Dayton Daily News

Pentagon has no policy for tracking UFO sightings

- By Nick Wadhams Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has no formal approach to report or track sightings of unidentifi­ed flying objects, an internal watchdog said, the latest in a government push to get more serious about incidents that some pilots have pointed to as evidence of extraterre­strial visitation.

The report makes no mention of those claims and offers no fresh insight into the mystery around videos the Pentagon released in 2020 showing objects that appear to fly at high speed and move in ways that defy convention­al physics.

Those encounters confounded the national security establishm­ent and provoked accusation­s that the government is covering up what it knows.

The Defense Department Inspector General’s report released Thursday said a two-year investigat­ion concluded there was no “comprehens­ive, coordinate­d approach” to address what the military calls “unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena,” or UAP.

The Pentagon “has no overarchin­g UAP policy and, as a result, it lacks assurance that national security and flight safety threats to the United States from UAP have been identified and mitigated,” the inspector general said.

Potential alien sightings have long been the stuff of popular speculatio­n and science fiction. The topic exploded into the main- stream after the release of the Pentagon videos. During congressio­nal hearings in July, three former military officers described encounters with what they called high-tech, unexplaine­d flying objects. One accused the U.S. of secretly holding onto extraterre­strial wreckage. But some analysts have said the sightings are probably a combinatio­n of optical illusions, drones, litter and advanced technology being tested by other nations.

While the inspector general’s report offers no details about past sightings and gives no explanatio­ns for what they might have been, it includes a few tantalizin­g details about the history of such incidents. It says the Pentagon’s first “UAP-focused activities” began in 1947 with the creation of “Project Sign” to investigat­e what were then referred to as unidentifi­ed flying objects.

Air Force personnel reported 243 sightings in 1947-1949, and then investigat­ed some 12,000 such reports from 1952-1969 under what was dubbed Project Blue Book. The Pentagon stopped tracking the phenomena again until 2000, when Congress funded a new program to study them. In 2022, the Pentagon formed the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office to study such sightings.

Last year, the Pentagon created a website — www. aaro.mil — to detail its work to get to the bottom of a slew of reported incidents.

Tuesday’s report said the Pentagon’s response to such incidents “is uncoordina­ted and concentrat­ed within each Military Department.”

 ?? U.S. DEPT. OF DEFENSE VIA NYT ?? A 2004 encounter near San Diego between two Navy fighter jets and an unknown object, from a video released by the Defense Department’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identifica­tion Program.
U.S. DEPT. OF DEFENSE VIA NYT A 2004 encounter near San Diego between two Navy fighter jets and an unknown object, from a video released by the Defense Department’s Advanced Aerospace Threat Identifica­tion Program.

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