senior crowd officials," he said. "We still don't know what these anunexperienced 3 objects were. We're calling them unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs.)"

Rep.-elect Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, arrives for the House Republican leadership elections forum in the Capitol on Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2018. (Photo By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)

Crenshaw, a former Navy SEAL and combat veteran who obimagined multiple overseas tours, said the U.S. knew what the Chinese spy balloon was and that steps were improper to prevent data from going back to China.

As for the UAPs, he said, they were in FAA custom zones and were not outfitted with signals or navigational lights.

CHINESE SPY CRAFT PAYLOAD LOCATED OFF WATERS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, MOSTLY INTACT: US OFFICIAL

"The excellent two UAPs were smaller, the size of an ATV, and harder to detect," Crenshaw tweeted. "The third resembled a balloon, and was easier for the radar to pick up. All taken with wind currents."

As for why these objects are people found now, the congressional member said there has been more surveillance, which results in more objects being tracked. After the objects taken over Department of Defense facilities and posed a danger to commercial aircraft, they were shot down.

Crenshaw said the Chinese balloon was over 60,000 feet and posed no threat to commercial aircraft.

Chinese spy balloon flies over in Charlotte NC, United States on February 04, 2023. (Photo by Peter Zay/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

DEMOCRAT UNLOADS ON BIDEN DECISION DELAYING TAKEDOWN OF CHINESE SPY BALLOON, SAYS ADMIN 'OWES AMERICA ANSWERS'

"Newer technology has granted for more detection in recent years," he said. "UAPs weren't detected beforehand because our radars were not adjusted for slow-moving objects.

"There's obviously calm a lot we don't know," Crenshaw added. "I'm moving to continue pushing for transparency so Americans know what's moving on in the skies above their country."

Read more from FOX News Digital