Pentagon’s UFO office investigates hundreds of new reports

Military officials, intelligence agencies and other agencies have reported unidentified objects in the air, underwater and in space.

The US Department of Defense has analyzed hundreds of UFO reports since last year. Officials revealed that some of these objects fly in ways we don’t yet fully understand, including in space and underwater. Undersecretary of Defense Ronald Moultrie and Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, head of the government’s UFO office, revealed the information to reporters last Friday. Right now we’re investigating and investigating several things that seem to have interesting flight dynamics,” revealed Kirkpatrick, head of the All Domains Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). According to Moultrie, military officials, intelligence agencies and other agencies have reported unidentified objects in the air, underwater and in space.

Agencies involved

Several agencies, including the Department of Energy, Federal Aviation Administration, NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, have worked together to share information and mobilize resources. When reporters asked Moultrie about specific cases in space, he replied that the case was classified. In June 2021, the Director of National Intelligence released a report detailing 144 UFO sighting incidents involving government, military and intelligence officials. A congressional public hearing in May 2022 revealed that 400 reports had been received. Since then, Kirkpatrick said, his office has reviewed “a few hundred” additional incident reports, including some that were filed before 2021.

The scientific study of UFOs

The field of UFOs has come a long way in the past five years, and the subject has gone from being a conspiracy to one worthy of the most rigorous scientific study. Proof of this is that NASA has more than a dozen astrophysicists who investigate UFO reports and analyze data relating to the phenomenon. A team of scientists led by Professor Avi Loeb, former chairman of Harvard’s astronomy faculty, also runs a UFO study group called Project Galileo.

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