WASHINGTON — While President Obama was promoting an immigration overhaul in Mexico, six former members
of Congress gathered two blocks from the White House to consider what they see
as the enforced government secrecy surrounding another kind of visitor: the
kind who come from a lot farther away.
Every day this week, the former legislators presided over panels
made up of academics and — former, of course — government and military
officials, who were there to discuss their research or their own eyewitness
accounts of unidentified flying objects and the extra-terrestrials who
presumably would have occupied them.
“Something is monitoring the planet, and they are monitoring it
very cautiously, because we are a very warlike planet,” said Mike Gravel, a
former Democratic senator from Alaska who ran in both the Democratic and Libertarian
presidential primaries in 2008.
Mr. Gravel and his fellow panellists were assembled by the Paradigm Research Group, which says it
is committed to ending the government’s “truth embargo” on the existence of extra-terrestrial
life. The lawmakers were there in hopes that their presence and political
credibility would be enough to persuade Congress to take the issue seriously.
“I’ve been exploring how we might get this issue
out of the shadows of the lunatic fringe,” said Roscoe G. Bartlett, a former
Republican representative from Maryland. Before his defeat last year, Mr.
Bartlett was known for sounding the alarm on the threat posed to the nation’s energy infrastructure
by electromagnetic pulse, or EMP, the shock wave from a nuclear weapon
detonated beyond the earth’s atmosphere.
Called the Citizen
Hearing on Disclosure, the event might have been
mistaken as advocacy for government transparency, and some of the panellists
had impressive résumés.
“I’ve come to understand and appreciate the
importance of open, transparent government and the power of truth,” said Paul
T. Hellyer, who served as Canadian minister of defence during the 1960s.
“We are not alone in the cosmos,” he added.
One reason the ex-members of Congress agreed to sit
on the dais and ask questions may have been curiosity.
“Our country has trivialized it, has made it a
joke, has made it green people with horns sticking out,” said Carolyn
Kilpatrick, a Democratic representative from Michigan who lost her seat in
2010. “Now I find that it’s much more than that. And it’s not a joke. And there
is scientific data that there may be something there.”
Another
reason might have been the $20,000 the organizers said they paid each panellist.
But they are still maintaining a healthy skepticism.
“Just
because the government might have had a document about how to handle extra-terrestrials
doesn’t mean there were any,” said Merrill Cook, a Republican from Utah who was
twice elected to the House.
The panels
this week have been low-hanging fruit for the news media while President Obama
is out of town and Congress is out of session, and not all of the people who
study U.F.O.’s think the meetings will help them improve their stature in
Washington.
“There really is something to this issue, and
there is a serious side to it, but that’s not what’s being presented as this
event,” said Leslie Kean, a journalist and author of “U.F.O.’s: Generals,
Pilots and Government Officials Go on the Record,” a collection of first-hand
accounts by people who believe they saw them.
The
conclusion that U.F.O.’s are proof of extra-terrestrial life is misguided, she
said, and the people who broadcast that belief hindered support for real
scientific research.
Despite the
ridicule that usually accompanies the discussion of U.F.O.’s, they have been
quietly talked about in corridors of power here. Some panelists at the event
this week counted among true believers John D. Podesta, a chief of staff in
President Bill Clinton’s White House, because of his role in Executive
Order 12958, which requires the declassification of most government documents
over 25 years old.
But the
possible existence of extraterrestrial life is not exactly why he believes in
government transparency, Mr. Podesta said.
“At the end
of the day, there are going to be people who say that even if you did that,
there must be other files that exist that you’re not disclosing,” he said in an
interview.
But objects
in the sky have piqued his interest. In June 2011, the Center for American
Progress hosted government officials, from the Pentagon, NASA and the
Department of Transportation, as well as Congressional staff and former
officials from intelligence organizations, for a briefing by Ms. Kean and
experts from academia and foreign militaries.
The private
briefing was organized to discuss a proposal that the government establish a
small office of two staff members who would selectively investigate mysterious
skyward sightings and seek to understand them by applying scientific method.
The proposal did not refer to U.F.O.’s, but rather, U.A.P.’s, unidentified
aerial phenomena, as if those who drew up the proposal were keenly aware of how
their objective could be perceived.
“They were
interesting, credible people who had observed aerial phenomena that were
unexplained and worthy of additional follow-up,” Mr. Podesta said. “Going back
and looking at and declassifying whatever government documents exist is a smart
thing to do.”
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