" NASA " investigating UFO sightings, agency chief says |
"Now
that I'm here at NASA, I've turned to our scientists and I've said, 'Would you,
looking at it from a scientific standpoint, see if you can determine [what
these objects are], so that we can have a better idea?'" Nelson told CNN's Rachel Crane in an interview that
the network posted online Friday (June 4).
"The
bottom line is, we want to know," he added. "And that's what we're
trying to do."
These stories also revealed that, in 2007,
the U.S. Department of Defense created the Advanced Aerospace Threat
Identification Program (AATIP) to investigate sightings of UFOs — or UAPs
("unidentified aerial phenomena"), as the military recently rebranded
them. AATIP was officially phased out in 2012, but the Pentagon stood up
a successor
task force last summer.
And the drive to get to the bottom of the
UFO mystery has continued to grow. In December 2020, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.)
— at the time the chair of the Senate's intelligence committee — asked the
Pentagon and the U.S. director of national intelligence to deliver an
unclassified report about the UFO sightings to Congress within six months.
"I want us to have a process to
analyze the data every time it comes in — that there be a place where this is
cataloged and constantly analyzed until we get some answers," Rubio added.
"Maybe it has a very simple answer. Maybe it doesn't."
The six-month deadline is
almost up. And we've already gotten a sneak peek at the investigation's
findings, thanks to The New York Times, which talked to sources familiar with
it. We shouldn't expect a blockbuster announcement, according to the Times story; its headline is "The U.S. finds no
evidence of alien technology in flying objects, but can't rule it out,
either."
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