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Sci-Fi Government United States

UFO Report Details 'Difficult To Explain' Sightings, Says US Ex-Intelligence Director (theguardian.com) 259

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: U.S. military pilots and satellites have recorded "a lot more" sightings of unidentified flying objects, or UFOs, than have been made public, Donald Trump's former intelligence director John Ratcliffe said. Asked on Fox News about a forthcoming government report on "unidentified aerial phenomena," Ratcliffe said the report would document previously unknown sightings from "all over the world." "Frankly, there are a lot more sightings than have been made public," he said. "Some of those have been declassified. And when we talk about sightings, we are talking about objects that have been seen by navy or air force pilots, or have been picked up by satellite imagery, that frankly engage in actions that are difficult to explain, movements that are hard to replicate, that we don't have the technology for. Or traveling at speeds that exceed the sound barrier without a sonic boom."

The UFO report must be published by early June, pursuant to a clause in a Covid relief and spending package signed by Trump before he left office. [...] The forthcoming report is to be issued by the defense department and intelligence agencies. When an unidentified aerial phenomena is identified, Ratcliffe said, analysts try to explain it as a potential weather disturbance or other routine spectacle.

"We always look for a plausible application," he said. "Sometimes we wonder whether our adversaries have technologies that are a little but farther down the road than we thought or that we realized. But there are instances where we don't have good explanations. So in short, things that we are observing that are difficult to explain -- and so there's actually quite a few of those, and I think that that info has been gathered and will be put out in a way the American people can see." Asked by Bartiromo where the unidentified phenomena were sighted, Ratcliffe replied, "actually all over the world, there have been sightings all over the world. "Multiple sensors that are picking up these things. They're unexplained phenomenon, and there's actually quite a few more than have been made public."

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UFO Report Details 'Difficult To Explain' Sightings, Says US Ex-Intelligence Director

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  • Isn't he violating the laws on secrecy?

    • Flying Saucers (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Spazmania ( 174582 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @12:01AM (#61187960) Homepage

      Do you know where flying saucers came from?

      On June 24, 1947 an amateur pilot flying near Mt. Rainier Washington reported a line of fast-flying crescent shapes, like a saucer or pie pan cut in half. Basically, the shape you'd expect of a "flying wing" craft like the B2 bomber. Newspapers simplified the description to "flying saucers," the origin of the term.

      • Mt Rainier is within 50 miles of Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, Wa., The Ordnance Annex at Brownsville WA. and the Naval Undersea Warfare Station, at Keyport, Wa. (all old base names by now.). All of these existed in the 1940's and well before.

        There's another, more recent addition to that area, as far as UFO's go. The Trident nuclear sub base for the west coast is located at Bangor, WA. The site at Bangor is less than 50 miles from Mt. Rainier and less than 10 miles from any of the 3 afore
        • You're not wrong in the general sense- but Washington native here... There are no US bases within 10 miles of Rainier.
          There's nothing within 10 miles of Rainier.
          That being said, Rainier is one seriously big fucking rock, and "near Mt. Rainier" in a plane feels like just about everything south of Seattle and north of Portland.
          • Ignore this- I misread what you wrote. Thought you were saying Bangor was within 10 mi of Rainier, not 10 mile of all the other components of Kitsap Naval Station.
      • Do you know where flying saucers came from?

        On June 24, 1947 an amateur pilot ...

        Yes we knew that.

    • by mbkennel ( 97636 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @02:58AM (#61188198)

      his background & behavior show him to be an obvious political hack (who also lied about actual intelligence to make Trump happy), so I bet he wasn't ever given the Actual Briefing. Clearly not stable or responsible enough.

      BTW, yes, I think the unidentified phenomena are real, human made, and the leaks are intentional. Interesting how they happen to be from U.S. Navy training exercises? What and who is Navy really concerned with right now?

      I personally think what was shown was very early versions of plasma blooms induced by lasers or particle beams. One aspect could be decoys against incoming missiles, like a permanent flare, and could be tuned & excited to emit RF and IR appropriately.

      It's intended as deterrence through uncertainty to Chinese, who otherwise have strong naval force superiority in the eastern pacific. People who understand the message are getting the message. The public's confusion & hysteria is amusing collateral damage.

      • and here it is:

        Navy laser decoys [forbes.com]

        I didn't see this article and developed the theory own my own but it all makes sense to me physically

      • by strikethree ( 811449 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @08:52AM (#61188848) Journal

        who otherwise have strong naval force superiority in the eastern pacific.

        lol wut?! China has 2 aircraft carriers to their name. America has 2 aircraft carriers in the region at all times with the ability to pull more into the region at will. China has claimed waters to be their territory and prohibits all others from entering and yet the US Navy enters those waters routinely. It is not appropriate to discuss nuclear submarines, but rest assured that the US Navy is superior in that way as well.

        TL;DR, you are gravely mistaken kind sir.

        • Not to mention:

          Chinese, who otherwise have strong naval force superiority in the eastern pacific.

          (i.e. the American west coast)

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        His background is downright weird. He was a personal injury lawyer when George W. Bush put him in charge of national security for Eastern Texas.

    • Re: Secrets? (Score:3, Informative)

      by guruevi ( 827432 )

      No, the government has declassified that information and is in the process of releasing a report.

      Heâ(TM)s rather vague with the details but it will be great for the scientific community to be able to research unknown phenomena instead of having the information rot in a government drawer somewhere.

      A lot of those are found to be visual trickery by nature due to some known or unknown atmospheric processes. They might tell us more about the nature and composition of gasses, weather effects and other things

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      I can't see how that would even be secret; it seems pretty obvious to me : unidentified flying objects -- or unidentified aerial phenomena -- are by *definition* difficult to explain. If you look at something and can readily tell that it's plane, or meteor, or Jupiter rising near the horizon, then it's that thing, not a UFO.

      This just goes to show how the life of a crackpot is easier than the life of an expert. To the crackpot, absence of evidence for X is proof of Y. When something can't be identified t

  • by HowlinFantods ( 7901118 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @11:07PM (#61187906)
    Thisâ(TM)ll be the US showing off its new toys to the world vs an actual report on the unexplained. Intended to alter the calculus of surviving mutually assured destruction. âoeYeah weâ(TM)ve got shit that moves so fast you canâ(TM)t hope to intercept let alone detect it.â
    • Thisâ(TM)ll be the US showing off its new toys to the world vs an actual report on the unexplained

      True. The actual center of UFO is at 504 Battery Drive, New York City.

  • Vela (Score:2, Insightful)

    No, not the Vela Incident with supposed joint SA-Israeli nuclear tests, but the actual Vela satellites themselves.

    Damn things kept picking up pops of energy from God-knows-where.

    Turns out they were then-unknown-to-science gamma ray bursts, which became quite well known to science after the Vela measurements became declassified.

    Lots of interesting stuff out there.

    And you'll notice that "zOmg alienz!" did not appear once in the preceding text.

    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      That's because the government guys in bad suits come by and are all, like, "Swamp gas from a weather balloon was trapped in a thermal pocket and reflected the light from Venus.". We just take their word for it, man.

      • by Salgak1 ( 20136 )

        And they've silenced one of the two Men in Black, Alex Trebek. They'll silence Jesse Ventura next. . . . (grin)

  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @11:17PM (#61187920)

    Aliens were so busy inventing interstellar travel that they neglected to develop stealth technology.

    • by irving47 ( 73147 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @11:25PM (#61187924) Homepage

      If I go stomping around on anthills and killing wasp nests tomorrow, I'm not gonna bother wearing Harry Potter's cloak.

      • In the context of craft operating in our atmosphere, we're far from ants, and "they're" (hypothetically) far from humans stomping on an anthill.
        It's more like a zookeeper teasing a lion in a cage by sticking his hand through the bars.

        To that point, the parent's overall point stands.
        Use of truly obscene amounts of energy to cross interstellar distances in reasonable timeframes for the purpose of poking an atomic age, albeit well-caged, lion?

        Na. Stupidity.
        • > Use of truly obscene amounts of energy to cross interstellar distances in reasonable timeframes

          If we see them, it's unreasonable to assume that their physics is halted at the Alcubierre solution.

          Until we have a comprehensively generative physics, humility is called for.

          • Re:But of course. (Score:5, Interesting)

            by DamnOregonian ( 963763 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @03:34AM (#61188246)

            If we see them, it's unreasonable to assume that their physics is halted at the Alcubierre solution.

            It's unreasonable to assume that the Alcubierre solution is even possible.

            Until we have a comprehensively generative physics, humility is called for.

            Yes, but this does not preclude a basic analysis of "what is possible" in terms of "what are the consequences of X being possible"
            If your proposals for alien technology involve things that, for example, violate the second law of thermodynamics, it's very reasonable to conclude that you're simply wrong.
            Not because "it's a law". Because without that law, the Universe becomes highly unreasonable. Many of the core laws are like this.
            If your proposed laws of physics allow for any sufficiently spunky alien to accidentally wipe out solar systems, simple statistics says you're probably wrong.

            • by ShadowRangerRIT ( 1301549 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @04:38AM (#61188316)

              If your proposed laws of physics allow for any sufficiently spunky alien to accidentally wipe out solar systems, simple statistics says you're probably wrong

              Pffft... My proposed laws of physics describe supernovae entirely in terms of spunky aliens. That whole core collapse theory is way too complicated; Occam's Razor favors spunky aliens.

            • If your proposed laws of physics allow for any sufficiently spunky alien to accidentally wipe out solar systems, simple statistics says you're probably wrong.

              I'm not the person you are replying to but this style of response always rubbed me the wrong way because it shows a lack of imagination and an unwillingness to explore the hypothetical being presented.

              In this hypothetical scenario our objective observation would be that there are aliens travelling by as yet unknown means across interstellar distances greater than the speed of light. Big claims require equally big evidence but in this scenario you have your evidence, they are standing right there with their

              • I'm not the person you are replying to but this style of response always rubbed me the wrong way because it shows a lack of imagination and an unwillingness to explore the hypothetical being presented.

                And I've always felt like those who like to argue that "anything is possible" and that "human ignorance is infinite in scale" shows that they had a defective education.

                In this hypothetical scenario our objective observation would be that there are aliens travelling by as yet unknown means across interstellar distances greater than the speed of light.

                Or perhaps more likely, your observation isn't as objective as you believe. Self delusion, even innocently, is a part of the human condition.

                Big claims require equally big evidence but in this scenario you have your evidence, they are standing right there with their fancy ship.

                It's your belief that if aliens are here, they must have come here at faster than light speeds?

                Do you really want to be the guy arguing with the Vulcans about the second law of thermodynamics?

                Don't you?
                I then submit that they will smirk and say, "If one were to violate that, then perpetual motion w

            • If your proposed laws of physics allow for any sufficiently spunky alien to accidentally wipe out solar systems, simple statistics says you're probably wrong.

              To be fair, we'd expect any interstellar spaceship to be a weapon of mass destruction in of itself. Even without invoking new physics, the amount of damage you can cause from up there with minimal effort is staggering. If you add rapid automated construction into the mix, you could also easily convert a planet into a swarm of solar mirrors designed to incinerate every last square centimeter of the solar system.

              But I do agree that people casually invoking radically new physics often don't consider the conseq

              • To be fair, we'd expect any interstellar spaceship to be a weapon of mass destruction in of itself. Even without invoking new physics, the amount of damage you can cause from up there with minimal effort is staggering.

                Particularly if you spent any significant amount of time on your journey accelerating with little intent of slowing down.
                Your scouting mission could easily be dual purpose: Take a look, and if you don't like what you see, go ahead and wipe out any and all civilization on your way via direct impact.

                But we're being too reasonable here. We're assuming the aliens aren't Marvel comic villains.

                However, for aliens to show up on our doorstep, none of this is necessary. For example, FTL technologies like the Alcubierre drive only seem important from our current perspective, because humans are so short-lived.

                I agree entirely. We want it to be Star Trek or Star Wars, because multi-generational exploration is a flat out buzz k

        • It's more like a zookeeper teasing a lion in a cage by sticking his hand through the bars.

          You're giving humanity way too much credit. More like a zookeeper teasing a bunch of rabbits. A lion is a significant threat to a zookeeper where it's doubtful that even our best weapons would be a significant threat to an interstellar race.

    • Aliens were so busy inventing interstellar travel that they neglected to develop stealth technology.

      If you can outrun or out maneuver your opponent, does it matter if they see you?

      • If you can outrun or out maneuver your opponent,

        That is a very dangerous assumption to make for any highly advanced beings.
        Light is very fast, and quite good at transferring energy at high rates.

        • If you can outrun or out maneuver your opponent,

          That is a very dangerous assumption to make for any highly advanced beings.

          Light is very fast, and quite good at transferring energy at high rates.

          If you are talking about FTL travel or anything that can reasonably travel between stars then light is on the slow side.
          That being said, if you have FTL technology then stealth technology would likely be a freebie because it would likely
          be very hard if not impossible to see something that is traveling faster than light.

    • . . . is that UFOs are actually drone cameras for Mutual of Andromeda's long-running show, "Wild Planet", starring host Mrrln Prknz.

      "As Jmm wrestles the redneck, I slip into the saucer with the native girl and the Anal Probes. . . . "

    • Or they are slowly getting us ready for the idea that there's more out there. Just showing up from one day to the next would be a huge culture-shock with incalculable risks to humanity.
      The better way to introduce yourself is with a softer approach, small baby steps, slowly beginning with getting humans acclimatized with the idea that they might exist. Some UFO sightings here and there, with some plausible deniability, slowly ramping it up. That's the way to go, if you're interested in good relations at leas

      • Ah, yes.
        One is reminded of all the times that violating the territory of a well-armed group of people in secrecy has gone well for relations.
        • Maybe we are in their territory of space, and they tolerate us as a curiosity or some kind of reservation for native planet species. :-/

          • by Salgak1 ( 20136 )

            Maybe we are in their territory of space, and they tolerate us as a curiosity or some kind of reservation for native planet species. :-/

            Reality Holovision. "Mutual of Andromeda's 'Wild Planet' "

    • Or navigation systems that don't fail when lit by 1940's era radar. I'd think that if you can build a vessel that can traverse interstellar distances, you could also build one that will avoid smacking into a planet.
  • by boudie2 ( 1134233 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @11:43PM (#61187940)
    We've been coming here for 50 years and performing anal probes, and all that we have learned is that one in ten doesn't really seem to mind. (Kids In The Hall)
  • One of the government distraction / coup plans discussed for decades is a faux aliens scenario and what it would require to get away with it.
  • When we got former F-117 maintainers sent to our units after the program was declassified they'd laugh about the "UFO sightings" of their birds.

    Denial just triggers screeching, but "affirming disinfo" defuses some of the conspiratards. The booboisie get their fantasies and adults can perform weapons system tests in peace. Of COURSE "UFOs" outperform air defense fighters! They damn well should and the Skunk Works pulled off many black programs gloriously well. The secrecy was so well kept that Congress foug

    • The secrecy was so well kept that Congress fought to keep SR-71 which the Air Force would not have wanted gone if it lacked vastly better alternatives.

      Such programs are known to Congress (specifically, a small subset of them who are tasked with oversight of them)
      While it's true that general debate of things known to the relevant oversight committees can't happen, such things would never make it out of committee if it were so cut and dry.
      The SR71 was kept alive because old-guard USAF generals lobbied hard for it, and Congressmen are inherently political creatures. Even a single general who wanted the bird to stay around provides great excuse for addition

  • I know the military would know better, but I seriously wonder how many of these are just temporary artifacts like dust or bugs on the lens or something like that.

    • I know ol' Jingo is pretty sensitive to stuff like this, and easily triggered, but the military is made of men.
      They contract figuring shit like this out to people who are smarter than them in the field.
      Frankly, it's a mistake to think they'd know better. In fact, I'd expect them to say exactly what they have: "We have no idea wtf these are."
  • Apparently, I saw an alien once.

    I was camping with some friends in a very remote area in the desert of southern Utah. It was late afternoon when something up in the sky caught my eye. It was a shiny sphere of some sort.

    It wasnâ(TM)t far away, maybe a couple of miles. It moved directly vertically, then shifted and moved horizontally for a while, the shifted again and moved vertically. And then it was *gone*. It was visible for 10-15 seconds. We all saw it.

    There was no sound and we saw no emissions of an

  • Skunkworks (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @06:30AM (#61188498) Journal

    30 years ago, when Desert Storm started, the population in general (myself included) were shocked to know that stealth fighters and bombers existed. Those planes were so technologically advanced, and yet totally secret, that it almost seemed like something out of science fiction. They had actually first flown 40 years ago in 1981. When a helicopter was damaged during the Bin Laden raid 10 years ago, we got a glimpse of some unknown stealth helicopter, since they couldn't properly destroy the tail section to hide it.

    It's hard to imagine what military technology exists now that has been in development over the last 40 years that we still don't know about. With the explosion in computing technology during that time (everything from hyper accurate aeronautical simulations, 3D printing to AI) you'd better believe that there have been some very significant advances.

    We've had drones of various basic kinds for 40 years as well, but the only ones known publicly are slow UAVs primarily for reconnaissance that might have some hellfire missiles attached. However, you'd better believe that there are high-speed fighter drones, capable of pulling Gs that would kill a human pilot, that are fully functional and ready for use. It's ridiculous to think that such things have not been engineered when they are simply the next logical step and totally within our technological ability.

    • Re:Skunkworks (Score:5, Interesting)

      by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @07:47AM (#61188666)
      Yep, I suspect that vectored thrust drones exist that aren’t much more than a jet engine with multiple computer controlled nozzles. Commercial jet engines have about 4-5 horsepower per pound with about 7/1 as the upper bound. But if you don’t need long lifetime or safety for on board humans you could exceed 10 or even 15 times that much power if you had the resources. This would make the craft able to accelerate at speeds exceeding 50 maybe even as high as 80g when unloaded and would give the impression of alien like speeds, faster than sound without a sonic boom, or able to zig zag around at “impossible” speeds.
    • I think it's a reasonable explanation that at least the recent sightings involving F-14 pilots off the coast of Southern California could represent a planned but poorly thought out force-on-force demonstration flight of some kind of advanced drone.

      At least there, it's reasonably close to the US, the Navy was in training mode and less likely to immediately switch to live fire from a lone unknown object, and really if you care about radar signatures and real-world fighter responses, the US Navy is about as go

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @07:34AM (#61188632)
    Instead of putting up an article from The Guardian quoting an interview on Fox News, why not link directly to Fox News? It is the actual source material after all.
  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @09:41AM (#61188994)

    Note how much easier it has been for us to send machines across large tracts of space than it has been to send humans. Our oldest probes have already technically gone interstellar. What if this holds for other intelligent species?

    This makes it most likely that our first contact will not be with alien biology, but with their machines. A corollary is that the contact will most likely be made by our own machines.

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