No really.
The Director of National Intelligence and the Secretary of Defense now have just under six months to provide Congressional Intelligence and Armed Forces Committees with an unclassified report on “unidentified aerial phenomena.”
It should also detail “an inter-institutional process to ensure timely data collection and centralized analysis of all unidentified aerial phenomena reporting to the federal government” and designate an officer responsible for that process.
Finally, the report should identify potential threats to national security from UFOs and assess whether there could be opponents from the country behind such activities, the committee said.
The report filed must be unclassified, the committee said, although it may contain a classified attachment.
Congress has long been interested in UFOs
The videos, one from 2004 and the other two from 2015, show what appears to be unidentified flying objects moving quickly while captured by infrared cameras. Two of the videos feature service workers reacting in awe at how fast the objects move. A voice speculates it could be a drone.
It is still unclear what the objects are and there is no consensus on their origin. Some believe it may be drones piloted by terrestrial opponents seeking to gather information, rather than the aliens we normally equate with UFOs.
Members of Congress and Pentagon officials have long been concerned about the appearance of the unidentified aircraft that have flown over US military bases. The Senate Intelligence Committee voted last June to have the Pentagon and the intelligence community provide a public analysis of the encounters.
That program launched in 2007 and ended in 2012, according to the Pentagon, as they felt there were higher priorities that needed funding.
CNN’s Ryan Browne contributed to this report.