UFOs came to Washington again last week.

The U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Oversight and Accountability held a hearing titled “Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena: Exposing the Truth” at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C. at 11:30 a.m. EST (1530 GMT) on Wednesday, Nov. 13. Unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) is a relatively new catch-all term that includes sightings of unexplained objects or events that take place in the air, underwater, in space, or that travel between those domains.

Like previous congressional UFO hearings, the event featured testimony from current U.S. military personnel who claim the American government has for decades hidden evidence of advanced technologies and otherworldly visitors from the public. A multitude of anecdotes were presented about flying orbs coming out of the ocean, disc-shaped objects, and craft “exhibiting flight and structural characteristics unlike anything in our arsenal.” While such claims are nothing new, what is noteworthy about the hearing are the pedigrees of some of the whistleblowers who testified, including a former U.S. counterintelligence officer, a retired U.S. Navy rear admiral and a former NASA associate administrator. All of them stressed the need for more government transparency, less stigma about the UFO topic and new policies to bring UAP data out of the “black” classified world and into the public domain.

A still from a video titled “Go Fast” recorded by a U.S. Navy aircraft reportedly showing a UAP that was discussed in the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Oversight and Accountability hearing titled “Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena: Exposing the Truth” on Wednesday (Nov. 13). (Image credit: U.S. Dept. of Defense)

This isn’t the U.S. government’s first attempt to investigate the recent wave of UFO claims that began in 2017. A similar hearing was held last year, in which a whistleblower told Congress the U.S. government is hiding evidence of ‘non-human intelligence.’

The Pentagon also created the All-Doman Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) in 2022 to investigate UAP reports and government data about UFOs, but critics, including some government officials, are skeptical of the office’s aims and methods.

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“AARO is unable, or perhaps unwilling, to bring forward the truth about the government’s activities concerning UAPs,” Representative Nancy Mace (R-South Carolina) said during the hearing’s opening remarks. “I’m disturbed that AARO itself lacks transparency; even its budget is kept from the public. So if there is no ‘there’ there, then why are we spending money on it? And by how much? Why the secrecy?”

Other representatives stressed the need for transparency and data analysis, a common theme of other recent UAP studies. “We have evidence that what we are detecting things, and we know that we don’t understand them, and this is worth investigating,” Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA) said. “I believe we can always be more transparent. To me, this hearing and others are simply about the truth and getting to the facts of what these UAPs actually are.”

Luis Elizondo, a former U.S. counterintelligence officer who has been vocal about such claims in recent years, told the assembled representatives at the hearing that “excessive secrecy has led to grave misdeeds against loyal civil servants, military personnel and the public — all to hide the fact that we are not alone in the cosmos.”

We are “in the midst of a multi-decade, secretive arms race  — one funded by misallocated taxpayer dollars and hidden from our elected representatives and oversight bodies,” Elizondo stated during his testimony.

Elizondo, who claims to have previously investigated UFOs as part of a secret Pentagon program, suggested that the U.S. government create a “whole-of-government” approach to studying UAP, create a national UAP strategy and offer protections so that whistleblowers who are “desperate to do the right thing can come forward without fear.”

During questioning, Elizondo was asked if some of the “advanced technologies” that have been seen monitoring sensitive military installations around the globe could be operated by aliens or private companies. “Maybe both,” Elizondo replied.

Elizondo also stated point-blank to Rep. Mace’s questioning that the U.S. government has programs to retrieve crashed UAP and reverse-engineer them, but avoided giving any specifics in an unclassified public setting such as the hearing.

Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL) then questioned Elizondo, asking the former counterintelligence agent about a document he signed that limits him from speaking publicly about crash retrieval programs. “The document said you can’t talk about crash retrieval. Well, you know, you can’t talk about Fight Club if there’s no Fight Club, correct?”

Like other witnesses, Elizondo stated that the alleged excessive government secrecy around UFOs harms national security. In response to questioning from Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN), Elizondo stated that, if UAP sightings turned out to be technologies operated by adversarial nations, it would be “an intelligence failure eclipsing 9/11 in order of magnitude.”

a still from footage shot by an MQ-9 reaper drone showing an unidentified spherical object soaring through the air

A still from footage shot by an MQ-9 reaper drone showing an unidentified spherical object soaring through the air shown to the United States Senate Committee on Armed Services during an April 2023 hearing. (Image credit: U.S. Dept. of Defense)

Retired U.S. Navy rear admiral Tim Gallaudet offered similar testimony as Elizondo. “We know from last year’s UAP hearing and recent statements and publications by credible whistleblowers that UAP, NHI [non-human intelligence], and their technology of unknown origin (TUO) represent a new realization that we are not the only advanced intelligence in the universe,” Gallaudet said on Wednesday, according to his published remarks.

“Unelected officials in the U.S. government do not have an exclusive right to this knowledge about the nature of reality. The American people have a right to that knowledge,” Gallaudet said. The retired rear admiral also stressed the national security and airspace safety concerns related with UAP sightings, calling them “extensive.”

When Rep. Garcia asked Gallaudet and other witnesses what UAP might represent, the retired rear admiral said he believes they are evidence of a “non-human higher intelligence.”

Former NASA Associate Administrator for Space Policy and Partnerships Michael Gold also testified at the hearing, and previously served on NASA’s UAP study team. Gold’s testimony was more grounded; for example, he stressed the need for NASA to contribute its authority and expertise toward analyzing what UAP data it might already possess and helping dispel the stigma associated with the UFO topic.

“Our best tool for unlocking the mystery of UAP is science, but we cannot conduct a proper inquiry if the stigma is so overwhelming that just daring to be part of a NASA search team elicits such a vitriolic response,” Gold said during the hearing. “Therefore, one of the most important actions that can be taken, relative to exposing the truth of UAP, is to combat the stigma, and this is where I believe that NASA can be eminently helpful.”

Gold added that NASA has a massive archive of data that could possibly contain evidence of UAP, and suggested that artificial intelligence/machine learning algorithms could help sort through the agency’s trove of data to help shine light on the UFO phenomenon. In addition, the former NASA associate administrator said the agency should develop specialized instruments that might be able to gather useful data about UAP.

Journalist Michael Shellenberger also testified, telling the representatives that there’s a “growing body of evidence that the government is not being transparent about what it knows about unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), formerly called UFOs, and that elements within the military and IC [intelligence community] are in violation of their Constitutional duty to notify Congress of their operations.”

Shellenberger stated that there is a secret program within the U.S. government known as “Immaculate Constellation” whose sole purpose is to collect UFO and UAP reports from military personnel and sensor data and quarantine them away from the rest of the government and military. While he noted that a Pentagon spokesperson has stated no such program exists, Shellenberger recounted prior examples in which the Department of Defense has initially denied knowledge of UAP-related information only to later change its stance and either admit the information exists or release it to the public.

“The U.S. government appears to know significantly more about UAPs than it is revealing,” Shellenberger said at the hearing. “But even those who believe the U.S. government has revealed all that it knows should have no objection to Congressional demands for greater transparency.”

To conclude the meeting, Rep. Mace asked each of the witnesses to define what non-human biologics or non-human intelligence mean to each of them.

“I don’t think it’s a stretch, when you look at the diversity of life on this planet and the size of this universe, to think that there will be more diverse, higher-order, non-human intelligence throughout the universe, and that’s probably what’s visiting us,” Gallaudet said.

Elizondo stated he would take a scientific approach: “The definition would be the ability to react to a stimulus in a manner that requires an intellectual thought process.”

Gold, meanwhile, questioned whether non-human intelligence necessarily implies life, suggesting sophisticated artificial intelligence might be responsible for some UAP encounters. Shellenberger simply stated he did not know what they might be.

In the hearing, as in other UFO hearings, there was a lot of telling and not a lot of showing. One of the core tenets of these whistleblower testimonies is that much of the credible UFO data is classified and can’t be revealed to the public based on the military capabilities that some of that data could reveal.

Whistleblowers have attested for years that, because advanced or classified sensors and satellites sometimes capture footage or photos of unexplained phenomena or advanced craft, those photos or videos are likewise classified by the U.S. government in order to not reveal America’s full surveillance or sensing capabilities.

Such was the case in 2023 when U.S. military aircraft shot down a mysterious object off the coast of Alaska. The American government has yet to release any imagery from the event, but a Canadian freedom of information request unveiled a photograph earlier this year of a balloon-like object.

Those incidents and others like it, such as a weeks-long drone incursion above Langley Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., were discussed in the hearing. “The origin of these drones and their operators remains a mystery,” Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-Wis.) said. “This incident and other sightings near sensitive military installations highlights the complexity of the UAP challenge facing our intelligence, defense and homeland security committees.”

Originally posted on Space.com.

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