Lost in airspace: Our bearings, maybe, as UFOs make news0
- From Around the Web, UFO News
- June 7, 2019
The Navy is treating reports seriously. Here’s what that actually means.
The Navy is treating reports seriously. Here’s what that actually means.
Some US Navy pilots reported spotting UFOs while training over the East Coast in 2014 and 2015, they said in a recent New York Times report.
The U.S. Navy is drafting new guidelines for pilots and other employees to report encounters with ‘unidentified aircraft.’
Extraterrestrials, take note: The U.S. Navy plans to set up an official reporting and investigative system that will monitor reports from its pilots about unidentified flying objects.
The U.S. navy is updating its procedure for pilots to report unauthorized and unidentified flying objects, the U.S. navy’s chief of Information told CTVNews.ca in an email that didn’t provide a precise timeline, but stressed the changes would be coming soon.
The US government already ran a short-lived ‘X-Files’ office in the Obama-era, which studied military reports about UFO sightings. Funding for the programme allegedly dried up in 2012, but the navy now wants this effort to be revitalised.
A recent uptick in sightings of unidentified flying objects – or as the military calls them, “unexplained aerial phenomena” – prompted the US Navy to draft formal procedures for pilots to document encounters, a corrective measure that former officials say is long overdue.
Pilots, both commercial and military, have been seeing weird things happening up in the sky for a very long time.
A recent uptick in sightings of unidentified flying objects — or, as the military calls them, “unexplained aerial phenomena” — prompted the U.S.
The US Navy has been granted a patent for an advanced aircraft which resembles a flying saucer UFO.