Unveiling the Elusive: Are UFOs Concealed from Our Nation's Elite?

Infrared image of an unknown aerial phenomenon (UAP) captured by a FLIR camera onboard a U.S. Navy F/A-18 fighter jet.

Unveiling the UAP Loophole: U.S. Agencies May Conceal Evidence of Extraterrestrial Craft

An obscure loophole may provide the U.S. government and its contractors with free rein to withhold data on unidentified craft traveling high above Earth in outer space.

The UAP Loophole

Former Capitol Hill advisor Dillon Guthrie argues that the redefinition of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) to "unidentified anomalous phenomena" (UAP) in 2021, and then "unidentified anomalous phenomena" (also UAP) in 2022, has created a "definitional gap."

This gap allows the government to exclude data on any unidentified, spaceborne-only objects from public disclosure.

Concerns and Implications

This loophole raises concerns that the Navy pilots who witnessed the infamous "GoFast" UFO in 2015 may not have seen a truly "flying" object, but rather a more amorphous phenomenon such as ball lightning.

Additionally, the Defense Department's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) recently disclosed that 49 of last year's 757 UAP cases involved strange sightings in outer space.

However, AARO emphasized that none of these reports originated from space-based sensors, raising suspicions of a potential failure to capture or report data.

Lack of Overarching Oversight

Guthrie attributes this problem to "an absence of overarching political oversight." He believes that multiple agencies involved in the UAP matter can easily avoid responsibility.

Former Pentagon official Luis Elizondo recommends creating a single point-of-contact responsible for a whole-of-government approach to the UAP issue.

Solutions

To address this loophole and ensure transparency, Guthrie suggests redefining the legal definition of UAP, creating a new acronym, and adopting a more centralized approach.

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