US Govt. examining over 500 ‘UFO’ reports | Daily News

US Govt. examining over 500 ‘UFO’ reports

An image from a US military pilot’s sighting of an ‘unidentified anomalous phenomena’ that some think is evidence of UFOs.
An image from a US military pilot’s sighting of an ‘unidentified anomalous phenomena’ that some think is evidence of UFOs.

US: The U.S. Government is examining 510 UFO reports, over triple the number in its 2021 file, and while many were caused by drones or balloons, hundreds remain unexplained, according to a report released Thursday.

The 2022 report by the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) said that 247 “unidentified anomalous phenomena” or UAP reports have been filed with it since June 2021, when it revealed that it had records of 144 sightings of suspicious aerial objects under examination.

In addition, the report said, another 119 reports that had been buried in old records from the past 17 years had been unearthed, leaving it with 510 in total.

Most of the new reports come from U.S. Navy and Air Force pilots, it said.

Of those, close to 200 had “unremarkable” explanations: they were balloons, drones or so-called aerial clutter, which covers birds, weather events and airborne plastic bags.

But others haven’t been explained according to the DNI document, an unclassified version of a report delivered to Congress.

Those are the focus of examinations by the Pentagon, U.S. intelligence agencies, and NASA over concerns not that they are alien spacecraft but unknown spying capabilities of rival countries.

The U.S. military is worried some of the UAPs spotted by military pilots in the past may represent technologies of strategic rivals unknown to U.S. scientists.

The Pentagon previously called them unidentified aerial phenomena, but has now changed it to unidentified anomalous phenomena to include air, space, and maritime domains.

In 2020, the Pentagon released a still inexplicable video taken by navy pilots of objects moving at incredible speeds, spinning and mysteriously disappearing.

- JAPAN TODAY

 


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