Search This Blog

Wikipedia

Search results

Showing posts with label UFO's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UFO's. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

UFO ‘evidence’: Recordings reveal air traffic control’s confusion at strange craft over Oregon

Worldwide UFO sightings hit all-time high

 By Jamie Seidel | news.com.au

According to data from the National UFO Reporting Center, UFO sightings around the world have reached an all-time high. Statistics show individuals in the US are more likely to witness a UFO
Unlike most UFO stories, this one appears to have substance.

On October 25, a strange craft was seen — in broad daylight — flying amid the heavy traffic of the United States’ air corridors above the state of Oregon.
Pilots radioed in reports of an aircraft flying outside registered flight plans. It was not responding to radio calls. It had no collision-avoidance transponders. But it was always just outside clear sight.
On the ground, air traffic control was also seeing strange things. Its radar was intermittently tracking an unregistered object moving at unusually high speeds.
It was cause for real concern.
After all, 9/11 showed the potential havoc aircraft flying “dark” could achieve.
So F-15 interceptor fighters from the U.S. Air Force were scrambled to take a look.
The story was first picked up by "The War Zone" blog of the automotive website The Drive. It tracked down comments from the pilots that had seen something strange that day. It also obtained confirmation — of sorts — from the U.S. air base that launched the fighters.
Now "War Zone" has obtained ─ through a freedom of information claim ─ a small mountain of documents and hours of audio recordings detailing Oregon’s air traffic controllers' actions.
Amid the accounts of phone calls, radio exchanges and pilot interviews is an enticing picture of what a substantive UFO report looks like, and how authorities struggle to make sense of what is going on above them.
‘THAT LOOKS CRAZY’
The unidentified flying object was first detected tearing through the air above Northern California by radar stations in Oakland. It was 4:30 p.m. It was unexpected. It was traveling “very fast at 37,000”.
It wasn’t supposed to be there.
At this point the recordings reveal the U.S. military was also aware of the strange aircraft. Air traffic controllers are told the Air Force was examining the radar track.
Then the unknown flying object did something potentially dangerous.
It took a sudden turn into a crowded stream of commercial airliners.
There it disappeared from radar.
But not from sight.
Startled commercial pilots began calling in reports.
Concerned and confused, for the next 30 minutes pilots and controllers tried to make sense of what was going on.
The audio recordings tell the tale of an obviously bemused controller responding to pilots. He directs other pilots on where to look. He asks if any of their air safety proximity sensors were registering it.
The military was also in the loop: references to elements of the US air defense command NORAD can be heard — “WADS” and “Bigfoot”.
Fighters are ordered into the air from the McChord Air Force Base in Washington.
What was the aircraft? Where was it going? What was it doing?
All they had to go on was that it appeared to be big. It was colored white. It was flying at about 37,000 feet.
It was now moving about the same speed as commercial airliners. It was not on radar, and was emitting no signals.
It never strayed closer than the edge of visual range.
“STEALTH MODE OR SOMETHING”
The radar and audio recordings reveal the F-15 interceptor fighters took to the air out of Portland. Dubbed “Rock” flight, these fighter aircraft are just some of those kept at a high alert status around the United States for incidents such as these after 9/11.
Strangely, they head south even as reports from commercial airliners indicate the strange craft was to the north.
One pilot calls air traffic control for an update: what’s going on?
The controller responds the UFO must be in “stealth mode or something”.
But by now it has slipped out of sight.
Losing touch with such an unregistered aircraft is no small thing.
Would it suddenly appear diving into the heart of a nearby city?
The scars of September 11 run deep.
So the urgent phone calls started.
MAINTAINING MYSTERY
Here the War Zone notes some unusual aspects of the Federal Aviation Authority recordings released under freedom of information requests.
“There were a few strange areas where conversations went mute and it’s not clear if this was edited or just an anomaly,” the blog reports.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the redacted components appear to be responses to requests for information about the military’s activities.
“When the Manager In Charge is asked if he was asking for military assistance by another FAA controller, the tape goes blank,” War Zone reports. “The same inquiry is heard moments later, and it goes silent again before another call begins.”
And again later, another “blank” occurs as pilots are asked about what they saw.
During a call with United 612 there are some odd “dead” moments in the audio, but the pilot is heard describing the encounter, stating that he was too far away to make out the type.
The pilot of Southwest 4712 was a little more forthcoming.
“This was a white airplane and it was big. And it was moving at a clip too, because we were keeping pace with it, it was probably moving faster than we were.”
FALLOUT
The recordings continue long after the strange craft slips out of sight.
Seattle’s air traffic control manager in charge of operations urgently interrogates controllers and three of the airline pilots that reported visual contact — as well as air traffic security and an safety officers.
Everyone had to submit written reports.
Had they responded correctly?
Should the commercial airliners have been ordered to keep the strange aircraft in sight?
Was the unknown flying object a threat, and should the airliners have been ordered to scatter?
Whatever the outcome, one air traffic controller hit the situation on the head with one off-the-cuff comment:
“I have a feeling someone is going to go through this with a fine-tooth comb.”
POSSIBILITIES AND PROBABILITIES
It’s tempting to immediately make the mental leap to aliens, but extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
Occam’s razor makes the fair point that when seeking an explanation for something unusual, choose the one that makes the least assumptions as being the most likely.
So what could such an explanation be?
Oregon is in the country’s northwest. It’s alongside the state of Nevada. Nevada is the site of the ultra-secret U.S. Air Force testing facility, Area 51 (or more officially Groom Lake).
We know the U.S. Air Force is fast-tracking development of its next generation stealth bomber, the B-21 “Raider”. We also know that absolutely everything about this aircraft — including its cost — is top secret.
And that’s probably one of the least secret projects being worked on at Area 51.
But a test pilot first allowing to be detected on radar and then entering a highway of commercial airliners in plain sight, is unprofessional in the least.
And the U.S. is no longer the only nation with stealth technology. Russia. China. Both have caught up and — in an increasingly belligerent world — are likely to “send messages” through overflights such as this.
So when it comes to the idea of ET taking a wrong turn at Albuquerque, it beggars belief that such a super intelligence capable of traveling vast interstellar distances would let itself be seen — if it didn’t want to be.
This story originally appeared in news.com.au.

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Reports: Pentagon continued UFO investigation program using ‘black money’

Alan Boyle
GeekWire
Aerial encounter

























A video shows what’s said to be an encounter between a Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet and an unknown object. (Department of Defense via New York Times)

The U.S. Department of Defense funded a program to investigate unidentified flying objects until 2012, and the program may well be continuing with alternate funding, The New York Times reported today.
The Times says its report is based on a range of interviews with people familiar with the program — including the military intelligence official who ran it until a couple of months ago, Luis Elizondo; and the now-retired U.S. senator who helped get $22 million in funding for the program, Nevada Democrat Harry Reid.
“This was so-called ‘black money,'” Reid told the Times.
The Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program is also discussed today in a report published by Politico.
A share of the federal funding reportedly went to a company headed by Robert Bigelow, the Nevada billionaire who has long held that aliens were visiting Earth in UFOs. Bigelow’s company, Bigelow Aerospace, is currently involved in a NASA-backed program to develop expandable space modules, and one of its modules is being tested on the International Space Station.
“I’m not embarrassed or ashamed or sorry I got this thing going,” the Times quoted Reid as saying. “I think it’s one of the good things I did in my congressional service. I’ve done something that no one has done before.”
The Times published a video clip that was recorded by a Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet and retained by the Pentagon’s UFO program.
The black-and-white video clip, which dates back to 2004, appears to show an object moving against a cloudy background and zooming away at high speed, off California’s coast near San Diego. In an accompanying story, the Times provides retired Navy pilot David Fravor’s account of the encounter with what he said was a whitish oval object.
Defense Department officials are quoted as saying that the program was funded until 2012, and Elizondo told the Times that he continued to work with the Navy and the CIA after that time.
Elizondo left his Pentagon post in October and is now director of global security and special programs for a company called To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science. In a news release issued today, Elizondo said he was “honored to serve at the DOD and took my mission of exploring unexplained aerial phenomena quite seriously.”
“In the end, however, I couldn’t carry out that mission, because the department — which was understandably overstretched — couldn’t give it the resources that the mounting evidence deserved,” he said.
Elizondo said he left the Pentagon “under very good terms” to join To The Stars, where the investigation would be “priority number one.” Toward that end, To The Stars has set up a “Community of Interest” website to serve as a central database and online hub for information related to unidentified aerial phenomena.
The Times quoted Elizondo as saying that his successor at the Pentagon was continuing with investigative efforts.
One of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s most provocative — and most derided — campaign pledges was her vow to “get to the bottom” of the UFO controversy. That pledge reportedly came at the urging of her campaign chairman, John Podesta, a longtime advocate for UFO disclosure.
At the time, the UFO comments were lost in the press of other campaign issues, including Wikileaks’ release of purloined emails from Podesta’s personal Gmail account.
The Trump administration hasn’t said much about UFO investigations, but current Pentagon officials acknowledged that the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program was in existence between 2007 and 2012.
“It was determined that there were other, higher priority issues that merited funding and it was in the best interest of the DoD to make a change,” the Times quoted Pentagon spokesman Thomas Crosson as saying in an email. Politico published an identical comment attributed to Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White.
Some aspects of the program remain classified, the Times said.
One of the authors of the Times article, investigative reporter Leslie Kean, has been looking into UFO reports for years — and is the author of a 2010 book on the subject, “UFOs: Generals, Pilots and Government Officials Go on the Record.”
This has more potential to create change than anything I have done before
Posted by Leslie Kean on Saturday, December 16, 2017
Today’s articles are likely to return the decades-old debate to the spotlight. However, the fact that the federal government continues to investigate anomalous aerial encounters doesn’t prove that extraterrestrial forces are at work.
An unnamed former congressional staffer told Politico the UFOs may have been experimental aircraft incorporating technologies that could threaten the United States. “Was this China or Russia trying to do something or has some propulsion system we are not familiar with?” the staffer said.
James Oberg, a former NASA engineer who has long looked at UFO controversies with a critical eye, noted that seemingly out-of-this-world observations usually have a more down-to-Earth explanation.
“There are plenty of prosaic events and human perceptual traits that can account for these stories,” Oberg told the Times. “Lots of people are active in the air and don’t want others to know about it. They are happy to lurk unrecognized in the noise, or even to stir it up as camouflage.


Pentagon Searched For Aliens and UFOs at Harry Reid’s Request: Report

Greg Price
,
Newsweek


The Pentagon has audio and video of two very confused pilots staring down an unidentified flying object that rotated and maintained a “glowing aura,” as part of a secret program that investigated the existence of UFOs and aliens for five years at the behest of a former major Democratic leader.
Between 2007 and 2012, the Defense Department ran the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program at the cost of about $22 million with the backing of former U.S. Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, The New York Times reported Saturday.

The since-retired Reid stated he was proud of the program, despite the fact many around the world view the search for aliens and UFOs to be the product of overly stimulated imaginations and conspiracy theorists.

“I’m not embarrassed or ashamed or sorry I got this thing going,” Reid told The Times. “I think it’s one of the good things I did in my congressional service. I’ve done something that no one has done before.”

The Defense Department claimed the program ended five years ago and so did its funding. However, it still exists and probes “episodes” reported by current service members, according to The Times. Parts of the program also remain classified.
The funding mostly went to Bigelow Aerospace, a Las Vegas-based company run by billionaire Robert Bigelow, a long-time friend of Reid’s.


RTSPQAP
Then-Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) speaks with reporters regarding a stop-gap funding bill to avoid a federal government shutdown later this week on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., September 27, 2016. Reuters
Among the program’s reported discoveries and investigations of “encounters” was a 2004 incident off the coast of San Diego. Two Navy F/A-18F fighter jets chasing down a “whitish oval object” the size of a commercial airplane.
Another incident involved a Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet following some kind of aircraft that emitted a “glowing aura traveling at high speed and rotating as it moves.” In audio and video of the incident, the pilots said, “There’s a whole fleet of them.”
Though, the date and location of the incident remains unknown.
Bigelow believes the U.S., unlike rivals like China and Russia, are missing out on opportunities due to potential “stigma” involved with funding alien and UFO research.
“Internationally, we are the most backward country in the world on this issue,” Bigelow told The Times. “Our scientists are scared of being ostracized, and our media is scared of the stigma. China and Russia are much more open and work on this with huge organizations within their countries. Smaller countries like Belgium, France, England and South American countries like Chile are more open, too. They are proactive and willing to discuss this topic, rather than being held back by a juvenile taboo.”
If any such stigma exists, Bigelow does not care. He explained to 60 Minutes in May that he thoroughly believes alien life exists.
This article was first written by Newsweek

Tom DeLonge Takes Alien Research to New Levels, Posts Declassified Videos of UFOs

Joe Price
Complex

We've said it before, and we'll say it again. Tom DeLonge loves aliens. The former Blink-182 frontman has a huge infatuation with all things space, but specifically UFOs and the possible aliens piloting them. He took things to a new level early this year when he was named UFO Researcher of the Year, and last year his name appeared in leaked emails from Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign chairman in discussions pertaining to UFOs.
Just when we thought we had reached the peak of his X-Files adventures, however, he seems to have outdone himself. Over the past weekend, former Pentagon official Luis Elizondo and a number of others confirmed the existence of a UFO-related investigative program in conversation with The New York Times and Politico. Elizondo no longer works in the Pentagon, but he did recently start working with a UFO research company called To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science, a company Tom DeLonge himself found.
Speaking with The New York Times and Politico, Elizondo said the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program started in 2007, before it was shut down by the Defense Department in 2012. Of course, it continued to operate unofficially. DeLonge's company, To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science, has now come out with some scoops of their own.
Taking to YouTube, the company posted formerly classified footage of what appears to a UFO. Yes, Tom DeLonge has obtained footage filmed in 2004 from a Navy Super Hornet, ostensibly providing proof of the government's research into what may or may not be extraterrestrial life. One of the pilots mentions they think it's nothing more than a drone, but then things get a little weird.
At first we all thought Tom DeLonge's research into the unknown was just weird, but now we're 100% onboard. Speaking with The New York Daily News when all the news dropped this weekend, DeLonge said, "All the things (people have) heard about and seen ar the first step of 20. There's a lot more shit coming." To The Stars also promise to improve national security, combat climate change, and harness telepathy among other goals. We wish Tom DeLonge all the best in his new endeavors.


Thursday, January 7, 2016

Why So Many People Are Reading This Old FBI Memo About UFOs

The most-viewed FBI file on UFOs is a one-page memo to J. Edgar Hoover about an investigation the agency never took up.​

 Beckie / Flickr

Whether or not you believe in Earthly visitation by alien beings, it's undeniable that UFOs have, at the least, become an essential part of modern day folklore. And in a bevy of stories that have added on to that treasure trove of fantastic tales, there's one document that, according to Atlas Obscura, has become the most popular FBI file among UFO truthers. 
The document is just called "Guy Hottel," named after an agent in an FBI field office. It's publicly available on the FBI Vault website, among a handful of other UFO and related cases. In one page, it describes an incident relayed second or third hand of a three separate but related UFO crashes around 1950 in New Mexico, with three alien bodies described as having a "human shape" but only being three feet tall, clothed in a metallic fabric. "Each body was bandaged in a manner similar to the blackout suits used by speed fliers and test pilots," Hottel said. The craft itself was described as being 50 feet in diameter. 
The agency denies that it's related to Roswell, or that they even seriously investigated it. "Finally, the Hottel memo does not prove the existence of UFOs; it is simply a second- or third-hand claim that we never investigated," it says. "Some people believe the memo repeats a hoax that was circulating at that time, but the Bureau's files have no information to verify that theory."

As Atlas Obscura points out, it's likely connected to a sort of space age snakeoil peddler named Silas Newton, whose claims were usually to spurious mining operations along with a series of UFO crash claims. According to TopSecretWriters, Newton finally got caught in 1970 after just under 20 years of FBI investigations for selling land to out-of-state speculators, claiming it had precious ore. Of course, that land just happened to be some of the land he claimed UFOs crashed on. The memo could be related to Newton's Aztec UFO hoax, one that Newton and an accomplice duped journalist Frank Scully into believing.
Though Newton wasn't tied to the Roswell incident, it's interesting to note that Roswell itself had fallen into obscurity from 1947 until 1978 when Stanton Friedman resurrected it. Most investigations into the matter, after the initial crash of the terrestrial experimental aircraft, took place at that time from second and third hand accounts. In fact, the reason for the crash at Roswell was declassified in the early 1970s, before Friedman's investigations into the matter.
The FBI rarely touched UFO cases at the time, with the Air Force handling most investigations under Project Bluebook. Bluebook dug up no conclusive proof of UFOs, though a few investigations proved vexxing. 
It's also interesting to note that from the 1920s to the 1950s, New Mexico was ground zero for rocketry research. Robert Goddard carried out much of his early research there, with Nazi rocket engineer turned NASA pioneer Wehrner Von Braun further developing rocketry technology for the nascent American space program at the White Sands Missile Range. In other words, there was a lot going on in the skies of New Mexico for quite some time, and some of it was definitely coming back down from high in the skies. 
So there you have it. The Hottel memo was either something so spurious that the FBI passed on investigating it (only relaying it to J. Edgar Hoover because of the director's paranoia on all things) or obvious evidence of a massive cover-up. But given the actors involved, it's safe to say it's the latter. That won't kill it off for sure, of course. Hillary Clinton allegedly wants to "get to the bottom" of UFO investigations if elected president. Of course, as with Area 51 and Goddard's work, it could all just be highly classified weapons testing. 
The biggest proof of alien life is unlikely to come from Freedom of Information Act releases of long declassified documents. Instead, it'll probably come from a NASA mission to Mars or Europa, or maybe, just maybe, the Breakthrough Listen Initiative that pumped unprecedented amounts of money into the scientific search for technologically advanced life. But who knows. An alien craft could just fall out of the sky. But it's not likely. 
Source: Atlas Obscura

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

'Aliens tried to save America from nuclear war': UFOs shot at missiles in White Sands to protect Earth, claims former astronaut

  • Comment made by Edgar Mitchell, the sixth man to walk on the moon 
  • He says UFO stories from high-ranking military officials back up claim 
  • 'Test missiles were frequently shot down by alien spacecraft,' he said 
Aliens came to Earth to stop a nuclear war between America and Russia, according the bizarre claim of a former astronaut.
Edgar Mitchell, the sixth man to walk on the moon, says high-ranking military officials witnessed alien ships during weapons tests throughout the 1940s.
The UFOs, he says, were spotted hovering over the world's first nuclear weapons test which took place on July 16, 1945 in the desolate White Sands deserts of New Mexico.
Scroll down for video 
Edgar Mitchell, the sixth man to walk on the moon, says high-ranking military sources witness alien ships hovering during weapons tests.

The UFOs, he says, were seen during the world's first nuclear weapons test which took place on July 16, 1945 in the desolate White Sands deserts of New Mexico
Edgar Mitchell (left), the sixth man to walk on the moon, says high-ranking military sources witness alien ships hovering during weapons tests. The UFOs, he says, were seen during the world's first nuclear weapons test which took place on July 16, 1945 in the desolate White Sands deserts of New Mexico
The Nasa veteran has regularly spoken about his belief in aliens ever since he landed on the surface of the moon during the Apollo 14 mission in 1971.
'White Sands was a testing ground for atomic weapons - and that's what the extra-terrestrials were interested in,' the 84-year-old Texan told Mirror Online. 
'They wanted to know about our military capabilities. 
'My own experience talking to people has made it clear the ETs had been attempting to keep us from going to war and help create peace on Earth.'
Dr Mitchell says stories from people who manned missile bases during the 20th Century back up his claims.

Edgar Mitchell, a veteran of the Apollo 14 mission in 1971, says stories from people who manned missile bases during the 20th Century back up his claims. 'Other officers from bases on the Pacific coast told me their [test] missiles were frequently shot down by alien spacecraft,' he said
Edgar Mitchell, a veteran of the Apollo 14 mission in 1971, says stories from people who manned missile bases during the 20th Century back up his claims. 'Other officers from bases on the Pacific coast told me their [test] missiles were frequently shot down by alien spacecraft,' he said
'Other officers from bases on the Pacific coast told me their [test] missiles were frequently shot down by alien spacecraft,' he said.
He previously said supposedly real-life ET's were similar to the traditional image of a small frame, large eyes and head.
He claimed our technology is 'not nearly as sophisticated' as theirs and 'had they been hostile', he warned 'we would be been gone by now'.
Nick Pope, a former Ministry of Defence UFO researcher, told DailyMail.com that Dr Mitchell's comments are all based on second-hand reports.
'Even where Mitchell's sources are genuine, how do we know they have access to classified information about UFOs?' asks Pope.

'White Sands was a testing ground for atomic weapons - and that's what the extra-terrestrials were interested in,' the 84-year-old told Mirror Online. 'My own experience talking to people has made it clear the ETs had been attempting to keep us from going to war and help create peace on Earth.'
'White Sands was a testing ground for atomic weapons - and that's what the extra-terrestrials were interested in,' the 84-year-old told Mirror Online. 'My own experience talking to people has made it clear the ETs had been attempting to keep us from going to war and help create peace on Earth.'
UFO believers say it's no coincidence that aliens showed up very shortly after we'd developed atomic weapons and rocket technology, as this is when they were alerted to the threat we pose to the wider cosmos.
'Ironically, governments have sometimes secretly promoted belief in UFOs, because if someone sees a secret prototype aircraft or drone, it's much better to have it reported as a flying saucer than recognised for what it is,' said Pope.  
'None of this is to say that there haven't been some genuinely fascinating and unexplained UFO sightings around nuclear facilities and military bases, but just because a UFO sighting is unexplained, it doesn't follow that it's extraterrestrial.'
'In a final irony, the very conspiracy theorists who believe Edgar Mitchell when he talks about aliens don't believe him when he talks about his moon mission, because they think it was all done on a film set.' 


This image was taken during the Apollo 14 mission in February 1971 of US astronauts Alan Shepard (left) and Edgar Mitchell (right). The Apollo XIV mission, the third mission to land on the moon, was launched on January 31, 1971 and landed on the moon on February 5, 1971
This image was taken during the Apollo 14 mission in February 1971 of US astronauts Alan Shepard (left) and Edgar Mitchell (right). The Apollo XIV mission, the third mission to land on the moon, was launched on January 31, 1971 and landed on the moon on February 5, 1971
Dr Mitchell, who has a Bachelor of Science degree in aeronautical engineering and a Doctor of Science degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics also says the Roswell cover up was real.
'This is really starting to open up,' he told a radio show several years ago. 'I think we're headed for real disclosure and some serious organisations are moving in that direction.'
Officials from Nasa were quick to play the comments down.
In a statement at the time, a spokesman said: 'Nasa does not track UFOs. Nasa is not involved in any sort of cover up about alien life on this planet or anywhere in the universe.
'Dr Mitchell is a great American, but we do not share his opinions on this issue.'