Not Much to See: The Release of the UFO Files

These are always occasions of anticipation and even celebration for the tinfoil hatters and those keen to spot the internal plot, the thriving fifth column and anything that could risk being seen as ordinary. The human mind is obsessed by the need for a rounded explanation. In place of that arises a form of mysticism, even superstition. What cannot be explained must be otherworldly.  Few better tests for this proposition can be found in the discussion about unidentified objects of aeronautical import.

May saw the release of two tranches of records (May 8 and May 22) on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs), a distinctly more cautious term for what is known in the popular vernacular as Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs). This was done at the insistence of President Donald Trump, who claimed on Truth Social in February that “tremendous interest” had been shown in the matter, undisguised code for revealing his own keenness in the matter.

The quotidian, the banal, the prosaic – these are terms no UAP pundit or card-carrying follower wants to know. But the reality remains that the files, as with previous declassified material, can often be put down to the explicable, even if a shade of doubt exists over sightings, photography and film. The Pentagon states that the archived materials document “unresolved cases, meaning the government is unable to make a definitive determination on the nature of the observed phenomena.”

The best some commentators can do about the unusual material is to suggest that “something” is taking place, which is as non-committal as you can get. What is interesting in these file drops is the signal change of heart in the Pentagon about UAPs. James Hibberd, writing in The Hollywood Reporter, suggests that the US government wants a share of a genre made famous by the entertainment industry. “The Pentagon has gone from denying UFOs are a thing to dumping documents, photos and video concerning ‘anomalous’ phenomena.” But Hibberd was not impressed by the Pentagon’s efforts. The “premier” was distinctly substandard, “vague, grainy, redacted mess.”

As for the scientific cognoscenti, the archives have been matters of qualified interest. Theoretical physicist Avi Loeb of Harvard University admitted in an interview with Al Arabiya English (AAE) to feeling “like a kid in a candy store” at the release of the material, focusing his attention on, among other things, “a black sphere that was moving through the clouds.” Not a drone, it might have been a balloon. But here, as with other assessments, not much can be made of it, and most certainly nothing about the speed “because we don’t know the distance to it.” The same could be said of another “object that accelerated very quickly, much faster than you expect from a drone.” Again, any evaluation regarding speed was impaired by not knowing the distance.

Loeb usefully describes the yawning gap between what is witnessed by the imperfect, often muddled eye and what is scientifically measured. A report by a senior intelligence officer from 2025 reporting a “swarm of orbs and other unusual phenomena” during a helicopter-piloted mission merely provided “a testimony not data from instruments. The question is whether he was looking at human-made drones, perhaps by adversarial nations.”

Typical releases include a report from the Central Intelligence Agency in December 1973, documenting intelligence gathering in the Soviet Union. The intelligence information report (IIR) notes the content of the report as informational and not evaluative. Be that as it may, an incident in the summer of that year features: an observation of an airborne, luminous, bright green, unidentified object. Concentric circles had formed around the observed phenomenon over a period lasting several minutes before dissipation. No opinion was offered by the witness on the phenomenon, and no further details on the incident were provided. Not exactly elucidating.

Military correspondence on the sighting of “flying discs” in 1947 serve as matters of curiosity rather than revelation. In a December memorandum from the Department of the Air Force to the Commanding General of the Fourth Air Force at Hamilton Field, California, a dismissive note is evident about submitted photographs purporting to show flying objects. “The marks appearing on the photographs inclosed in basic letter are believed to be defects in the film, paper, or camera and not pictures of ‘flying discs’.”

Photographs forwarded to headquarters of the Fourth Air Force taken by one Mary L. Herren of Portland, Oregon demonstrate the intrinsic vagueness and questionable value evident in such images. “She advises,” says the relevant memorandum by Lt. Colonel Donald J. Springer of the USAF to the Chief of Staff of the USAF in Washington on December 5, 1947, “these photographs were taken some time between November 5th and 12th, 1946, in the vicinity of Jefferson, Oregon, and points out the formation in the photographs as being objects she did not recall seeing herself but she thought might possibly be flying discs.” The assessment afforded the photos is dismissive: “The objects referred to appear in the sky area of each accompanying photograph. The uniformity of the markings would tend to indicate that the camera or film used to take these pictures was possibly defective.” There had been no “incidents of flying discs” reported in that area over the dates mentioned. How unfortunate for Mary Herren.

The pregnant question marks hovering over large swathes of these archives has stirred the relevant question: Have the intelligence and security agencies overseeing such matters been appropriately attentive? The sheer volume of “unresolved” cases is bound to niggle the more security minded sorts. Professor Loeb could not resist a caustic observation on that score; such poorly assessed sightings “imply that the US intelligence agencies are not doing a perfect job. They cannot identify objects that are potentially human-made, and that’s a serious national security concern.” If any such objects were, however, to be from beyond Earth, “of course, it’s the biggest discovery ever made by humanity.”  Best not wait up regarding the latter.


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About Dr Binoy Kampmark 275 Articles
Dr Binoy Kampmark is a senior lecturer in the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University. He was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, University of Cambridge. He is a contributing editor to CounterPunch and can be followed on Twitter at @bkampmark.

9 Comments

  1. mmmm
    While I believe that we are probably not the only “intelligent” beings in the universe, I’m yet to be convinced that we are being visited by other beings – either personally or via some investigative flying object or other.

    As a side note I lived in Warwick Qld and met a fellow who was convinced that he had seen an extraterrestrial being near Gayndah (Qld), and in addition had seen the ship it arrived in.
    Of course he was not able to get close as he was too afraid, and did not have a camera (back in the days of film).
    He managed to convince a number of locals that a trip to Gayndah was a good idea to suss out the area, and came back convinced that the aliens had deleted any evidence that they had been there.

  2. Not for the first time in these pages I will reference the 2022 documentary, Ariel Phenomenon, which recounted the incident at the Ariel School near Ruwa, in Zimbabwe, on 16-Sept-1994, where 62 kids at that school said that they saw one or more silver craft descend from the sky, land on a field near their school, along with one or more creatures dressed in black emerging from the craft and telepathically communicating to them a message with an environmental theme.

    This incident been described as the most significant encounter in recent history experienced by humans. The children were interviewed extensively at the time, and some were also re-interviewed years later as adults. Their stories were consistent and compelling.

    Of course we are free to believe anything we wish – flat earths, cheesy moons and our planet at the centre of everything were all popular at points of time in the past. If we live long enough we may have more evidence presented. The American physicist Michio Kaku said in a recent interview that given the vast numbers of solar bodies – galaxies, stars and solar systems, that it’s a virtual certainty that the universe is teeming with life, and that if extraterrestrials are visiting this planet then that in itself is indicative of their being a much more advanced organism than H. sapiens, given the technologies involved, the manipulation of energies, the possibility of their use of worm holes to navigate vast regions of interstellar space in relatively short times and so on.

    Quite useful to consider we’re not the smartest creature around, and possibly much dumber than we give ourselves credit for. When we take a long hard look at how we’ve trashed this planet, our only home – despite NASA’s current bout of insanity per its ‘plan’ to colonise the moon – and how we seem incapable of harmonious & cooperative juxtapositioning with our human and other neighbours, it’s not hard to draw that conclusion.

  3. I swear I’ve seen pink elephants and flying pigs, usually in the vicinity of Canberra, but the only time I’ve seen flying saucers was when my significant other was displeased with me.

  4. It’s just another attempted distraction from their failure to release the full, unedited Epstein files.

  5. Of course they’re real. I had a bit to do with them in my previous job.

    I made many friends. I was even the best man at Hffhgdrdfghjki’s (pronounced “Tnb”) wedding.

  6. Still trying to think of a phrase that could replace ‘probably thinks the X-files is documentary’ with a contemporary version.

  7. Thommo,

    Keep an eye out for a new reality TV show making its debut in November – “Abducted.” It has a G rating so it won’t be showing any anal probes. I’m pleased about that.

  8. Aliens are definitely walking among us; I just hear that there is a movement to promote PAULINE FOR PM

  9. You’ve done it now, Terry. I mention anal probes and you mention Pauline (Hanson).

    I won’t go into the details of what I can’t unsee.

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