Las Vegas Review-Journal

Navy spotlight on curious spottings

Pilot encounters with craft prompt questions

- By Ben Finley The Associated Press

NORFOLK, Va. — In one of the videos, a small object streaks across the sky before the U.S. Navy fighter jet’s tracking system locks on and follows it.

“Whoa. Got it,” the pilot yells, laughing as the dot moves on his screen. “Woohoo!”

Another pilot asks: “What is that, man?”

The Navy isn’t offering an explanatio­n — at least not publicly — for exactly what that object was. But the service is confirming the authentici­ty of that video and two others taken from its planes in 2004 and 2015.

The release of the videos, which have been circulatin­g online and in news reports, was not authorized, Navy officials said. But the footage has prompted the Navy to publicly discuss an ongoing investigat­ion into sightings by its pilots of what it describes as “unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena,” or UAPS, in U.S. airspace on both coasts.

Meanwhile, lawmakers are calling for more informatio­n on the socalled UAPS, saying some of their movements seem to challenge the laws of physics.

“Based on pilot accounts, encounters with these UAPS often involved complex flight patterns and advanced maneuverin­g, which demand extreme advances in quantum mechanics, nuclear science, electromag­netics and thermodyna­mics,” North Carolina Rep. Mark Walker wrote in a letter to Navy Secretary Richard Spencer in July.

“If the accounts are true, the unidentifi­ed crafts could pose a serious security risk to our military personnel and defense apparatus,” wrote Walker, a Republican on the U.S. House’s Homeland Security Committee. “They could also represent a tremendous opportunit­y for advancemen­ts in science in technology that can contribute to the public good.”

The Navy is updating its guidelines to encourage pilots to more thoroughly report what they see, Navy spokesman Joseph Gradisher said. And Navy investigat­ors have been traveling to bases such as Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where squadrons of F/A-18 Super Hornets are based, to talk to aviators.

Gradisher said the issue ultimately is the safety and security of the Navy’s operations.

“Our aviators train as they fight,” he said. “And we don’t like the idea of someone or something observing how we train.”

 ?? The Stars Academy of Arts & Science ?? In this image made from video from a U.S. Navy aircraft, an unidentifi­ed object moves in the air near the plane. The Navy isn’t offering an explanatio­n — at least not publicly.
The Stars Academy of Arts & Science In this image made from video from a U.S. Navy aircraft, an unidentifi­ed object moves in the air near the plane. The Navy isn’t offering an explanatio­n — at least not publicly.

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