by Rudy Blalock
November 15, 2024
from
NTD Website
A photo from the Department of
Defense
shows an
"unidentified aerial phenomenon."
Department of
Defense
The new findings
bring the total number of
UAP cases under review
to more than 1,600 as of
June...
There were 757 reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP)
accounted for between May 2023 and June 2024, according to an
unclassified Department of Defense (DoD)
report released Thursday.
Congress mandated the annual report by the DoD's All-Domain
Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), which is tasked with studying
and cataloging reports of UAPs, formerly referred to as UFOs.
The report said that AARO received 757 UAP reports from May 1, 2023,
to June 1, 2024, of which,
"485 of these reports featured UAP incidents
that occurred during the reporting period.
The remaining 272 reports featured UAP
incidents that occurred between 2021 and 2022 but were not
reported to AARO until this reporting period and consequently
were not included in previous annual UAP reports."
The new findings bring the total number of UAP
cases under AARO review to more than 1,600 as of June.
AARO Director Dr. Jon Kosloski said at a Nov. 14
media briefing the findings have
left investigators puzzled.
"There are interesting cases that I, with my
physics and engineering background and time in the IC
[intelligence community], I do not understand.
And I don't know
anybody else who understands them either," Kosloski said.
Some cases were later resolved, with 49
determined to be common objects like balloons, birds, and unmanned
aerial systems.
Another 243, also found to be ordinary
objects, were recommended for closure by June.
However, 444 were deemed inexplicable and
lacking sufficient data, so they were archived for future
investigation.
Notably, 21 cases were considered to "merit further analysis"
due to anomalous characteristics and behaviors, unlike typical
sightings.
Despite the unexplained incidents, the office
noted that it,
"has discovered no evidence of
extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology."
The report said UAP cases often had consistent
patterns, described with unidentified lights and round, spherical,
or orb-shaped objects with distinct visual traits.
Of the new cases, 81 were reported in U.S. military operating areas,
and three reports from military aircrews described,
"pilots being trailed or shadowed by UAP".
The Federal Aviation Administration
reported 392 unexplained sightings of the 757 reports since 2021.
In one such case, the AARO resolved a commercial pilot's sighting of
white flashing lights as a Starlink satellite launched from Cape
Canaveral, Florida.
"AARO is investigating if other unresolved
cases may be attributed to the expansion of the Starlink and
other mega-constellations in low earth orbit," the report
states.
The AARO report maintains that none of the
resolved cases have substantiated,
"advanced foreign adversarial capabilities or
breakthrough aerospace technologies."
The document also states that the AARO will
immediately notify Congress if any cases indicate such, which could
suggest extraterrestrial involvement.
The report emphasized the AARO's "rigorous scientific framework and
a data-driven approach" and safety measures while investigating
these phenomena.
UAP Hearing
The report was released a day after a House Oversight Committee
hearing titled "Unidentified
Anomalous Phenomena: Exposing the Truth," during which witnesses
alleged government secrecy surrounding the phenomenon.
During the hearing, a former DoD official,
Luis Elizondo, said
UAPs are real.
"Advanced technologies not made by our
government or any other government are monitoring sensitive
military installations around the globe," he said.
Elizondo testified that the government has
operated secret programs to retrieve UAP crash materials to identify
and
reverse-engineer alien technology.
"Furthermore, the U.S. is in possession of
UAP technologies, as are some of our adversaries.
I believe we are in the midst of a
multi-decade secretive arms race, one funded by misallocated
taxpayer dollars and hidden from our elected representatives and
oversight bodies," he said.
"Although much of my government work on the UAP subject still
remains classified, excessive secrecy has led to grave misdeeds
against loyal civil servants, military personnel, and the
public, all to hide the fact that
we are not alone in the cosmos.
"A small cadre within our own government involved in the UAP
topic has created a culture of suppression and
intimidation that
I have personally been victim to, along with many of my former
colleagues"...
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