No evidence US cover-up of UFO existence, Pentagon report says

No evidence US cover-up of UFO existence, Pentagon report says


"A careful effort confirmed that most of the sightings were the result of misidentification of conventional items and peculiarities," according to the Pentagon audit.


There is no sustainable evidence that US specialists have been hiding extraterrestrial life as unidentified flying objects, regardless of whether several Americans firmly believe in UFOs, a Pentagon report said Friday.


The report offered various explanations for what led more than 40% of Americans to imagine that life structures from another universe have visited Earth.


"Careful efforts have shown that the majority of sightings were the result of misidentification of standard items and features," according to the 63-page report on "Unidentified Irregular Features (UAP)."


"Although the numerous UAP reports remain confusing, AARO (All-space Abnormality Goal Office) finds that if extra quality information were available, most of these cases could be distinguished and resolved as normal items or oddities."


 No evidence US cover-up of UFO existence, Pentagon report says


No evidence US cover-up of UFO existence, Pentagon report says


Maj. Gen. Patrick S. Ryder, representative of the Defense Division, demanded that "there is no conclusive evidence to support the claim that the US government and private enterprise are accessing or detecting alien innovation."


"Furthermore, AARO has found no evidence that any US government examination, scholastically supported survey, or official commission of inquiry has confirmed that any UAP placement is related to extraterrestrial innovation," he added. "Every analytical effort, at every level of order, has concluded that most observations were common objects and peculiarities and the result of misidentification."


Still, Luis Elizondo, the previous top of the Pentagon's high-level aviation hazard identification program, disagreed with Friday's report, particularly its unsavory language dismissing all conceivable evidence of UAPs.


"The public body has documentation, stacks, UAPs that go back many years and slow down our basic military innovation," Elizondo said.


"To try to bring the cat back into the fold the way they did is incredibly flamboyant and against the interest of the American public."


The report noted several satellites and various information gatherings that had grown, usually clandestinely, by public authority and confidential industry, that could generally be distinguished as UFOs.


"The models below address an example of unclassified and declassified valid public safety programs that AARO assesses were likely related to incorrect UAP details," it said of the specializations of organizations such as Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman.


The report suggested that Americans' belief in UFOs was unlikely to change.


No evidence US cover-up of UFO existence, Pentagon report says


"In addition to lies and fraud, deception and misinformation are now more common and easier to disperse than at any time in recent memory, especially with today's high-quality photos, videos and token devices made on PCs," the report said. "The calculations of web search and content suggestions create predispositions and tendencies in people to seek pre-determined feedback as much as to help educate and enlighten."


In any case, Friday's report appeared to contradict several components of a House Oversight subcommittee hearing last July that put UAP still in the public eye.


David Grusch, the previous U.S. research official, told the board that he was aware of "various partners" who had been harmed by UAPs and that he had consulted with people who recovered "non-human biological agents" from crashed UAPs.


He denied the complexity, and the Pentagon at the time completely denied Grusch's cases.

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