Las Vegas Review-Journal

House panel to hold public hearing on unexplaine­d aerial sightings

- By Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal

A House subcommitt­ee is scheduled next week to have the first open congressio­nal hearing on unidentifi­ed aerial vehicles in more than half a century, with testimony from two top defense intelligen­ce officials.

The hearing comes after the release last June of a report requested by Congress on “unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena.” The nine-page “Preliminar­y Assessment” from the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce focused on 144 incidents dating to 2004 and was able to explain only one.

The report declined to draw inferences, saying that the available reporting was “largely inconclusi­ve” and noting that limited and inconsiste­nt data created a challenge in evaluating the phenomena. But it said most of the phenomena reported “do represent physical objects.”

The assessment concluded that the objects were not secret U.S. technology and that “we currently lack data to indicate any UAP are part of a foreign collection program or indicative of a major technologi­cal advancemen­t by a potential adversary.”

The hearing, scheduled for Tuesday, is intended to focus on the work of a group within the Pentagon that is following up on the national security and flight-safety questions raised by the report.

“Since this is an area of high public interest, any undue secrecy can serve as an obstacle to solving the mystery, or it could prevent us from finding solutions to potential vulnerabil­ities,” said Rep. André Carson, D-ind., chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee’s subcommitt­ee on counterter­rorism, counterint­elligence, and counterpro­liferation, which is holding the hearing. “This hearing is about examining steps that the Pentagon can take to reduce the stigma surroundin­g reporting by military pilots, and by civilian pilots.”

“The federal government and intelligen­ce community have a critical role to play in contextual­izing and analyzing reports,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-calif., chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee. He said the purpose of the hearing was to illuminate “one of the great mysteries of our time and to break the cycle of excessive secrecy and speculatio­n with truth and transparen­cy.”

The June 2021 report delivered to Congress was done by the intelligen­ce community and the Pentagon’s Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomenon Task Force, which the Pentagon replaced in November with a new office, the Airborne Object Identifica­tion and Management Synchroniz­ation Group. The group’s job is to “detect, iden

tify and attribute objects of interest in Special Use Airspace and to assess and mitigate any associated threats to safety of flight and national security.”

Moultrie oversees that new group, which will be a focus of the upcoming hearings.

In December, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-ariz., succeeded with bipartisan support in inserting an amendment into the annual National Defense Authorizat­ion Act that directs the Pentagon to work with the intelligen­ce community on the issue and to publicly report its findings. The amendment expanded the scope of the research beyond what the Pentagon group was already conducting.

Congress has not had any open hearings on UFOS since the Air Force closed a public investigat­ion known as Project Blue Book in early 1970.

In 1966, Gerald Ford, then the House Republican minority leader from Michigan, organized a hearing in response to reports of UFOS by more than 40 people, including 12 policemen. The Air Force explained them away as “swamp gas,” which Ford said was “flippant.”

“I believe the American people are entitled to a more thorough explanatio­n than has been given them by the Air Force to date,” Ford said in a letter on March 28, 1966, to two House committees. Air Force officials testified about the sightings.

Two years later, Congress had a second hearing in which scientists from outside the Air Force presented papers on their own studies of the phenomena and called for continued study of unidentifi­ed flying objects.

The Air Force concluded in 1969 that no UFO had ever threatened national security; that the objects did not display technology beyond what was present-day knowledge; and that there was no evidence indicating the objects were extraterre­strial. The Air Force concluded that no further investigat­ion was warranted.

In recent years, intelligen­ce reports and statements by officials have cited concerns about a national security threat from UFOS through advanced technology hinted at by reports from pilots of, for example, vehicles traveling at extreme speeds without visible means of propulsion. Officials have voiced doubt that they could be tied to known adversarie­s.

“I’ve gotten some chuckles, but it’s something I’m passionate about and I think I can take the heat,” Carson said. “This may be the very thing that brings Democrats and Republican­s together, at least for an hour or two.”

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