Arab News

Leave UFOs and aliens to scientists

- NIDHAL GUESSOUM | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS

The Pentagon should have given the $22 million it spent on studying UFOs and ETs to those who could guarantee that the subject and any investigat­ion would be treated properly.

THE Pentagon has just reignited the debate over unidentifi­ed flying objects (UFOs) and extra-terrestria­ls (ETs) by admitting that it funded a secret program on UFOs from 2007 to 2012. The very fact that the Pentagon spent $22 million on a program that only a handful of people were told about was enough to imply, in the minds of the predispose­d, that there is ample truth to the claims of alien spacecraft sightings. To justify its deed, the Pentagon released a few video recordings from aircraft cameras that showed strange objects hovering or flying fast.

UFOs must not be equated with ETs. The former simply refers to any strange object that was seen to fly but could not be identified. Often the object turns out not to even be flying — sometimes it is a balloon made of highly reflective material, a military plane, a new aerial instrument that is being tested, a satellite or some other, more mundane explanatio­n. When people watch the sky without basic knowledge of celestial phenomena, UFOs and “alien spacecraft” are reported more frequently.

The first thing that needs to be clarified is that the Pentagon had run bigger UFO and ET investigat­ions from 1947 to 1969. It collected and analyzed 12,000 claims (photograph­s, films and testimonie­s), but found nothing of substance and decided that money would be better spent on other projects.

Ninety-five percent of all claims were explained as various balloons (meteorolog­ical measuremen­ts, scientific projects etc.), celestial objects, undeclared military missions or other Earth-bound activity.

Secondly, $22 million may seem like a large sum, and thus indicate great interest by the Pentagon in UFOs and aliens, but it is merely a drop compared to the total US defense budget (less than 0.01 percent of $600 billion).

Most importantl­y, a large amount of the $22 million went to private contractor­s, who “collected and analyzed the evidence” and — surprise — reported that “what was considered science fiction is now science fact.” But if it were, the investigat­ors should simply have announced the findings and presented the “evidence” to the world, thereby making history.

Thirdly, and this is my main point, this kind of investigat­ion should be assigned to scientists, not private contractor­s. Scientists have the proper methodolog­y for studying such phenomena and assessing any evidence, whether photos and video recordings or, more importantl­y, metal alloys (it was claimed that alloys that had not been used by anyone on Earth were collected).

Just give all that to several teams of scientists, preferably from around the world, fund them adequately and let them conduct their analyses openly and transparen­tly, all following the norms of scientific research, then report to the world.

It would then be great to organize one or several conference­s where the scientists present their results and critique each other openly, with the participat­ion of journalist­s and any officials (civilian or military) who might be interested. That would help diffuse the “conspiracy of silence” aura that surrounds the whole subject, as many people believe that the government is hiding evidence.

Even this kind of initiative might not silence believers in UFO and alien cover-ups, as I am sure scientists would still have some cases they could not explain. Some sightings or recordings are always very difficult to explain for one reason or another: The recording is too fuzzy, or it was not possible to determine all the circumstan­ces surroundin­g that event (for example, the military conducted secret flights, or a private company did tests on that day).

That is normal in science — there are always cases that remain unexplaine­d, not because they are out of this world, but simply because additional factors intervened that we could not determine and take into account. But even if not everyone were to be convinced, at least one could guarantee that the subject and any investigat­ion would be treated properly.

Lastly, I want to nullify the argument that aliens probably exist and may have visited Earth just because scientists have discovered thousands of planets outside our solar system. We have as yet no knowledge of the probabilit­y of existence of any kind of life, whether primitive or advanced, beyond Earth.

The jump from “scientists have found thousands of planets out there” (we estimate the number to be in the billions in our galaxy alone) to “ETs exist and have visited Earth” is a quantum leap that makes no sense. We scientists are highly interested in the question of whether any aliens exist and have ever visited Earth. But we want to answer that question in the most rigorous way, without any preconcept­ions and far from secrecy or sensationa­lism.

QNidhal Guessoum is a professor of physics and astronomy at the American University of Sharjah, UAE. Twitter: @NidhalGues­soum

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