In what was breaking
news yesterday but today is just a reminder of the past, we learn that the
required Annual Report on UAPs has been released into the public arena. It is
only eleven pages long with many of those eleven pages only partially filled. There
are no redactions because this is the unclassified version that tells us little
or nothing about the sightings but does tell us more than we need to know about
the mechanics of this new investigation.
The Executive Summary
is four paragraphs that do not fill the page. It tells us that, added to the
144 reports gathered over the last 17 years and were mentioned in the first
public report, there were 247 new sightings added to that list. There were also
another 119 that “were either since discovered or reported after the
preliminary assessment period.” That made for a grand total of 510, as of
August 30 of last year. They note that additional information will be found in
the classified version of the report.
Both the AARO and the
ODNI (Office, Director National Intelligence) suggested that the increase in
UAP reports (UFOs) was due, in part, to a better understanding of the possible
threat of UAPs as either a hazard to aerial navigation or adversary collection
methods. Or, in other words, they’re not thinking in terms of alien visitation
but in terrestrial intervention.
After a long paragraph
that it filled with acronyms there is a final paragraph that reinforces the
idea that UAPs (UFOs) continue to penetrate restricted air space, which leads
back to threats to aerial navigation and intelligence collection by our
adversaries in the world… or, what amounts to a repeat of the second paragraph.
The third page (page
one is a table of contents) is “Scope and Assumptions,” which establishes
reporting requirements, who is responsible for what and a list of government
organizations that lists the agencies involved that includes intelligence
agencies, the various branches of the military, NASA, the FAA and NOAA.
The assumptions are
that there are multiple factors for seeing UAP (UFOs), that the reports are
from the “observer’s accurate recollection of the event and/or sensors that
generally operate correctly… AARO acknowledge that a select number of UAP [UFO]
incidents may be attributable to sensor irregularities or variances…”
An example of a sensor irregularity. |
The fourth page is
devoted to “Governmental Changes to Manage UAP [UFO] Issues.” This is more
government boilerplate providing information about who will do what and how it
will be done. It tells us nothing about the sightings or the investigations,
just who will coordinate with whom and lots of alphabet agencies mentioned.
Page five is “Continued
Reporting and Robust Analysis Are Providing Better Fidelity on UAP [UFO]
Events, but many Cases Remain Unresolved.” While this promises some interesting
information, it is just more numbers about the reports, which were provided in
the Executive Summary. It does tell us about AARO’s initial “analysis and
characterization of 366 newly identified reports” that left 171 that were said
to be uncharacteristic and unattributed UAP reports which is a way of saying
that they were currently unidentified. Of those 366 reports, 26 were unmanned
Aircraft or UAVs, 163 were balloons or balloon-like entities, their word and not
mine, and 6 were clutter meaning birds or weather or other such things.
They finish that
section by mentioning, once again the possible hazard of collision that would
require operators to adjust flight patterns “in response to their [UAP]
presences in the airspace, operating outside of air traffic control standards.”
This means that pilots might have maneuver to avoid hitting one of these UAPs
(UFOs).
In the summary (which
covers about half a page), they again noted that the UAP (UFO) continue to
represent a hazard to flight safety and pose a possible adversary collection
threat. AARO has been established as the DoD focal point for UAP (UFO) reports
and coordinated efforts among the various government agencies have resulted in
increased data sets. In other words, it seems like a high school student who
was told to write an eleven-page theme and used repetition to reach the
required length and to make statements that look impressive but say nothing.
However, we have no
details on the reports, what investigative methods were used, and that the
numbers were often repeated. They report on 510 reports, they mention 366
reports that were gathered in addition and that 119 reports were not included
in the assessment period. And they have explained, to their satisfaction, 195
of the reports.
There were three
appendices, that included Key Terms, the ARRO Establishment of Office and
Duties, and telling us that an Annual Report is due on October 31 of each year
until 2026.
In other words, there
wasn’t much in the report that provided any insight into what was happening or
how the investigations were conducted, size of the operation or any description
of the UFO sightings made. Just numbers reported and governmental boilerplate
that clarified nothing and a seemed suggestion that there was an increase in
UFO sightings when in reality it was merely an increase in reporting. As I
mentioned, the next scheduled report is on October 31. You can see the whole
report here:
https://www.dni.gov/files/ODNI/documents/assessments/Unclassified-2022-Annual-Report-UAP.pdf
I will note that we are
seeing more mainstream media reporting of UFO sightings and we see a change in
attitude of those in the media. No longer are UFO reports met with scorn, but
with a wait and see attitude. However, most of those reporters know little or
nothing about the UFO field and accept with little or no questioning of the
source and their proclamations. Although there is an overall improvement in the
reporting by the media, there is still a gap between what it true, what is perceived
and what the government would like us to believe.
We’ll have to wait to
see if anything new comes out of this renewed interest in UFOs, or if it will
degenerate to the point it reached when the Condon Committee conducted what was
allegedly a scientific investigation. We’re still in the phase I think of as
Twining 2.0 where there seems to be an interest in investigation rather than
explanation. It will be interesting to see when we reach Robertson 2.0, which
is the debunking feature.
The real point is that
there is nothing in this new report that tells us about the sightings. We are
given numbers and a list of agencies and a schedule for reports. We expect that
some sightings, maybe most, will have mundane explanations but we have no
details at all. In the past, with Project Blue Book and other investigations,
we saw how the data were manipulated to obtain a specific result. Here we see
the beginnings of that same sort of manipulation. We have a mystery and then we
find a solution to convince people there was
no mystery. That is right out of the Robertson Panel Playbook. We need
more than eleven short pages that include a table of contents and a list of definitions.
We need an avenue to the truth.
2 comments:
Let's talk terminology. UFO - they might be identified but with identity kept secret, they might not be flying, and they may not be objects; so 0 for 3. UAP - same U, they may not be aerial (is a bullet aerial?), and it really puts stress on the definition of phenomena; so 0 for 3.
We (think?) we know what we mean when we use these terms, but do we?
What can we say for sure?
We have a large series of possibly anomalous observations (PAOs?).
Without better evidence, the discussion can't progress.
A
Count on the government to contribute zero to the truth of UFO'S, but count on them 100% to continue the big lie, to open new rabbit holes for the gullible to go down, and come up with more ludicrous explanations that have no basis in reality. In other words...SOP.
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