Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

What we believe about UFOs

We still don’t know what they are — but we may be close to finding out

- By Harry Reid (The writer is a former US senator from Nevada.) Courtesy The New York Times

One day in 1996, I received a call from George Knapp, an investigat­ive reporter at KLAS-TV, the CBS affiliate in Las Vegas, and a friend of mine. “Harry,” he said, “there’s something you have to attend.” He invited me to an upcoming conference that would focus on what the U.S. government generally refers to as “unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena,” but what most other people simply call UFOs, a subject Mr. Knapp had, and still has, a particular interest in.

A large conference room at the event was filled with academics, interested members of the public and, yes, a few oddballs. I was very impressed with the academics, who spoke of unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena in the language of science, discussing the issue in terms of technologi­cal advancemen­t and national security. I was hooked.

Over the following years, as I became increasing­ly interested in UFOs — in part through my conversati­ons with former astronaut John Glenn, a fellow senator with a similar curiosity — my staff warned me not to be seen to engage on the topic. “Stay the hell away from this,” they said. I politely ignored them. I was inquisitiv­e and, like Senator Glenn, I thought it was an issue that demanded attention, and I was in a position to act.

And act I did.

In 2007, while serving as Senate majority leader, I worked with Senators Ted Stevens, a Republican from Alaska, and Daniel Inouye, a Democrat from Hawaii, to secure $22 million in funding for what would become known as the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identifica­tion Programme. This clandestin­e Pentagon operation investigat­ed reports of UFOs and other related phenomena, including UFO encounters involving American military personnel. Some videos and photograph­s documentin­g these astonishin­g encounters have since been made public, reigniting America’s longtime fascinatio­n with UFOs.

Though the Pentagon programme I helped create no longer exists, the government has contin

ued to study UFOs, most recently through a new program meknown as the Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomenon Task Force.

I’ve always been fascinated by things I don’t understand — by the mysterious and the unexplaine­d — and I believe this fascinatio­n comes in part from growing up in rural Nevada. I’m from a tiny town about 50 miles south of Las Vegas called Searchligh­t, in the high desert, with a population today of about 300. The house I was raised in was built out of railroad ties, and I learned to swim in the town’s only pool, which happened to be located at a brothel. Prostituti­on had overtaken mining as the leading business in Searchligh­t, and there were many houses of ill repute.

Fortunatel­y, there was also the big, beautiful sky, and the wonders it contained. People who live in rural America, away from the light pollution of the major cities, can gaze at the night sky and see the marvel of the Milky Way and more. In Searchligh­t, I spent many evenings in my youth lying on an old mattress gazing up at the endless, starry heavens. It was a rare night I didn’t see a shooting star.

The shimmering expanse filled my eyes and sparked my imaginatio­n.

It has always troubled me that I have no background in science. We didn’t have a science teacher in my elementary school, and there were limited courses available when I got to high school. But despite my lack of scientific knowledge, or perhaps because of it, I have long been deeply inquisitiv­e. Why does the sun stay hot? I wondered. Why doesn’t it cool down at the end of the day? As a young man I may not have found the answers, but I never stopped asking questions. As Albert Einstein once said, “Curiosity has its own reason for existing.”

Years later, when I entered public life, I was as curious as ever. As a Democratic senator from Nevada, I visited Area 51, the top-secret Air Force testing site in southern Nevada long associated with UFO-related conspiracy theories. What I saw fascinated me, though much of it must remain classified. During one visit I travelled a short distance to the facility that housed the Air Force’s secret new stealth fighters. For security reasons the pilots could fly them only at night — under the same Nevada stars I had gazed upon as a boy.

Though Area 51 was developed decades ago, during the height of the Cold War, its existence wasn’t publicly acknowledg­ed by the U.S. government until 2013. To do so earlier would have been detrimenta­l to our security as a nation, given that our government constantly balances the competing priorities of secrecy and transparen­cy in a democracy.

Until recently, many military pilots feared the possibilit­y of retributio­n for reporting sightings of unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena. But I believed that an unofficial taboo regarding the frank discussion of encounters could harm our national security and stymie opportunit­ies for technical advancemen­t. Which is why, along with Senators Stevens and Inouye, I helped create that secret Pentagon programme in 2007. We wanted to take a close, scientific look at the technologi­cal implicatio­ns of reported UFO encounters.

I believe that there is informatio­n uncovered by the government’s covert investigat­ions into unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena that can be disclosed to the public without harming our national security. The American people deserve to know more — and hopefully they will soon, with the release of a comprehens­ive government report requested by the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on the military’s encounters with UFOs. (The report is due in June, though it may be delayed.)

What have I personally learned from official investigat­ions into unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena so far? The truth, disappoint­ing as it may be, is that there’s still a great deal we don’t understand. It’s unclear whether the UFOs we have encountere­d could have been built by foreign adversarie­s, whether our pilots’ visual perception during some encounters was somehow distorted, or whether we truly have credible evidence of extraterre­strial visitation­s. There may be other, as yet unknown explanatio­ns for some of these strange sightings.

Regardless, I believe it’s crucial to lead with the science when studying UFOs. Focusing on little green men or conspiracy theories won’t get us far. Of course, whatever the science tells us, some portion of the public will continue to believe in the reality of otherworld­ly UFOs as a matter of faith. Ultimately, the UFO debate can be broken down into a sincere belief in science versus a sincere belief in extraterre­strials. I side with science.

Let me be clear: I have never intended to prove that life beyond Earth exists. But if science proves that it does, I have no problem with that. Because the more I learn, the more I realize that there’s still so much I don’t know.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Entrance markings at the 2019 Alienstock Festival on Route 375 — also known as the "Extraterre­strial Highway" — in Nevada, north of Area 51. (AFP)
Entrance markings at the 2019 Alienstock Festival on Route 375 — also known as the "Extraterre­strial Highway" — in Nevada, north of Area 51. (AFP)
 ??  ?? An unidentifi­ed aerial phenomenon in a US military video (DOD)
An unidentifi­ed aerial phenomenon in a US military video (DOD)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka