The Senate Intelligence Committee, frustrated with the Pentagonās dismissal of UFO evidence, passed a bill calling for increased transparency and whistleblower protections. Despite sensational claims lacking corroboration, sightings and sensor data of unexplained aerial phenomena persist, posing potential national security threats. The Committeeās decisive action acknowledges a genuine puzzle needing resolution. By demanding better investigation, they aim to address the ongoing mystery and seek clearer explanations for these anomalies.
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ByĀ Tyler Cowen
Three months ago, following last summerāsĀ congressional hearingsĀ on UFOs, the Pentagonās All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office issued a 63-pageĀ reportĀ evaluating almost 80 years of evidence. Its conclusion ā not altogether surprising, given the name of the office ā can be summarized as follows:Ā Not much to see here. Please move on. ___STEADY_PAYWALL___
The Senate Intelligence Committee isnāt buying it. TheĀ Intelligence Authorization ActĀ , which it passed last week, amongĀ other thingsĀ calls for review of theĀ All-Domain Anomaly Resolution OfficeĀ . The bill would also limit research into what are now called UAPs (for unidentified anomalous phenomena) unless Congress is informed and add whistleblower protections for anyone who might wish to step forward and speak their minds.
Less plausible claims about UAPs have been achieving greater circulation in part because of the efforts ofĀ David Grusch, whoĀ testified before CongressĀ last year about hidden alien bodies, crashed vehicles and secret conspiracies. Those claims, which primary witnesses have not corroborated, defy belief, and the ensuing controversy has helped make concerns about UAPs appear silly.
Nonetheless, the truth remains that there are systematic sightings and sensor data of fast-moving entities that the government cannot explain. You donāt have to think they are space aliens to realize that they areĀ threatsĀ to national security. At the very least, the mere fact that some experienced military pilotsĀ entertainĀ the moreĀ speculativeĀ alien-linked hypotheses suggests that the military is not processing information effectively. Does it make anyone feel better when reports from pilots are dismissed as crazy?
UAPs will remain an issue as long as China and Russia (and possibly other nations) remain national security threats, because the US military will always want to identify possible entrants to its airspace. No report or bureaucratic process can make those concerns go away. And so there is a kind of paralyzed equilibrium, where a very strong force ā the desire to know ā has met an immoveable object ā a lack of knowledge.
In this sense, the frustration of the Senate Intelligence Committee ā as expressed by its unanimous 17-0 vote ā is understandable. The Pentagonās report presents many of the weaker UAP allegations and notes that there is no serious evidence to back them up. And it simply dismisses some of the stronger UAPĀ puzzles, such as the Nimitz or Gimbal incidents.
It is not until Page 26 that the report concedes: āA smallĀ percentage of cases have potentially anomalous characteristics or concerning characteristics.Ā AARO has kept Congress fully and currently informed of its findings.Ā AAROās research continues on these cases.āĀ Those sentences should have been on the first page, and then the report should have presented the evidence about those cases. If this were an undergraduate term paper, I would have given it a D+.
The chatter among insiders, some of which surely reaches senators, is that some of the data is very hard to explain. Some people,Ā such as John Brennan, former head of the CIA, have even speculated that the available evidence might imply contact with a non-human civilization. Agree or disagree, the admission is a marker of our ignorance.
The conspiracy, to the extent there is one, is not to suppress evidence of different life forms; it is to avoid admitting the embarrassing absence of any real answers.Ā So at the very least, the Senate Intelligence Committee deserves credit for reopening the issue.
It can be hard to wrap your head around such huge questions. People are often more concerned with dismissing the possibility of alien life than with admitting the possibility of genuine uncertainty. And since even partial evidence of aliens mightĀ scareĀ the public too much, there is an overriding incentive to keep matters under wraps.
When I think about all this, I try to keep two questions separate. First, is there a major puzzle to account for? And second, what is the best explanation for that puzzle? It helps to focus on the first question in isolation, since we canāt seem to keep our heads on straight when it comes to the second.
By admitting that there is a real puzzle to be solved, the Senate Intelligence Committee has moved decisively to answer the first question. Once we clarify exactly what the puzzle is, maybe weāll be able to make some progress explaining it.
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