A "
growing number
" of unidentified objects have been reported in the sky for twenty years, a Pentagon official said on Tuesday May 17 in front of American elected officials, without going so far as to confirm the presence of extraterrestrial life.
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For the first time in more than 50 years, the US Congress held a public hearing devoted to "
unidentified aerial phenomena
".
“
Since the early 2000s, we have observed an increasing number of unauthorized or unidentified objects
,” said Scott Bray, deputy director of intelligence for the US Navy.
Confusing drones and birds
The official attributed the rise
to "considerable efforts
" by the US military to "
de-stigmatize the act of reporting sightings
" and technological advancement.
However, he indicated that he had detected nothing "
that could suggest a non-terrestrial origin
" for these phenomena.
But also did not definitively rule out this possibility.
In June 2021, American intelligence had already claimed in a long-awaited report that there was no proof of the existence of extraterrestrials, while acknowledging that dozens of phenomena observed by military pilots could not be explained.
Some could be justified by the presence of drones or birds creating confusion in the radar systems of the American military.
Others could stem from tests of military equipment or technologies carried out by other powers, such as China or Russia.
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The US military and intelligence are primarily interested in determining whether these "
unidentified aerial phenomena
" may be linked to threats against the United States.
"
Unidentified aerial phenomena constitute a potential threat to national security
," warned the elected Democrat André Carson, head of the parliamentary committee behind the hearing.
“
And they should be treated as such.
»