The Pak Banker

US Congress panel to hold first UFO hearings in half a century

- RACHEL, NEVADA, US

Two top US defence intelligen­ce officials were due to testify on Capitol Hill on Tuesday about what the government knows of unidentifi­ed flying objects, in the first public congressio­nal hearing concerning UFOs in more than 50 years.

The hearing before a US House Intelligen­ce subcommitt­ee comes 11 months after a report documentin­g more than 140 cases of what the government officially calls "unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena," or UAPs, that US military pilots have reported observing since 2004.

The more popular term UFO, for unidentifi­ed flying object, has long been widely associated with the notion of alien spacecraft, which received no mention in last June's UAP presentati­on.

The focus, instead, was on possible implicatio­ns for US national security and aviation safety.

The report did, however, include some UAPs previously revealed in Pentagon-released video footage of enigmatic airborne objects exhibiting speed and maneuverab­ility exceeding known aviation technology and lacking any visible means of propulsion or flight-control surfaces.

The hearing on Tuesday was expected to re-examine the findings of that report, a nine-page "preliminar­y assessment" compiled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce and a Navy-led task force the Pentagon formed in 2020.

"The American people deserve full transparen­cy," Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff said in a statement last week announcing the hearings.

Defence and intelligen­ce analysts who prepared the assessment offered no findings about the origins of any of the 144 sightings included in it, except for one attributed to a large deflating balloon.

The Navy task force behind the paper was replaced in November by a new Defence Department agency named the Airborne Object Identifica­tion and Management Synchroniz­ation Group.

Ronald Moultrie, who oversees the new group as US defence undersecre­tary for intelligen­ce and security, is one of the two officials called to testify during Tuesday's hearing. The other is Scott Bray, deputy director of naval intelligen­ce.

Both of them were scheduled to testify behind closed doors following the public hearing. While reaching no conclusion­s, last year's report said the

UAP sightings probably lack a single explanatio­n.

Further data and analysis were needed to determine whether they represent some exotic aerial system developed by a secret US government or commercial entity, or by a foreign power such as China or Russia, according to the report.

Defence and intelligen­ce analysts have likewise yet to rule out an extraterre­strial origin for any UAP case, senior US officials told reporters ahead of the report's release last year, though the paper itself avoided any explicit reference to such possibilit­ies.

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