The United States Congress has just admitted, in a note, that it believes that not all UAPs (unidentified flying objects) spotted in the skies are "man-made". The rather peculiar observation is contained in an authorization for Intelligence funding expected in fiscal year 2023 (I link it to you here). And it did not go unnoticed by researchers, enthusiasts and journalists specialized on the subject.
Researcher Douglas Johnson he noticed for the first time that a draft bill approved by the Senate Select Committee had renamed UAPs as “unidentified aerospace-submarine phenomena.” The Senate would change the definition to include both objects seen in space and underwater.
A semantic "restyling" work reserved by the Pentagon also for its investigative task force on these phenomena. He was called AOIMSG (Airborne Object Identification and Management Group), now called AAR, (All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office). As mentioned, this broadens the scope of application to all "objects of interest".
Not just UAPs, but 'transmedium' objects that go into the sky and water
The new definitions arise from the number and quality of evidence currently under review. A large number of sightings UAP, in fact, reports objects that make "transitions between space and the atmosphere or between the atmosphere and bodies of water".
It is no coincidence that the lawmakers scribe: “transmedia threats to US national security are expanding exponentially.” The main note, however, is that these acts underscore that it is necessary to examine evidence of admittedly “man-made” objects in a separate branch of investigation. And who are the others created by?
The news that a branch of the US government considers some of the UAP sightings to be of non-human origin is surprising, and quite a bit. The “telenovela” is enriched with another chapter: the last, last May, saw NASA take to the field, now directly involved in contributing to the investigation.
Someone go get me a popcorn refill.