Sunday, November 7, 2021

Proposed US Senate Amendment creates UAP Anomaly Surveillance and Resolution Office

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Press Release

For Immediate Distribution






Senator Kirsten Gillibrand submits comprehensive UAP research and reporting amendment proposal to National Defense A Act for 2022.


Senator Kirsten Gillibrand
Toronto [ZNN] The Select Senate Committee on Intelligence appears to be light-years ahead of any political, military and media agencies concerning the UAP matter. The language used in the amendment indicates the authors are either UAP experts or they have been fed inside information.


Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D) New York, a member of the Select Senate Committee on Intelligence, has proposed the establishment of a structure to address the UAP phenomenon: 

 The ANOMALY SURVEILLANCE AND RESOLUTION OFFICE.


The proposed amendment outlines in minute detail the duties of the new Office by designing "procedures to synchronize and standardize the collection, reporting, and analysis of incidents, regarding unidentified aerial phenomena across the Department and intelligence community." 


The amendment also outlines how allies and partners of the United States will coordinate to better assess the nature and extent of unidentified aerial phenomena.

Observations
If read carefully, the technical nature of the language in Senator Gillibrand's amendment appears to indicate that she is either experienced and highly knowledgeable in the UAP matter or, she, as the author of the amendment has received specific inside information on the scientific and technological aspects of the UAP phenomenon. 

The language in the amendment appears to point to the latter.

The terminology used in her amendment indicates that its linguistic framework has been derived from a military department or an official who has intimate scientific knowledge on the UAP phenomenon. 

For example:
‘‘[T]ransmedium objects or devices - objects or devices that are observed to transition between space and the atmosphere, or between the atmosphere and bodies of water, that are not immediately identifiable."

"[S]cientific theories to account for characteristics and performance of unidentified aerial phenomena that exceed the known state of the art in science or technology, including in the areas of propulsion, aerodynamic control, signatures, structures, materials, sensors, countermeasures, weapons, electronics, and power generation, and to provide the foundation for potential future investments to replicate any such advanced characteristics and performance."

These are complex scientific terms, phrases and concepts generally used by experts who are familiar with the characteristics of UAP flight patterns and dynamic capabilities - and not the language of a Senator or a staff member who ostensibly has little or no familiarity with the intricacies of UAP.


Questions Arising:
  • From where has Senator Gillibrand obtained such decidedly technical concepts and language about UAP?
  • Might the language used in the amendment be the results of briefings that several Senators were reported to have received from Naval officials in June of 2019?
  • Why has this amendment arisen so expodiciously after the amendment by Congressmen Ruben Gallego?
  • What is the rationale to designate 10 civilian agencies comprised of 20 members as an advisory committee to the Anomaly Surveillance and Resolution Office?
  • Why the unanticipated reference in the Gillibrand amendment to UAP encounters with US nuclear missiles just weeks after the October 19, 2021 press conference at the National Press Club in Washington DC organized by Captain Robert Salas? (To the knowledge of ZNN - no references have ever been made to ICBM missile tampering in previous Select Senate Committee on Intelligence publications.)
  • Why does Senator Gillibrand's amendment cite 'the replication' of advanced technologies when any possible replications may have already been derived from unacknowledged off-world sources? 

These questions suggest that what may be at work here is a Time Release Disclosure Program designed by the Pentagon to stimulate restrained public interest without over-heating mainstream media cable news outlets such as MSNBC, ABC, NBC, 60 Minutes and CBS News. Each of these major media outlets have been suspiciously quiet. By utilizing a Time Release Disclosure Program through legislators like Senator Gillibrand, the Pentagon may be resorting to or volunteering a variation of the truth about UAP while still managing to withhold damaging facts that point to its long history of silence, lies and deceit.   

Additional Media Resources:

FOR YOUR REVIEW

Proposed UAP US Senate Amendment Legislation

[Excerpt pertaining to 

Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon]

The entire 473 page Gillibrand amendment deals with various issues not related to UAP. The UAP amendment segment consists of 7 pages. ZNN has taken the liberty of highlighting in bolded text specific segments about UAP.


Kirsten Gillibrand (D) New York 
Member - Select Senate Committee on Intelligence

https://www.gillibrand.senate.gov 


https://www.gillibrand.senate.gov/contact/email-me


Excerpts pertaining to Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon


S7808 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE November 4, 2021

ESTABLISHMENT OF STRUCTURE AND AUTHORITIES TO ADDRESS UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL PHENOMENA.

(a) ESTABLISHMENT OF ANOMALY SURVEILLANCE AND RESOLUTION OFFICE.

 

(1) IN GENERAL. Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination with the Director of National Intelligenceestablish an office within an appropriate component of the Department of Defense, or within a joint organization of the Department of Defense and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, to assume—

(A) the duties of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force, as in effect on the day before the date of the enactment of this Act; and

(B) such other duties as are required by this section.

 

(2) DESIGNATION.—The office established under paragraph (1) shall be known as the ‘‘Anomaly Surveillance and Resolution Office’’ (in this section referred to as the ‘‘Office’’).

 

(3) TERMINATION OR SUBORDINATION OF PRIOR TASK FORCE. Upon the establishment of the Anomaly Surveillance and Resolution Office, the Secretary shall terminate the Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force or subordinate it to the Office.

(b) FACILITATION OF REPORTING AND DATA SHARING.—The Director and the Secretary shall each, in coordination with each other, require that—

(1) each element of the intelligence community and the Department, with any data that may be relevant to the investigation ofunidentified aerial phenomena, make such data available immediately to the Office; and

(2) military and civilian personnel employed by or under contract to the Department or an element of the intelligence community shall have access to procedures by which they shall report incidents or information, including adverse physiological effects, involving or associated with unidentified aerial phenomena directly to the Office.

 

(c) DUTIES.—The duties of the Office established under subsection (a) shall include the following:

(1) Developing procedures to synchronize and standardize the collection, reporting, and analysis of incidents, including adverse physiological effects, regarding unidentified aerial phenomena across the Department and intelligence community.

 

(2) Developing processes and procedures to ensure that such incidents from each component of the Department and each element of the intelligence community are reported and incorporated in a centralized repository.

 

(3) Establishing procedures to require the timely and consistent reporting of such incidents.

 

(4) Evaluating links between unidentified aerial phenomena and adversarial foreign governments, other foreign governments, or non-state actors.

 

(5) Evaluating the threat that such incidents present to the United States.

 

(6) Coordinating with other departments and agencies of the Federal Government, as appropriate, including the Federal Aviation Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Department of Homeland Security, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the Department of Energy.

 

(7) Coordinating with allies and partners of the United States, as appropriate, to better assess the nature and extent of unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(8) Preparing reports for Congress, in both classified and unclassified form, as required by subsections (h) and (i).

 

(d) EMPLOYMENT OF LINE ORGANIZATIONS FOR FIELD INVESTIGATIONS OF UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL PHENOMENA.

(1) IN GENERAL.—The Director and the Secretary shall each, in coordination with each other, designate line organizations within the Department of Defense and the intelligence community that possess appropriate expertise, authorities, accesses, data, systems, platforms, and capabilities to rapidly respond to, and conduct field investigations of, incidents involving unidentified aerial phenomenaunder the direction of the Office.

 

(2) PERSONNEL, EQUIPMENT, AND RESOURCES.—The Director and the Secretary shall take such actions as may be necessary to ensure that the designated organization or organizations have available adequate personnel with requisite expertise, equipment, transportation, and other resources necessary to respond rapidly to incidents or patterns of observations of unidentified aerial phenomena of which the Office becomes aware.

(e) UTILIZATION OF LINE ORGANIZATIONS FOR SCIENTIFIC, TECHNOLOGICAL, AND OPER- ATIONAL ANALYSES OF DATA ON UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL PHENOMENA.—

 

(1) IN GENERAL.—The Director and the Secretary shall each, in coordination with each other, designate one or more line organizations that will be primarily responsible forscientific, technical, and operational analysis of data gathered by field investigations conducted under subsection (d), or data from other sources, including testing of materials, medical studies, and development of theoretical models to better understand and explain unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(2) AUTHORITY.—The Director and the Secretary shall promulgate such directives as necessary to ensure that the designated line organizations have authority to draw on special expertise of persons outside the Federal Government with appropriate security clearances.

 

(f) INTELLIGENCE COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS PLAN.—

(1) IN GENERAL.—The head of the Office shall supervise the development and execution of an intelligence collection and analysis plan on behalf of the Secretary and the Director to gain as much knowledge as possible regarding the technical and operational characteristics, origins, and intentions of unidentified aerial phenomena, including the development, acquisition, deployment, and operation of technical collection capabilities necessary to detect, identify, and scientifically characterize unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(2) USE OF RESOURCES AND CAPABILITIES.—In developing the plan required by paragraph (1), the head of the Office shall consider and propose, as appropriate, the use of any re- source, capability, asset, or process of the Department and the intelligence community.

 

(g) SCIENCE PLAN. The head of the Office shall supervise the development and execution of a science plan on behalf of the Secretary and the Director to develop and test, as practicable, scientific theories to account for characteristics and performance of unidentified aerial phenomena that exceed the known state of the art in science or technology, including in the areas of propulsion, aerodynamic control, signatures, structures, materials, sensors, countermeasures, weapons, electronics, and power generation, and to provide the foundation for potential future investments to replicate any such advanced characteristics and performance.

 

(h) ASSIGNMENT OF PRIORITY.—The Director, in consultation with the Secretary, shall assign an appropriate level of priority within the National Intelligence Priorities Frame- work to the requirement to understand, characterize, and respond to unidentified aerial phenomena.

(i) USE OF AUTHORIZED AND APPROPRIATED FUNDS.—The obtaining and analysis of data relating to unidentified aerial phenomena is a legitimate use of funds authorized and appropriated to Department and elements of the intelligence community for—

(1) general intelligence gathering and intelligence analysis;

(2) strategic defense, space defense, defense of controlled air space, defense of ground, air, or naval assets, and related purposes; and

(3) any additional existing funding sources as may be so designated by the Secretary or the Director.

 

(j) ANNUAL REPORT.

(1) REQUIREMENT.—Not later than October 31, 2022, and annually thereafter until October 31, 2026, the Director, in consultation with the Secretary, shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(2) ELEMENTS. Each report under paragraph (1) shall include, with respect to the year covered by the report, the following information:

 

(A) An analysis of data and intelligence received through reports of unidentified aerial phenomena.

(B) An analysis of data relating to unidentified aerial phenomena collected through—

(i) geospatial intelligence

(ii) signals intelligence;

(iii) human intelligence; and

(iv) measurement and signals intelligence. (C) The number of reported incidents of unidentified aerial phenomena over restricted air space of the United States.

(D) An analysis of such incidents identified under subparagraph (C).

 

(E) Identification of potential aerospace or other threats posed by unidentified aerial phenomena to the national security of the United States.

 

(F) An assessment of any activity regarding unidentified aerial phenomena that can be attributed to one or more adversarial foreign governments.

 

(G) Identification of any incidents or patterns regarding unidentified aerial phenomena that indicate a potential adversarial foreign government may have achieved a breakthrough aerospace capability.

 

(H) An update on the coordination by the United States with allies and partners on efforts to track, understand, and address un- identified aerial phenomena.

 

(I) An update on any efforts to capture or exploit discovered unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(J) An assessment of any health-related effects for individuals who have encountered unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(K) The number of reported incidents, and descriptions thereof, of unidentified aerial phenomena associated with military nuclear assets, including strategic nuclear weapons and nuclear-powered ships and submarines.

 

(L) In consultation with the Administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration, the number of reported incidents, and descriptions thereof, of unidentified aerial phenomena associated with facilities or assets associated with the production, transportation, or storage of nuclear weapons or components thereof.

 

(M) In consultation with the Chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the number of reported incidents, and descriptions thereof, of unidentified aerial phenomena or drones of unknown origin associated with nuclear power generating stations, nuclear fuel storage sites, or other sites or facilities regulated by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

 

N) The names of the line organizations that have been designated to perform the specific functions imposed by subsections (d) and (e) of this section, and the specific functions for which each such line organization has been assigned primary responsibility.

(3) FORM.— Each report submitted under paragraph (1) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

 

(k) SEMIANNUAL BRIEFINGS.—

 

(1) IN GENERAL.—Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act and not less frequently than semiannually thereafter until December31, 2026, the head of the Office shall provide the classified briefings on unidentified aerial phenomenato—

 

A) the Committee on Armed Services and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and

(B) the Committee on Armed Services and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives.

 

(2) FIRST BRIEFING.—The first briefing provided under paragraph (1) shall include all incidents involving unidentified aerial phenomenathat were reported to the Unidentified Aerial PhenomenaTask Force or to the Office after June 24, 2021, regardless of the date of occurrence of the incident.

 

(3) SUBSEQUENT BRIEFINGS.—Each briefing provided subsequent to the first briefing described in paragraph (2) shall include, at a minimum, all events relating to unidentified aerial phenomenathat occurred during the previous 180 days, and events relating to unidentified aerial phenomenathat were not included in an earlier briefing due to delay in an incident reaching the reporting system or other such factors.

 

(4) INSTANCES IN WHICH DATA WAS NOT SHARED.—For each briefing period, the Chairman and Vice Chairman or Ranking Member of the Committee on Armed Services and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate and the Committee on Armed Services and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives shall receive an enumeration of any instances in which data related to unidentified aerial phenomena was denied to the Office because of classification restrictions on that data or for any other reason.

(l) AERIAL AND TRANSMEDIUM PHENOMENA ADVISORY COMMITTEE.—

(1) ESTABLISHMENT.—(A) Not later than October 1, 2022, the Secretary and the Director shall establish an advisory committee for the purpose of—

(i) advising the Office in the execution of the duties of the Office as provided by this subsection; and

(ii) advising the Director regarding the gathering and analysis of data, and scientific research and development pertaining to unidentified aerial phenomena.

(B) The advisory committee established under subparagraph (A) shall be known as the ‘‘Aerial and Transmedium Phenomena Advisory Committee’’ (in this subparagraph the ‘‘Committee’’).

(2) MEMBERSHIP. (A) Subject to subparagraph (B), the Committee shall be composed of the following:

(i) 20 members as follows:

(I) Three persons appointed by the Administrator of the National Astronautics and Space Administration.

(II) Two persons appointed by the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration.

(III) Two persons appointed by the President of the National Academies of Sciences. 

(IV) Two persons appointed by the President of the National Academy of Engineering.

(V) One person appointed by the President of the National Academy of Medicine.

(VI) Three persons appointed by the Director of the Galileo Project at Harvard University.

(VII) Two persons appointed by the Board of Directors of the Scientific Coalition for Unidentified Aerospace Phenomena Studies.

(VIII) Two persons appointed by the President of the American Institute of Astronautics and Aeronautics.

(IX) Two persons appointed by the Director of the Optical Technology Center at Montana State University.

(X) One person appointed by the president of the American Society for Photo- grammetry and Remote Sensing.

(ii) Up to five additional members, as the Secretary and the Director jointly consider appropriate, selected from among individuals with requisite expertise, at least 3 of whom shall not be employees of any Federal Government agency or Federal Government contractor.

(B) No individual may be appointed to the Committee under subparagraph (A) unless the Secretary and the Director jointly determine that the individual—

(i) qualifies for a security clearance at the secret level or higher;

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S7816 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE November 4, 2021

(ii) possesses scientific, medical, or technical expertise pertinent to some aspect of the investigation and analysis of unidentified aerial phenomena; and

(iii) has previously conducted research or writing that demonstrates scientific, technological, or operational knowledge regarding aspects of the subject matter, including propulsion, aerodynamic control, signatures, structures, materials, sensors, counter-measures, weapons, electronics, power generation, field investigations, forensic examination of particular cases, analysis of open source and classified information regarding domestic and foreign research and commentary, and historical information pertaining to unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(C) The Secretary and Director may terminate the membership of any individual on the Committee upon a finding by the Secretary and the Director jointly that the member no longer meets the criteria specified in this subsection.

 

(3) CHAIRPERSON.—The Secretary and Director shall jointly designate a temporary Chairperson of the Committee, but at the earliest practicable date the Committee shall elect a Chairperson from among its members, who will serve a term of 2 years, and is eligible for re-election.

 

(4) EXPERT ASSISTANCE, ADVICE, AND RECOMMENDATIONS.—(A) The Committee may, upon invitation of the head of the Office, provide expert assistance or advice to any line organization designated to carry out field investigations or data analysis as authorized by subsections (d) and (e).

 

(B) The Committee, on its own initiative, or at the request of the Director, the Secretary, or the head of the Office, may provide advice and recommendations regarding best practices with respect to the gathering and analysis of data on unidentified aerial phenomenain general, or commentary regarding specific incidents, cases, or classes of unidentified aerial phenomena.

 

(5) REPORT. Not later than December 31, 2022, and not later than December 31 of each year thereafter, the Committee shall submit a report summarizing its activities and recommendations to the following:

(A) The Director.

(B) The Secretary.

(C) The head of the Office.

(D) The Committee on Armed Services and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.

(E) The Committee on Armed Services and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives.

(6) RELATION TO FACA.—For purposes of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.), the Committee shall be considered an advisory committee (as defined in section 3 of such Act, except as otherwise provided in the section or as jointly deemed warranted by the Secretary and the Director under section 4(b)(3) of such Act.

 

(7) TERMINATION OF COMMITTEE.—The Committee shall terminate on the date that is six years after the date of the establishment of the Committee.

 

(m) DEFINITIONS.—In this section:

(1) The term ‘‘appropriate committees of Congress’’ means—

(A) the Committee on Armed Services, the Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and

(B) the Committee on Armed Services, the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.

(2) The term ‘‘intelligence community’’ has the meaning given such term in section 3 of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3003).

(3) The term ‘‘transmedium objects or devices’’ means objects or devices that are observed to transition between space and the atmosphere, or between the atmosphere and bodies of water, that are not immediately identifiable.

(4) The term ‘‘unidentified aerial phenomena’’ means—

(A) airborne objects that are not immediately identifiable;

(B) transmedium objects or devices; and

(C) submerged objects or devices that are not immediately identifiable and that display behavior or performance characteristics suggesting that they may be related to the subjects described in subparagraph (A) or (B)

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