

The report is likely to provide further details about these incidents and also add to previous findings by offering a much deeper analysis of the data than has ever been conducted before.

There has been much speculation about what the report may reveal about UAPs/UFOs, particularly what the government knows about the decades of sightings that have been recorded in American airspace. The report may also include several other sources as it is understood that some of the information has been garnered from military personnel and accounts currently in classified files. The director of National Intelligence and the Secretary of Defense were the two figureheads tasked with compiling the report, which is to be presented to the congressional intelligence and armed services committees. So instead of flinging pencils at the ceiling ala Fox Mulder, you might want to grab another writing instrument to make a note of all the important details you need to know about the upcoming report. Whether you're a believer or a skeptic, this report is expected to present the most substantive US government account and detailed analyses of UAP/UFO data and intelligence to date. The Act "requires the UAP Task Force to publicly share a report and security strategies of their findings within 180 days of the 2021 act," as IGN previously reported. Top intelligence and government officials in the US have apparently circled a date in their diaries by which time they must submit an unclassified report to Congress about unidentified aerial phenomena, according to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021. But this month we might get closer to the truth than ever before. UAPs – commonly known as unidentified flying objects (UFOs) – have long been a source of fascination, and sightings have been frequently reported.
