Las Vegas Review-Journal

UFO encounters: Intelligen­ce report is inconclusi­ve

- By Gary Martin

WASHINGTON — A widely anticipate­d report by U.S. intelligen­ce agencies on Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomena was delivered to key congressio­nal committees on Friday, but the unclassifi­ed version to the public said no definitive conclusion­s could be reached.

The report also found no direct link to reported incidents and alien aircraft, a theory that was heightened recently after the Pentagon released video and audio of Navy pilots who saw unexplaine­d objects while flying missions.

Intelligen­ce investigat­ors did not find extraterre­strial links in a reported 144 sightings of aircraft or other devices apparently flying at mysterious speeds or trajectori­es. One of the sightings was determined to be a

deflating balloon.

“The limited amount of high-quality reporting on unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena (UAP) hampers our ability to draw firm conclusion­s about the nature or intent of UAP,” the report’s executive summary stated.

One major conclusion reached in the report was that none of the phenomena witnessed appeared to be designed or produced by other nations, although it could not be ruled out.

There were 18 cases where witnesses saw unusual patterns of movement or flight characteri­stics, the report said. But analysts said more research was needed to determine if those sightings represente­d “breakthrou­gh” technology.

‘An important first step’

The report prepared by the director of national intelligen­ce was required by the Intelligen­ce Authorizat­ion

Act passed by Congress late last year. Intelligen­ce agencies were given 180 days to prepare an unclassifi­ed and classified report on what the U.S. government knew about the objects.

The report’s findings were seen as just a beginning for more research, said Sen. Mark Warner, D-VA., chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee.

Sen. Marco Rubio, ranking Republican on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, pushed for more disclosure about the phenomenon. He called the report “an important first step in cataloging these incidents, but it is just a first step.”

“The Defense Department and Intelligen­ce Community have a lot of work to do before we can actually understand whether these aerial threats present a serious national security concern,” said Rubio, R-fla., in a statement.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce and the Pentagon are creating a strategy to standardiz­e data on UFOS, according to the report. The agencies said they will update Congress within the next 90 days, the report said.

White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki said last month that the administra­tion supports the research.

“We take reports of incursions into our airspace by any aircraft identified or unidentifi­ed very seriously and investigat­e each one,” Psaki told reporters then.

Reid’s role in research

Harry Reid, the former Senate majority leader, told the Review-journal earlier this month he expected a lack of definitive conclusion­s, but said that justifies continued government research into the reports and sightings of unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena.

“I expect they are going to be fairly vague with what they come up with,” Reid said then. “We don’t have enough informatio­n now to be drawing conclusion­s.”

It was Reid in 2007 who urged initial congressio­nally approved research to

determine the origin of unexplaine­d craft and whether they might pose a threat to national security.

Reid was instrument­al in the first congressio­nally funded research into unidentifi­ed flying objects in 2007.

Reid credits Las Vegas reporter George Knapp, of KLAS-TV, Channel 8’s I-team, with bringing the issue to his attention years ago. (Knapp is a former columnist for the now-defunct Las Vegas Mercury and Las Vegas Citylife, both of which were owned by the Review-journal’s then-parent company.)

Knapp persuaded Reid to attend a convention that focused on UFOS and unexplaine­d phenomenon.

“It was interestin­g,” Reid told the Review-journal last month in an interview. “There were some academics there and some interestin­g people — and a few goofballs.”

As majority leader, Reid urged Sens. Ted Stevens, R-alaska, and Daniel Inouye, D-hawaii, to tuck $22 million into the Pentagon’s “dark budget” for the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency to carry out an initial investigat­ion in 2007.

Never seen a UFO

During a chat, the Alaska senator confessed that he had seen unexplaine­d phenomenon as a pilot in World War II. Other sightings and unexplaine­d observance­s had been reported, and the public was already hungry for informatio­n.

Reid said in the interview that he has never seen a UFO. He said he never wants to, either.

Reid’s Senate staffers at the time raised eyebrows. Their advice to Reid was to steer clear of the topic. He didn’t, he said, because of the reports and sightings and scientific research. “I ignored my staff,” he said. Nonetheles­s, Reid said he never kept his interest or his involvemen­t in early research on UFOS quiet for political reasons, though he was conscious of negative connotatio­ns.

It was a national security interest and technology, he said. And because much was classified, he never spoke about it until he was approached by a reporter from the New York Times in 2017.

The story unveiled the program that would become known as the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identifica­tion Program and Reid’s role in helping establish it. The former director, Luis Elizondo, also outlined his role in the program in the Times article.

Elizondo has been widely quoted lately, including his recent claims that the Pentagon is trying to discredit him with a misinforma­tion campaign about his involvemen­t.

Meanwhile, the retired Reid has no role in the ongoing research program but sees his early interest in getting scientific research funding as a catalyst for Pentagon efforts now.

Media exposure has also done that, Reid said, noting a recent “60 Minutes” segment on CBS featuring two former Navy pilots, Cmdr. Dave Fravor and Lt. Cmdr. Alex Dietrich, who recalled watching “Tic-tac” shaped objects during a 2004 training mission over the Pacific southwest of San Diego.

The pilots spoke publicly about their astonishme­nt in the segment, after the incident was declassifi­ed by the Pentagon. They called the experience unsettling.

Harry Reid, the former Senate majority leader, was instrument­al in the first congressio­nally funded research into unidentifi­ed flying objects in 2007.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Video provided by the Department of Defense from 2015 shows an unexplaine­d object as it soars against the wind. “There’s a whole fleet of them,” one aviator says.
The Associated Press Video provided by the Department of Defense from 2015 shows an unexplaine­d object as it soars against the wind. “There’s a whole fleet of them,” one aviator says.

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