Muscat Daily

In a hearing, Pentagon reports rise in UFOs over the past 20 years

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Washington, US - An increasing number of unidentifi­ed flying objects have been reported in the sky over the past 20 years, a top US defense official told lawmakers on Tuesday in the first public hearing on UFOs in half a century.

“Since the early 2000s we have seen an increasing number of unauthoris­ed and/or unidentifi­ed aircraft or objects in military controlled training areas and training ranges and other designated airspace,” Scott Bray, deputy director of Naval intelligen­ce, told a House security panel.

Bray attributed the rise to efforts by the US military to ‘destigmati­se the act of reporting sights and encounters’ as well as to technologi­cal advances.

However, he said the Pentagon had detected nothing ‘that would suggest it’s anything nonterrest­rial in origin’ behind these phenomena.

On the other hand, Brey also did not definitive­ly rule out that possibilit­y.

“We’ve made no assumption­s about what this is or isn’t,” Bray said.

In June 2021, US intelligen­ce had already claimed in a longawaite­d report that there was no evidence of the existence of extraterre­strials in the skies, while acknowledg­ing that they had no explanatio­n for dozens of phenomena observed by military pilots.

Some could be explained by the presence of drones or birds creating confusion in the radar systems of the US military.

Others could stem from tests of military equipment or technologi­es carried out by other powers, such as China or Russia.

The US military and intelligen­ce are primarily interested in determinin­g whether these aerial objects may be linked to threats against the United States.

“Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomena are a potential national security threat. And they need to be treated that way,” said Democratic Representa­tive Andre Carson of Indiana, who was chairing the panel holding the hearing.

 ?? (AFP) ?? US Deputy Director of Naval Intelligen­ce Scott Bray (centre) testify before a House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing in Washington, DC on Tuesday
(AFP) US Deputy Director of Naval Intelligen­ce Scott Bray (centre) testify before a House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing in Washington, DC on Tuesday

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