The U.S. military’s official acknowledgment of videos of strange flying objects taken by Navy pilots has brought the debate over UFOs into the mainstream like never before.听

Later this month, the Pentagon is on the mysterious sightings, which it officially calls unidentified aerial phenomenon, or UAPs. But the disclosures may not have been possible without Hawaii鈥檚 late Sen. Daniel Inouye.

Inouye played a quiet, but critical role in reigniting interest in the phenomena, which have been the subject of speculation and conspiracy theories for decades. Inouye was one of a trio of senators who came together in 2007 to secretly funnel $22 million to the Pentagon鈥檚 clandestine budget for UFO research.

A mysterious glowing blue object caught on video over Oahu in December made international headlines amid an increase in reported UFO sightings since the coronavirus pandemic began. Hawaii News Now/2020

The clear skies over Hawaii and the surrounding Pacific ocean make it an ideal place for stargazing 鈥 and spotting strange objects.

That became a popular pastime last year after the coronavirus pandemic stranded millions of people at home, leading to 听罢丑别听苍辞苍辫谤辞蹿颈迟 , compared with more than 6,000 the previous year.

Hawaii had two high-profile incidents last year.

On Oct. 24, a flurry of lights appeared in the night sky over Hawaii. University of Hawaii astronomer Richard Wainscoat said people were likely watching the reentry into the used to launch Venezuelan satellite Venesat-1 into space in 2008.

On Dec. 29 several Oahu residents reported a mysterious blue听glowing object in the sky that made international headlines. It was before disappearing at sea.听

The Federal Aviation Administration had no records of any registered aircraft — or anything else on its radar — following the object鈥檚 trajectory that night and no other official explanation was given. But internet sleuths believe it may have been a .

Investigations And Cover-Ups

It’s not just stargazers interested in strange sightings over the Pacific.

Discussion about UFOs, often linked in pop culture and science fiction novels to aliens from other planets, was long taboo due to the secrecy involved and the stigma that often met those who claimed to have seen one. But the issue has emerged into the mainstream after and announced it was forming a task force to study them.听

In September, Japan鈥檚 Ministry of Defense also gave its military pilots new guidelines for reporting and cataloging UFO sightings. Japan鈥檚 then-Defense Minister Taro Kono previously had been publicly skeptical about UFOs, but changed his tune .

This month, what it calls 鈥渦nidentified air conditions,”听which it said were being reported in Chinese airspace with increasing frequency.

Almost all of the recent videos and material the Pentagon has declassified have involved sightings during Navy operations over the last two decades. A significant number involved Navy personnel serving in the Hawaii-based Pacific Fleet鈥檚 area of responsibility.

The most well known is depicted in a now declassified video from 2004 taken by Navy pilots who encountered what they 鈥淭ic Tac鈥 like object听over the Pacific that moved in ways that confounded them.

Officials familiar with the Pentagon鈥檚 upcoming report recently听 that investigators found no evidence that any of these cases involved extraterrestrials but would not rule it out completely. The Times reported some analysts believe some sightings are Chinese or Russian technology, possibly including experimental hypersonic systems.

A still from the now famous leaked video the Navy recorded of a strange object over the Pacific. The Pentagon officially declassified the video last year. Courtesy: U.S. Navy/2004

鈥淲hen I start to hear mentions of hypersonics and even hear references to China involved in all this, then that provides perfect cover for the services to start asking for more money to invest in new experimental technology,鈥 said Dan Grazier, a fellow at the Project on Government Oversight. 鈥淚 mean, that’s just classic threat inflation.鈥

In an analysis Tyler Rogoway, editor-in-chief of the defense news outlet The War Zone, argued that many of the known cases indicate that a 鈥渧ery terrestrial adversary鈥 is using 鈥渞elatively simple technologies 鈥 drones and balloons 鈥 and making off with what could be the biggest intelligence haul of a generation.鈥

Pacific Fleet officials declined to discuss if they’re concerned that either high or low tech machines have compromised any of the fleet’s activities, saying that the Navy鈥檚 UAP task force is the lead agency in discussing incidents.

Hawaii Sen. Mazie Hirono, who chairs the Senate鈥檚 subcommittee overseeing the Navy, said in an emailed statement that she is withholding judgment and would 鈥渞eview the Department of Defense鈥檚 findings on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena when they are published.鈥

Military sightings and investigations of UFOs aren’t new. Near the end of World War II, the U.S. Navy studied the effects of nighttime flying on pilots and concluded听most sightings were a mix 听at high speeds and elevations.

But in some cases, there really were strange objects in the sky.听The Japanese military sent more than 9,000 incendiary 鈥渂alloon bombs鈥 across the Pacific via jet streams in hopes of starting wildfires in North America during World War II. Civilians who saw them described them as 鈥.鈥

U.S. officials publicly denied the existence of the balloon bombs and censored news reports,听 one killed six picnickers on the Oregon coast, only admitting their existence after the war.

This gun camera photograph shows balloons being shot down by 11th Air Force fighters near Attu in the Aleutians on April 11, 1945. Nine balloons were downed in two hours. Note the P-38 in lower right frame. (U.S. Air Force photo)
American pilots shoot down a balloon bomb spotted near the island of Attu during World War II. Courtesy: U.S. Air Force/1945

The American public鈥檚 fascination with UFOs took off after World War II when pilot Kenneth Arnold reported seeing nine circular objects flying near Mount Rainier in Washington State in June 1947. Newspapers

The Air Force commissioned a classified study called Project Sign to see if they could be advanced Soviet weapons.听By 1952 the Air Force expanded its investigation with Project Blue Book, which investigated military and civilian sightings.

Investigators looked into thousands of sightings, .听

But the U.S. government鈥檚 search for answers was often entangled with efforts to hide its own newly developed technologies. UFOs became largely associated with the deserts of the American Southwest where the Air Force and CIA听 and .

Blue Book investigators cross referenced reported sightings with flight records, finding coincided with secret test flights. But they didn鈥檛 tell civilians. In some cases the Air Force .

Blue Book investigated 12,000 cases — 701 of which it labeled “unexplained.” The Air Force ultimately concluded unexplained cases didn’t involve Soviet weapons and defunded Blue Book in 1969.听

But after retiring, Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater, an Air Force veteran, about his belief that the government knew more than it was letting on.

Enter Three Senators

In 2007, Inouye, then-Democratic Senate Majority leader Harry Reid and Republican Ted Stevens, a former fighter pilot, joined forces to steer funding into the Pentagon鈥檚 so-called Black Budget for UFO research.

Reid, who is from Nevada, home to the Air Force’s infamous Area 51 test site, recalled that听the three moved forward despite the stigma.听“My staff warned me not to be seen to engage on the topic,” , adding that he “politely ignored them.”

Inouye’s support was pivotal. He was the powerful chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which has jurisdiction over all the Senate’s discretionary spending legislation. By putting it in the Black Budget, the three were able to .

With new funds to revive the research, the Pentagon formed the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program. Answering to the Defense Intelligence Agency, AATIP investigated dozens of sightings during military operations.听

“I believed that an official taboo regarding the frank discussion of encounters could harm our national security and stymie opportunities for technical advancement,” Reid said. “Which is why, along with Senators Stevens and Inouye, I helped create that secret Pentagon program in 2007.”

But the program was controversial for many reasons, including the involvement of Robert Bigelow, a Nevada billionaire, UFO enthusiast and political donor with close ties to Reid. His company Bigelow Aerospace .

Daniel Inouye helped secretly direct funds from the military’s “Black Budget” into a program to study UFOs, setting the stage for the Pentagon’s report coming out this month. Civil Beat/2011

Inouye died in 2012, and the Pentagon officially defunded AATIP the same year.

But the military continued to document numerous instances of strange objects detected by sailors.听The Pacific Fleet investigated a summer 2019 incident in which several mysterious triangular objects followed Navy destroyers for several nights near California. .

In August the Pentagon announced the existence of a successor to AATIP, the Navy-led Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force.听As part of its COVID-19 relief package Congress included a provision requiring that the government compile an unclassified report on its UFO findings.

The report will be available to the public, but additional classified information will be included for lawmakers.听While many are eager to see its contents, there are still calls for caution — and skepticism.

鈥淪ince we don’t know what these things are, people can make all kinds of claims about them,鈥 said Grazier. 鈥淎nd they could be used for justification for a whole bunch of things.鈥

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