Witnesses described a climate of âover classificationâ of anything related to UFOs, or UAP, from the U.S. government.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers hosted a congressional hearing on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), formerly referred to as UFOs, on Nov. 13. Witnesses testified on the threat to national security from potential incursions into U.S. airspace while criticizing the Pentagon for shrouding many UAP documents in secrecy.
Among the topics discussed were congressional lawmakersâ ongoing bipartisan interest in UAP, NASAâs potential role in reporting sightings, the origins of the alleged craft, and the Pentagon classifying and restricting access to UAP documents and materials.
While a previous hearing last year was heavy on speculation into alleged non-human life, or extraterrestrials, this weekâs hearing went further into the impacts of the Pentagonâs alleged secrecy regarding UAP sightings and how that might breach congressional oversight.
âOne of Congressâs most important responsibilities is oversight of the executive branch in general and the military and intelligence community in particular,â Shellenberger said. He believes the government is unconstitutionally usurping congressional authority by withholding that information.
Here are five takeaways from the Nov. 13 congressional UAP hearing.
1. Ongoing Bipartisan Interest From Congress
The bipartisan UAP caucusâMace, Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.), Rep. Anna Paulina (R-Fla.), Rep. Eric Burlison (R-Mo.), and Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.)âwere joined by other House members on Wednesday for the nearly two and a half hour hearing.
Mace, concerned that the U.S. government is withholding UAP materials it has officially compiled since the 1940s, said Congress and the public deserve to know what the governmentâs taxpayer-funded research on the topic has yielded, even if they are dead ends.
âIf weâre spending money on something that doesnât exist, why are we spending the money? And if it does exist, why are we hiding it from the public?â Mace asked. She said national security is at stake if those objects are the technology of foreign adversaries.
The possibility that some UAP, including those in videos released by the Pentagon, could be foreign technology, was echoed by Ogles.
âIt is clear, from my experience and what Iâve seen, that there is something out there. The question is, âIs it ours, is it someone elseâs, or is it otherworldly?ââ Ogles asked.
Any attempts to restrict Congress from gaining access to that information would be criminal, he added.
The Pentagonâs All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, which is tasked with studying and cataloging UAP reports, has hundreds of sightings that remain âuncharacterized and unattributedâ while displaying âunusual flight characteristics or performance capabilities,â Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) said.
âNow, we shouldnât prejudge what they might be. Iâm certainly not going to. We need evidence that we are detecting things, and we know that we donât understand them, and this is worth investigating,â he added.
2. Elizondo Testifies
Elizondo, one of the key witnesses at the hearing, is famous for feeding the story of the Pentagonâs former UFO program to The New York Times in 2017.
That article resulted in a resurgence of public interest and media reporting on UFOs, and was accompanied by several Department of Defense fighter jet videos that purportedly showed unidentified craft.
Elizondo said on Wednesday that some UAP are âadvanced technologies not made by our government or any other governmentâ but that both the United States and its adversaries are in possession of âUAP technologies.â
âI 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,â he said.
Elizondo has claimed since 2017 that he was previously the director of the Pentagonâs 2009 UFO program, which was officially called the Advanced Aerospace Weapons System Application Program.
âLuis Elizondo had no assigned responsibilities for AATIP while assigned to OUSD(I) [Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence],â Pentagon spokesperson Susan Gough told The Epoch Times.
3. NASAâs Role in UAP Reporting
Gold, who was also a member of NASAâs UAP Independent Study Team, told Congress that commercial airline pilots need an official database to report potential UAP sightings. He suggested that his former employerâs Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) is a good place to start.
âThis system, which is administered by NASA and funded by the FAA, provides a confidential means for reporting of safety violations in a voluntary and non-punitive manner,â Gold said. âOver 47 years, the ASRS has collected nearly 2 million reports. ASRS is the perfect tool to collect UAP data, which could then be collated by NASA and shared with the public at large.â
NASA is already one of the most respected U.S. agencies, Gold added, which gives it a unique position in reestablishing the publicâs trust in the government and UAP.
âFor relatively little cost and effort, NASA could create an AI [artificial intelligence] or ML [machine learning] algorithm that could search the agencyâs archives for anomalous phenomena.â
4. Aliens, Drones, or Something Else?
While this yearâs UAP hearing was lighter on speculations of non-human intelligence, the topic was still addressed.
Mace probed Elizondo about purported UAP crash retrieval programs in the U.S. government, a central topic of discussion in last yearâs hearing. Elizondo answered in the affirmative when asked if those programs were âdesigned to identify and reverse engineer alien craft.â
âIn regards to these aircraft being piloted by whatever they might beânon-human biologicsâwould you agree that itâs likely that they are being piloted by some mind-body connection?â Luna asked.
Elizondo, who emphasized that he was more interested in the objectsâ flight characteristics than speculating on their origin, said it was safe to presume intelligent control of some kind because they âseem to anticipate [pilotsâ] maneuvers.â
Garcia asked all four witnesses what could be the source of UAP. Both Gallaudet and Elizondo said nonhuman, higher intelligence, but Shellenberger and Gold said they donât know.
âI think we must be modest in our assumptions that weâre looking for intelligence that could be biological. It might not,â Gold said. âBut I think the ultimate answer is going to surprise us all.â
The Pentagon said earlier this year, even among its unsolved cases, âif more and better quality data were available, most of these cases also could be identified and resolved as ordinary objects or phenomena.â Those could be drones, satellites, or even meteorological events, it said.
5. The Pentagonâs Role in UFOs/UAP
The witnesses and lawmakers present agreed that the Pentagon has been âover-classifyingâ documents and materials related to UAP sightings, which sometimes get labeled âtop secretâ and are not subject to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
âFor what purpose is the federal government over-classifying? Because thatâs what theyâre doing. Theyâre over-classifying and forbidding the public from getting access to this.â Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) said.
Elizondo offered two explanations. For one, it could be a holdover policy from the Cold War, when the United States didnât want to reveal to the Soviets our awareness of foreign military technology or disclose our own. The Pentagon might also be uninterested in revealing information related to problemsâincluding foreign incursions into U.S. airspaceâthey lack answers for, Elizondo added.
Shellenberger mentioned government researcher John Greenewald Jr., who runs The Black Vault, an online database of more than 3 million government documents obtained through FOIA requests.
Greenewald says that the government has often denied the existence of specific UAP records, only to admit they exist after he files a FOIA appeal. But in one case, the Navy responded that the videos contain sensitive information, are classified, and exempt from disclosure.
The Navy, for instance, falls back on its UAP Security Classification Guide for denying many FOIA requests, Greenewald told The Epoch Times. The guide says any UAP information obtained or developed through the use of classified sources or methods will receive the highest classification level applicable. The Pentagon has a similar policy.
When the Pentagon declined to release video footage from U.S. fighter jets shooting down suspected UFOs over Alaska in 2023, the Defense Department said the footage remained classified.
âWhen you get into over secrecy, over classification, them not wanting to be open and honest about thingsâwhether it be about UAP or anything for that matterâthe public trust erodes,â Greenewald said.
In response to a request for comment from The Epoch Times, the Department of Defense said it takes public interest in UAP seriously.
âThe department is fully committed to openness and accountability to Congress and the American people, which it must balance with its obligation to protect sensitive information, sources, and methods,â Gough said.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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