US report on UFOs: “It cannot be said that they are aliens, nor that they are not”

The United States Department of Defense report is about to be published which should explain in detail the results of the investigations into “unidentified aerial phenomena”, namely UFOs (the expression “unidentified flying objects”, or Ufo, long associated with the idea of ​​an alien spaceship, has been replaced in the official language of the government by “unidentified aerial phenomena”, Steam). The report analyzes 120 of the reported cases in the last twenty years by navy, army and air force.

But it seems the content is quite disappointing and that no major revelation is to be expected: the leaked versions of the report so far have nothing definitive to say about recent sightings by US military aviators. Some enthusiastic researchers link these reports to extraterrestrial theories, but scientists trying to understand more about extraterrestrial life remain more dubious.

The Pentagon has confirmed in recent years the authenticity of video showing aircraft traveling at speeds and maneuverability superior to known aeronautical technologies. “We take reports of incursions into our airspace very seriously – from any aircraft, identified or unidentified – and investigate each one,” Pentagon spokesman Sue Gough said.

However, the New York Times reported that US intelligence officials they found no evidence that the unidentified aerial phenomena that pilots talk about are alien spacecraft. At the same time they cannot explain the unusual movements of these objects, nor can they definitively rule out extraterrestrial explanations. Officials found that the vast majority of the more than 120 “unidentified aerial phenomena” of the past two decades – many observed by personnel aboard US planes and warships – he did not belong to any American army or other advanced government technology.

The public began to question the nature of UFOs around 1947, when the pilot of a small plane reported seeing nine objects “similar to flying saucers” flying at supersonic speed near Mount Rainier in Washington state. From his report, a newspaper article was written that spoke of “flying saucers” and, in the following months, many more sightings were reported in the United States. But, so far, no one has yet discovered the truth, and these “aerial phenomena” remain “unidentified”.

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