A new report to Congress says the Pentagon’s task force on UFOs – now recognized as unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAPs – has processed additional stories in the past couple of years than it did in the previous seventeen years. But that doesn’t mean we’re in the midst of an alien invasion.
The unclassified report was issued this week by work of the Director of National Intelligence, or ODNI, in cooperation with the Department of Defense ‘s All Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or maybe AARO. The office was developed by congressional mandate, and this week’s article serves as an update to a preliminary assessment of the Pentagon’s UAP reports issued in 2021.
That assessment said there were 144 reports associated with aerial anomalies sighted by military service members between 2004 and 2021. “There have been 247 new stories plus another 119 which were either since discovered or perhaps reported after the preliminary assessment ‘s time period,” the newly released report says.
That brings the complete to 510 UAP reports as of last August thirty.
The authors of the report say the increase in the reporting rate “is somewhat because of a clear understanding of the attainable threats which UAP might represent, either as safety of flight hazards or as potential adversary collection platforms, along with partly because of reduced stigma surrounding UAP reporting.”
Either way, Military officials and u.s. intelligence say they find out that as an excellent thing. “This increased reporting allows more opportunities to use rigorous analysis and solve events,” the report states.
Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, the Pentagon’s press secretary, cast the problem of aerial anomalies like a national security concern. “The safety of our service personnel, our bases and installations, as well as the protection of U.S. operations security on farm land, in the skies, seas, along with room are paramount,” Ryder said in a statement. “We take reports of incursions into our designated space, sea, land, or maybe airspaces seriously and look at each one.”
Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle praised the report but known as for a lot more transparency. Sen. Marco Rubio, R Fla., said “more needs to be done … to use existing sensors to gather and also analyze far more details on UAPs,” while Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said he looks forward to continued cooperation “as we work focusing resources on UAP reports that continue being unattributed.” and uncharacterized
The unclassified model of the report doesn’t include details on any cases. Such details are provided solely in the classified report to Congress. But the unclassified version does provide a breakdown of the 366 recently identified sightings. More than one half of the reports have been tentatively motivated to exhibit “unremarkable characteristics”:
- 26 were characterized as caused by drones or drone-like devices.
- 163 were characterized as caused by balloons or similar objects.
- Six were attributed to clutter, such as birds, weather events, plastic bags or other airborne debris.
Which leaves 171 accounts unidentified as well as unassociated. A few of the phenomena discussed in those mystifying reports appear to involve unusual flight characteristics or performance abilities and need additional analysis, “the report stated. At the very least, a few of these anomalies could be linked to sensor glitches or other obscure causes.
“Many reports lack sufficient comprehensive information to allow attribution of UAP with good certainty,” it said in a statement. Investigators might find it helpful to have a bigger database of sightings, which may help resolve lingering mysteries.
No one of the reported UAP encounters entail collisions or negative health consequences, the report stated. The document doesn’t deal with the possibility that foreigners might be involved in any of the UAP incidents, though last year, during a congressional hearing, Pentagon officials said they’ve seen nothing that seems to be ‘non alien” in origin.
The UFO update this week got mixed reviews from individuals who closely follow the UAP / UFO problem. Former Pentagon advisor Christopher Mellon said the UAP concern is starting to gain traction as well as recognition inside the government, especially with regards to understanding of the security problems presented by drones, which includes surveillance drones being fielded by China.
However Mellon pointed out the language in the article demonstrated the U.S. government’s “unique and uncanny ability to change an inherently intriguing subject into vexing bureaucratic jargon.”
Harvard physicist Avi Loeb, who chairs the Breakthrough Starshot Advisory Committee and also has authored a controversial book on the possibility of intelligent alien life, said the most fascinating information about UAP sightings is likely to stay classified as well as concealed from the general public.
“Even when one object out of the 510 reported UAP is of extraterrestrial origin and this object poses no risk to national security, its identification will be the most important discovery that humanity ever made,” Loeb wrote in his Medium posting.
“The ODNI report is therefore complementing the work of researchers,’ it stated. It’s intriguing in it alerts the scientific community to anomalous objects, but it does not provide sufficient evidence for the character of UAP, which may be moving, accelerating or looking differently compared to our technological products.
Just last year, for instance, NASA created an independent panel to evaluate non-military UAP sighting reports. The board is likely to report its findings by mid-2023.
In October last year Bill Nelson, the NASA Administrator, seemed to have a clear mind when asked about the possibilities for intelligent life beyond Earth. “the Universe is so big, and now there’re theories that maybe there’re other universes,” he said.
“if that is true, who am I to say that the planet Earth is the sole location of a life form that’s civilized and organized like ours?”
This article was originally published by Universe Today. Read the original article.