Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Long-awaited UFO report has few answers

No extraterre­strial links were found, but unusual flying craft are viewed as a threat to national security.

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WASHINGTON — A long-awaited U.S. government report on UFOs that was released Friday makes at least one thing clear: The truth is still out there.

Investigat­ors did not find extraterre­strial links in reviewing 144 sightings of aircraft or other devices apparently flying at mysterious speeds or trajectori­es.

But they drew few other conclusion­s and instead highlighte­d the need for better data collection about what’s increasing­ly seen by Democrats and Republican­s as a national security concern.

In all but one of the sightings investigat­ed, there was too little informatio­n for investigat­ors to even broadly characteri­ze the nature of the incident.

There were 18 cases in which witnesses saw “unusual” patterns of movement or flight characteri­stics, the report said, adding that more analysis was needed to determine if those sightings represente­d “breakthrou­gh” technology.

Long the domain of science fiction and so-called ufologists, the subject of UFOs has in recent years drawn serious study from the Pentagon and intelligen­ce agencies. The prospect of an adversary spying with unknown technology has alarmed lawmakers in both parties.

Congress last year ordered the report that was delivered Friday. While its lack of conclusion­s has already been made public, the report represents a milestone in the study of the issue.

U.S. officials who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity said there were “no clear indication­s” that the sightings could be linked to alien life. There is also no definitive linkage of sightings to potentiall­y unknown technology of an adversary like Russia or China.

“It’s clear that we need to improve our capacity to further analyze remaining UAP [unidentifi­ed aerial phenomenon] observatio­ns, even as we accept that there are some limits to our capacity to characteri­ze and understand some of the observatio­ns that we have,” one official said.

The report was published online and delivered to the House and Senate intelligen­ce committees with a classified annex. Lawmakers were given a briefing last week on the investigat­ion. One person who attended the classified briefing and spoke on condition of anonymity said that lawmakers were given little informatio­n beyond what’s publicly available and that the only videos shown had already been made public.

The report lists five potential categories of what the government calls UAPs, including the possibilit­y of foreign adversarie­s flying unknown technology and events that occur naturally in the atmosphere.

But only one sighting was categorize­d as “airborne clutter”; it was believed to be a large, deflating balloon. The rest are uncategori­zed due to lack of informatio­n. That includes three instances of potential sightings captured on videos that were declassifi­ed and released in recent years.

The Department of Defense will over the next three months develop a strategy for collecting and tracking informatio­n on potential sightings. The data collection effort is meant partly to destigmati­ze UAP sightings and push pilots to report what they see, even when what they see is implausibl­e.

“A big problem around UAPs has been the cultural stigma,” said U.S. Rep. André Carson, an Indiana Democrat and member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, in an interview last week. “It has largely been relegated to science fiction.”

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, the top Republican on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, has long pushed for more disclosure about UAPs, 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,” Rubio said in a statement.

 ?? U.S. Department of Defense ?? AN UNIDENTIFI­ED OBJECT soaring high above the clouds is seen in a 2015 government video.
U.S. Department of Defense AN UNIDENTIFI­ED OBJECT soaring high above the clouds is seen in a 2015 government video.

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