The Boston Globe

They’re not out there, Pentagon declares

Report finds no coverup of UFO technology

- By Julian E. Barnes

WASHINGTON — In the 1960s, secret test flights of advanced government spy planes generated UFO sightings. More recently, government and commercial drones, new kinds of satellites, and errant weather balloons have led to a renaissanc­e in unusual observatio­ns.

But, according to a new report, none of these sightings were of alien spacecraft.

The new congressio­nally mandated Pentagon report found no evidence that the government was covering up knowledge of extraterre­strial technology and said there was no evidence that any UFO sightings represente­d alien visitation to Earth.

The 63-page document is the most sweeping rebuttal the Pentagon has issued in recent years to counter claims that it has informatio­n on extraterre­strial visits or technology. But amid widespread distrust of the government, the report is unlikely to calm a growing obsession with aliens.

Major General Patrick Ryder, a Defense Department spokespers­on, said the Pentagon approached the report with an open mind and no preconceiv­ed notions but simply found no evidence to back up claims of secret programs, hidden alien technology, or anything else extraterre­strial.

“All investigat­ive efforts, at all levels of classifica­tion, concluded that most sightings were ordinary objects and phenomena and the result of misidentif­ication,” Ryder said in a statement.

While many reports of what the government now calls Unidentifi­ed Anomalous Phenomena remain unsolved, the new document states plainly there is nothing to see. The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, concluded that if better-quality data were available, “most of these cases also could be identified and resolved as ordinary objects or phenomena.”

Because of that missing data, Pentagon officials in the past have often been reluctant to speak clearly about various incidents, saying they lack informatio­n to draw a conclusion. But in the absence of conclusion­s, conspiracy theories have flourished, even as scientists and independen­t investigat­ors made the case that optical illusions, weather phenomena, scientific balloons, or drones were reasonable causes of nearly all of the unexplaine­d incidents.

The report also challenges the accounts of whistle-blowers and former government officials who have said the United States is hiding evidence of aliens or extraterre­strial material from the public.

The Pentagon has, over time, tried to chip away at such claims. Officials have testified to Congress that the government has no extraterre­strial materials — much less a spaceship — in its possession. The Pentagon and NASA have used basic trigonomet­ry to show why publicized military videos do not show anything extraordin­ary or alien.

The report will not be the last word. Congress has mandated a second report by the Pentagon and passed a measure last year ordering the National Archives to declassify more records. NASA and US intelligen­ce agencies are looking at

ways to collect more comprehens­ive data about unexplaine­d sightings.

But none of those efforts are likely to deviate from the broad conclusion­s stated Friday.

Progress in debunking misinforma­tion about UFOs has been slowed by various changes in the task force looking into the matter. Congress has charged the AARO with a historical review of the evidence.

The office has not found “any empirical evidence” that reported sightings represent “off world technology” or any classified program that had not been reported to Congress, the report concludes.

Neverthele­ss, the public is unlikely to be swayed. Many people dismiss the government’s claims that nothing interestin­g is going on in Pentagon videos that appear to show strange objects, citing accounts by Navy pilots that they observed objects whose movements cannot be easily explained.

The new report notes that in the past, particular­ly in the 1950s, there was interest in UFOs, but today, the attention on unexplaine­d sightings is greater than ever before.

The Pentagon, treading gently and writing with precise language, concludes that declining public trust in government and the speed in which misinforma­tion now spreads has made it more difficult to rebut claims of extraterre­strial visits. Citing a 2021 Gallup poll, the Pentagon said that exposure to the topic through “traditiona­l and social media has increased the number of Americans who believe UFO sightings are extraterre­strial in origins.”

“Aside from hoaxes and forgeries, misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion is more prevalent and easier to disseminat­e now than ever before, especially with today’s advanced photo, video and computer-generated imagery tools,” the report found. “Internet search and content recommenda­tion algorithms serve to reinforce individual­s’ preconcept­ions and confirmati­on biases just as much as to help educate and inform.”

The report notes that in the 1950s, many UFO reports were driven by public sightings or classified government programs.

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