The Pentagon Officially Opened a UFO Investigation Unit

The US Department of Defense announced on July 20, 2022, that the Pentagon will soon establish a separate division (office) devoted solely to looking into UFO encounters.

The US Army, Navy, and Air Force will submit their UFO sighting reports to this office, known as the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), which will act as a central center for gathering, looking into, and processing such sightings.

The branch will coordinate federal efforts “to detect, identify and attribute items of interest… and, if required, to mitigate any related threats to the security of operations and national security,” according to the statement.

This “includes anomalous, unidentified space, air, undersea, and transmedial objects,” it is further noted.

Following the “leak” in 2017 of three films depicting enigmatic wingless UFOs (also known as Tic-Tac-shaped UFOs) traveling at hypersonic speeds alongside American aircraft carriers, the U.S. government has recently taken a fresh interest in UFOs.

In April 2020, the US Navy formally acknowledged and declassified these films, although it made no mention of what the enigmatic objects may be.

The United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence requested an investigation into UFOs (or Unidentified Air Phenomena, or UAPs, as the U.S. government now prefers to refer to them) in 2020, citing concerns that there was no centralized government strategy for gathering and examining reports of such sightings.

The Pentagon reported on more than 140 UFO sightings by US Navy pilots in June 2021 and came to the conclusion that there was no proof of extraterrestrial involvement in any of these occurrences.

Additionally, more than 1,500 pages of historical UFO documentation have been made public in the US at the request of interested activists. This documentation includes strange claims that some UFO encounters resulted in radiation burns on eyewitnesses’ bodies and that some women experienced unexpected pregnancies.

According to the announcement, Sean M. Kirkpatrick, the Center for Space and Missile Intelligence’s top scientist, would oversee the new position.

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