The Union Democrat

Spot a UFO? The Pentagon wants you to tell them about it

- By ANUMITA KAUR

WASHINGTON — If you see an unidentifi­ed flying object in the air, let the Pentagon know — and officials have promised to take you seriously.

The Defense Department wants to remove the stigma around reporting such incidents so that it can better investigat­e them, starting with military personnel, Pentagon officials on Tuesday told members of the House Intelligen­ce Committee at a hearing.

“We want to know what's out there as much as you want to know what's out there,” testified Ronald Moultrie, a top Defense Department intelligen­ce official. “Our goal is not to potentiall­y cover up something, if we were to find something. It's to understand what may be out there, examine what what it may mean for us.”

The hearing focused on a Pentagon program that started in 2017 and sought to investigat­e reports from pilots and other military personnel who spotted what the Defense Department calls UAPS, short for “unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena” (better known to the public as UFOS, or unidentifi­ed flying objects).

This isn't the Pentagon's first attempt to record and investigat­e UFOS. The latest program follows another Pentagon effort, known as Project Bluebook, which discontinu­ed its research about 50 years ago.

“Unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena are a potential national security threat, and they need to be treated that way,” said Rep. André Carson, D-ind., chairman of the Intelligen­ce subcommitt­ee that held the hearing, the first to examine UFOS in five decades. “For too long, the stigma associated with UAPS has gotten in the way of good intelligen­ce analysis. Pilots avoided reporting or were laughed at when they did.”

Scott Bray, deputy director of Naval Intelligen­ce, said that reports of such sightings are “frequent and continuous,” with more than 400 recorded by the Pentagon to date — up from the 144 reported sightings between 2004 and 2021. He attributed the rise in reports to the agency's efforts to destigmati­ze the sharing of such stories.

Understand­ing and assessing the reports is another matter. The spontaneou­s and often quick nature of the incidents means that officials frequently have little data to work with.

During the hearing, Bray pointed to footage of a mysterious object zooming by a military aircraft, appearing and disappeari­ng in the blink of an eye.

“I do not have an explanatio­n for what this specific object is,” he said.

Lawmakers asked Bray to play and replay the video so they could catch a glimpse of the puzzling visual captured through a plane's window.

In another video, Navy personnel documented a triangle flashing off the coast of the United States. Several years later, Navy personnel witnessed another triangle floating off a different coast in the U.S., Bray said.

“We're now reasonably confident that these triangles correlate to unmanned aerial systems in the area. The triangular appearance is a result of light passing through the night vision goggles and then being recorded by an SLR camera,” he said. “This is a great example of how it takes considerab­le effort to understand what we're seeing in the examples that we are able to collect.”

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