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US intel report on UFOs inconclusive - reports

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This file video grab image courtesy of the US Department of Defence shows part of an unclassified video taken by Navy pilots that have circulated for years showing interactions with "unidentified aerial phenomena".
This file video grab image courtesy of the US Department of Defence shows part of an unclassified video taken by Navy pilots that have circulated for years showing interactions with "unidentified aerial phenomena".
US Department of Defence / AFP
  • The classified report by the US intelligence on the alien UFOs is inconclusive according to media reports.
  • No evidence was found of any alien traces of the unidentified flying objects that were spotted by military pilots.
  • The New York Times highlighted a report that showcased unexplained anomalies that occurred over the past 20 years.

The conclusion of a classified US intelligence report on the existence of alien UFOs is . . . inconclusive, US media reported on Friday.

US military and intelligence found no evidence that seemingly highly advanced unidentified flying objects sighted by military pilots were alien spacecraft, the report concludes, according to the New York Times and other media briefed on it.

But it also could not explain dozens of phenomena and incidents, some filmed by the pilots, and so could not rule out the existence of aliens.

According to the New York Times, citing unnamed senior administration officials, the report determined that most of some 120 incidents over the past 20 years had nothing to do with unknown or secret US military or government technology.

Nor were they related to objects like research balloons, which some postulated were behind the reports.

Alien Anomaly on video
An unclassified image taken by Navy pilots that have circulated for years showing interactions with unidentified aerial phenomena.

But it then could not explain what, for example, US Navy pilots saw when they recorded objects travelling at seeming hypersonic speeds, spinning and mysteriously disappearing.

Serious defence concerns

While speculation over alien life has long been a cottage industry for conspiracy theorists, the sheer number of what the Pentagon terms unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) has made it a serious issue, amid worries that US adversaries like China and Russia may be using unknown, highly advanced military and surveillance technologies.

Here are key updates:

- The report, ordered last year, is to be submitted to Congress by the end of June by the director of national intelligence.

- The main report will be unclassified and can be made public, but there will also be a classified annex, the Times said, that will remain secret.

- The report, the Washington Post said, "will offer no firm conclusions about what the objects . . . might be."

Interest was piqued in the possibility of highly intelligent extraterrestrial life after the Pentagon released videos last year, in which Navy pilots express amazement at the fast-moving objects they see.

Added to that were comments by top officials with access to intelligence, including former president Barack Obama, and a CBS 60 Minutes report in which pilots were interviewed about what they saw.

"What is true - and I'm actually being serious here - is that there's footage and records of objects in the skies that we don't know exactly what they are," former president Barack Obama told "The Late Late Show" on 17 May.

John Ratcliffe, who was director of national intelligence for the last eight months of Donald Trump's administration, said on Fox News in March:

There are a lot more sightings than have been made public. There are instances where we don't have good explanations for some of the things that we've seen.

Luis Elizondo, who had worked on the Pentagon's UAP investigation and has urged it to reveal what it knows, said some of the sightings suggest extremely advanced technology unknown to humans.

"If the New York Times reporting is accurate, the objects being witnessed by pilots around the world are far more advanced than any earthly technologies known to our intelligence services," he said in a tweet on Friday.

"It's time to release the full report, videos & data that we've seen in the Pentagon."


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