The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US ‘object’ shoot downs: The end of UFO sightings?

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WASHINGTON: Is the US military’s decision to shoot down four objects that suddenly showed up in US airspace the beginning of the end of UFO speculatio­n?

Pentagon officials say they only detected three of the objects after adjusting strategic radar systems originally trained toward large items like ballistic missiles and bombers to take note of smaller, slower objects.

That might not supply answers on sketchy UFO claims from past years, but could lead to better and quicker explanatio­ns for any strange anomalies in the future, scotching tall tales of flying saucers.

For years, reports of unidentifi­ed flying objects were filed away with little investigat­ion, except by a corps of alien-believing, conspiracy theory toting “UFO logists”.

But after a slew of inexplicab­le sightings from US Navy and Air Force pilots, several years ago the Pentagon decided to pay closer attention.

The central worry was that the sightings could be of unknown aerial surveillan­ce technology China was using to collect intelligen­ce on US defenses.

In 2020, the Pentagon set up its Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomena (UAP) Task Force, using its own acronym for UFOs, to dig deeper into hundreds of cases with the support of the CIA and other agencies.

Some were easily written off as weather balloons or solar reflection­s.

But others were daunting, such as a Navy pilot’s video from 2014 of an oblong aerial object that appeared to move faster and with more maneuverab­ility than the jet the pilot was flying.

“What is true ... is that there’s footage and records of objects in the skies that we don’t know exactly what they are,” former president Barack Obama said in 2021.

Hundreds of reports

Yet the first unclassifi­ed report, released by the director of national intelligen­ce to Congress in June 2021, failed to dampen speculatio­n about extraterre­strials.

The task force could confidentl­y explain away only one of 144 UAP sightings by US government personnel and sources between 2004 and 2021.

Meanwhile, 18 were objects that appeared to display unusual movements or flight characteri­stics, like holding stationary in high winds at high altitude, and moving with extreme speed with no discernabl­e means of propulsion, the report said.

“We currently lack sufficient informatio­n in our dataset to attribute incidents to specific explanatio­ns,” it said.

In January this year, the director of national intelligen­ce issued a new report on the UAP investigat­ions that resolved some questions but added more.

It increased the number of incidents being examined to 510.

Of those, nearly 200 had “unremarkab­le” explanatio­ns: balloons, drones or so-called aerial clutter, which covers birds, weather events and airborne plastic bags.

Many others could stem from weather phenomena, faulty sensors, or erroneous analysis by humans, but lacked enough detailed data for a clear attributio­n, the report said.

On the other hand, it said, “Some of these uncharacte­rized UAP appear to have demonstrat­ed unusual flight characteri­stics or performanc­e capabiliti­es, and require further analysis.”

Balloon surprise

Just weeks later the issue came to the forefront when the air force tracked a previously unseen Chinese surveillan­ce balloon entering US airspace from the northwest.

It appeared to have selfsteeri­ng technology and it tracked directly over sensitive sites including US nuclear missile silos and strategic bomber bases.

After it was shot down off the east coast, officials went back through electronic data from previous years.

They realized there have been at least four other instances when Chinese surveillan­ce balloons entered US airspace since 2017 – some possibly classified as UAPs.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre watches as National Security Council Coordinato­r for Strategic Communicat­ions John Kirby (right) speaks during the daily press briefing in the James S Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC.
— AFP photo White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre watches as National Security Council Coordinato­r for Strategic Communicat­ions John Kirby (right) speaks during the daily press briefing in the James S Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC.

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