Pentagon UFO report says most sightings 'ordinary objects' and phenomena
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[March 09, 2024]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Pentagon report on unidentified
flying objects said U.S. government investigations since the end of
World War Two have found no evidence of extraterrestrial technology and
had concluded that most sightings were misidentified ordinary objects
and phenomena.
The report released on Friday follows on from a 2022 Pentagon
announcement that its then newly formed All-domain Anomaly Resolution
Office (AARO) had not found any evidence to suggest that aliens have
visited Earth or crash-landed here.
Under the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act, ARRO was required to
issue a report to Congress detailing the governments historical record
relating to "unidentified anomalous phenomena" (UAP) since 1945.
It delivered the first of two volumes of that to Congress last week,
Pentagon Press Secretary Major General Pat Ryder said in statement
accompanying the release of the unclassified version.
"AARO found no evidence that any USG investigation, academic-sponsored
research, or official review panel has confirmed that any sighting of a
UAP represented extraterrestrial technology," the report's executive
summary said.
"Although many UAP reports remain unsolved or unidentified, AARO
assesses that if more and better quality data were available, most of
these cases also could be identified and resolved as ordinary objects or
phenomena," it said.
The report said that since 1945, the government had funded
investigations to determine whether UAPs represented a flight safety
risk, technological leaps by competitor nations, or evidence of
"off-world technology under intelligent control."
The report said there was a persistent narrative in popular culture that
the government, or a secretive organization within it, had recovered
several "off-world spacecraft and extraterrestrial biological remains"
and operates programs to "reverse engineer" the recovered technology.
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"AARO recognizes that many people sincerely hold versions of these
beliefs," the report said. "The goal of this report is not to prove
or disprove any particular belief set, but rather to use a rigorous
analytic and scientific approach to investigate past USG-sponsored
UAP investigation efforts."
"AARO found no empirical evidence for claims that the USG and
private companies have been reverse-engineering extraterrestrial
technology," the report said
"AARO determined, based on all information provided to date, that
claims involving specific people, known locations, technological
tests, and documents allegedly involved in or related to the
reverse-engineering of extraterrestrial technology, are inaccurate."
It said additional claims would be detailed in a second volume.
The U.S. military has spent decades deflecting, debunking and
discrediting observations of UFOs and "flying saucers" dating back
to the 1940s.
The Pentagon said two years ago that its investigation efforts had
led to hundreds of new reports, but nothing that indicates
intelligent alien life.
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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