The Unidentified Flying Object (UFO) report 2022, released by the Pentagon on January 12, shows that my government is taking UFO safety issues seriously.
Specifically, a report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) of the US Department of Defense shows that about 510 unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs) were collected from agencies and organizations related to the military. America.
Out of a total of 510 discoveries of these objects, 366 have been identified by ODNI and are subject to further investigation.
Accordingly, 26 objects are from unmanned aerial vehicles (UAS), 163 events are caused by balloons, hot air balloons and the remaining 6 are believed to be from birds, or plastic bags.
According to ODNI, the 171 UAP findings in the report are still unidentified, which indicates that there are still many potentially unusual flying objects that the agency has asked its staff to analyze. additional accumulation.
The Pentagon report (as the headquarters of the US Department of Defense is called) highlighted the increase in threats of security attacks to no part of the US, in part due to the growing presence of of unmanned aircraft. drivers, among which there may be UASs on the alert status of other countries.
At the same time, the US Department of Defense concluded that UAP continues to endanger safe flight and may pose a threat to national security.
“UAP events continue to occur under unrestricted or sensitive circumstances, which expose potential concerns for the safety of an adversary’s flight or intelligence operations,” ODNI said in a statement. layout in the report.
At the same time, the agency added, it would consider more skill analysis than data collected from military pilots in the unregulated department that could spot multiple UAPs or UFOs.
Factors such as weather conditions, lighting, and emissions effects can affect observations of entities that can be selected as UAP.
ODNI assumes: “Reports can be derived from the precise recollections of pilots who have observed the UAP combined with sensors on military cameras that can scan the surrounding sky, when sufficient data is gathered. will actually make an initial assessment.”
Note that some of the UAP incidents that are listed up to date in the report may be due to operator error or from the sensors used to develop the UAP.
Ryan Graves, former U.S. Navy F/A-18 pilot and Chairman of the Committee on Accessing and Integrating Unknown Aerospace Phenomena of the United States Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (UAPIOC) )), said: “We must speculate unscrupulously, break stigma, and invest in science to tackle this nation-wide threat.”
The document also emphasizes that no missions and touches have been reported between US aircraft and the UAP to date, and documents relating to alien UFOs are also not mentioned.
The Pentagon report also does not indicate any encounters between the pilots and the UAP, and many statements have been made in recent years that observers of these events may have problems. health issues afterwards.
As can be seen, the ODNI report shows that my government appears to be taking UAP safety issues seriously and is not part of years of media startling me around a number of clashes with UFOs.