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Unclassified Data In NASA Study Does Not Show Evidence Of Aliens; Director Named To Conduct Further Research on UAPs

No evidence of unexplained anomalous phenomena (UAP) in the public domain of alien origin has been uncovered, according to an independent investigation commissioned by the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

Following the release of the report, which was conducted by a panel of 16 independent experts, the US space agency named a new director to further investigate UAPs in accordance with the panel’s recommendations. In the past, the UAPs were referred to in the United States as unidentified flying objects (UFOs). Mark McInerney has been named the new head of UAP research at NASA.

A UAP is defined by the NASA as an observation of sky phenomena that cannot be attributed to an aircraft or a recognized natural phenomenon.

There is currently no clear evidence supporting an alien origin for UAP in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Eyewitness accounts, which on their own can be intriguing and compelling but aren’t reproducible and typically lack the information needed to draw any firm conclusions about a phenomenon’s provenance, are among the data needed to explain these anomalous sightings when it comes to UAP, according to the study.

The study’s reliance on unclassified data, however, poses a significant restriction. The US government allegedly has access to sensitive knowledge on extraterrestrial —alient— planes and even animals, according to retired government officials and independent academics who have made the claim for decades. Since a steady flow of material from the secret sector has entered the public domain, such accusations have gained more traction.

In January, it was revealed that 144 of the US government’s 510 UAP sightings are still unsolved.

Numerous inexplicable UAP sightings have occurred throughout the years, with some of the more prominent ones coming from US military personnel. For instance, US fighter pilots tracked ‘tic tac’ UAP in 2014; this term was given to the flying objects because they resembled tic tac tablets. They moved quite quickly and for no apparent reason. The incident with the enigmatic orb traveling over Iraq is another.

The US government made part of the UAP movies available in 2020. “One of the videos shows an incident from 2004, and the other two were recorded in January 2015,” the Guardian writes in reference to the video below. The films were leaked without permission in 2007 and 2017, and the Navy has already established their validity.

There is now an additional component to the US government’s UAP-related operations thanks to the establishment of a specific job at NASA to investigate UAPs. A All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), which was formed in July 2022, already exists inside the Department of Defence.

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