
National Archives directed to collect reports but measure gives government departments broad authority to keep them secret
If the truth about UFOs is out there, the American government doesn’t want you to see it yet.
Just months after US space agency Nasa appointed a research director of unidentified anomalous phenomena, and promised more transparency about what it knows, the US Congress has acted to throttle the flow of information that ultimately reaches the public.
Measures to create a presidential commission to review UFO records, and to order the Department of Defense to declassify certain “records relating to publicly known sightings of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP)”, were stripped from the sweeping defense policy bill that passed Congress on Thursday with bipartisan support.
Reviewing the 2024 NDAA.
The final UAP Disclosure Act lacks initially proposed features like an independent Review Board and eminent domain authority.
Only a UAP records collection and review process remains.
A disappointment for the UAP community.
🛸#UAPDisclosure #NDAA2024 pic.twitter.com/bQyAa37nmY— Richard Dolan Intelligent Disclosure (@I_D_Official) December 7, 2023
