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Aviation Safety in America:
Under-Reporting Bias of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena and
Recommended Solutions
Ted Roe
Executive Director
National Aviation Reporting Center
on Anomalous Phenomena
Version 2
July 20, 2004
Copyright NARCAP 2004
[Part 1] [Part
2] [Part 3]
Introduction:
Science has validated the
existence of phenomena that are characterized by unusual airborne
lighting displays, some are related to tectonic or geo-magnetic
activity, others are a result of weather induced electrical
activity, solar and meteor activity, etc. Tentatively identified
examples include:blue jets, sprites, various lightning phenomena,
and so-called "earthlights" and "earthquake
lights".
Those aerial phenomena regularly
documented by research scientists over the Hessdalen Valley,
Norway and over other locations including several in North
America are even less understood.
Additionally, reliable observations
from U.S. government and official international sources include
visual observations and radar contacts with unusual airborne
objects.
The physical properties
and behaviors of some of these lights and objects are not
clearly understood and in some cases their existence has been
only recently documented. These unusual lights and objects
may have electrical properties that may affect avionics and
electrical systems. They can appear to be very unusual to
observers. Some of these phenomena are quite dynamic. US aviators
have described some encounters with these phenomena as near
mid-air collisions. Though these observations and incidents
do occur they are under-reported. The US aviation system is
not investigating these reports to mitigate these potential
hazards.
The issue of valid U.S.
pilot reports of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) and the
seeming lack of attention given to these reports by the aviation
system is a complicated one. There is a longstanding bias
in place that severely inhibits the reporting and investigation
of UAP incidents. This bias stifles open discussion of UAP
amongst aircrews, management, safety administrators, and the
researchers who try to acquire information on this important
topic.
These incidents can affect
aviation safety. Some UAP incidents include very close pacing,
and passes that have been described by aircrews as near mid-air
collisions. Some UAP incidents also include transient and/or
permanent electro-magnetic effects on avionics systems. The
distraction to aircrews caused by some phenomena can have
a direct effect on cockpit resource management (CRM). In some
cases the intensity of light emanated by UAP during a close
pass can disrupt night vision. In some cases, passengers and
crew have been injured by emergency control inputs implemented
by aircrews to avoid what is perceived as a potential collision
with UAP.
Some UAP encounters involve
ground-based radars that provide verification of the presence
of uncorrelated targets near aircraft that are reporting visual
observations of UAP. Often these observations and incidents
go unreported even though these "radar/visual" events
involve significant numbers of witnesses including aircrews
and passengers, radar operators, air traffic controllers and
supervisors. The confusion surrounding these incidents and
observations is evident in the air traffic control tapes that
regularly record all transmissions and communication between
the control tower, aircraft, and peripheral facilities.
Military pilots are supported
by post-mission debriefings as well as specific radars that
continually examine their activities and occasionally capture
the presence of UAP. In turn, these observations are protected
from public scrutiny by secrecy oaths taken by military officers
and enlisted men. Even so, through the Freedom of Information
Act some of these incidents and observations have become public
record. This information seldom travels directly back to the
aviation safety planning community.
Based upon this large and
constantly growing body of data it is unreasonable to conclude
that conservative, responsible individuals don"t see
UAP. The image of conservative responsibility offered by the
airlines may contribute to an environment that is not conducive
to reporting unusual observations or incidents.
Some commercial and private
pilots report incidents and observations to the various government
run incident databases, but those incidents and observations
tend not to be actively examined for their effects upon aviation
safety by the various government and civil organizations charged
with aviation safety. In fact, when one reviews the various
incident databases it becomes apparent that there is no way
to report these types of incidents on the reporting forms
or in the process. Reporters are left to their own devices
to explain their experience and so pilots and air controllers
may simply choose not to do so.
This reluctance to report
and investigate safety-related UAP incidents has its roots
in several significant historical events. These events have
served to create, or have significantly contributed to, an
atmosphere of fear. Fear of ridicule, fear of having one's
competence questioned, fear of losing one's career, fear of
government reprisal, even fear of the phenomena itself are
all cited as reasons why pilots are not officially reporting
many observations, close pacing and near mid-air collisions
with UAP. These fears are unknowingly amplified by the lack
of attention given to these incidents and observations by
the US aviation system.
These incidents
are being reported globally. Private research into these phenomena
is ongoing. Official public efforts to investigate them are
being conducted by several nations. Case files have been acquired
by the National Aviation Reporting Center on Anomalous Phenomena,
NARCAP, from several official sources including; the Center
for the Study of Anomalous Aerial Phenomena or CEFAA of Chile
and Service Expertise for Rare Atmospheric Phenomena or SEPRA
of France support the contention that from a global perspective
these incidents occur frequently, though frequency
of occurrence should not be a primary factor in determining
safety concerns.
Pilot Commentary Reflecting an Under-Reporting
Bias
Though many of the incidents
listed in the ASRS database are consistent with those referred
to as UFO, aviation professionals are unlikely to choose the
phrase UFO to describe their observation. This is possibly
a result of the objective phrase "unidentified flying
object" being commonly associated with extraterrestrial
spacecraft.
After many interviews with
pilots and other aviation professionals one has the definite
impression that they prefer to use apparently less stigma-inducing
words like "unknown traffic, traffic, balloon, unidentified
object, or unknown aircraft" even though the description
of the incident itself is consistent with those commonly described
as "UFO". Given that the "object" in question
was airborne one might argue that Unidentified Object and
Unidentified Flying Object are the same thing. Whether one
calls them UAP, UFO, Anomalous Aerial Phenomena, Rare Atmospheric
Phenomena, Unidentified Object, Unknown Aircraft, etc. one
is speaking of the same thing. Whatever it is, it is outside
of the pilot's experience.
Pilots choose their words
carefully to avoid being associated with a UFO sighting even
though that is exactly what they may have experienced. It
is appropriate to ask "Why?"
NARCAP receives reports
from pilots and aviation professionals via email and other
sources. During one week in the summer of 2001 NARCAP received
reports from a number of current and former pilots, the majority
of whom were commercial airmen. A review of some of the commentary
from these pilots who have seen UAP includes the following:
Pilot Commentary:
"We didn't say anything.
We figured nobody would believe us."
Charter
Pilot
"Upon return to my domicile,
JFK, I reported our sighting to the proper authorities. I
was shortly visited by two federal investigators who evidently
thought I was hallucinating for one of them stated he had
seen spaceships while fishing in Great South Bay and was quite
obviously trying to prove that I was a loony."
Captain,
Pan Am (ret.)
"It must have been Huge!
We were all due back at JFK about the same time two days later
so I waited in the crew ready room to talk to them. None of
them wanted to talk! They were afraid management would take
them off of flying status and have them tested for booze and
drugs. The story never came out!"
Flight
Engineer, TWA (ret.)
"a group of lights in the
air appeared at our 12o'clock position. I called departure
control and asked them if they had any traffic in that area.
When they came back and said NO, what do you see, I said no,
just checking. For at that time when a pilot reported seeing
a UFO he was in a lot of trouble."
Captain,
Ozark Airlines (ret.)
"I, and Flight crew saw
something (in broad daylight) that did things that no known
aircraft could do without killing any living thing inside.
I will only give sketchy details to protect the privacy of
the rest of the crew. If you are interested, and all information
(is) kept anonymous, contact me. I will not present myself
for public ridicule."
Captain,
NW (ret.)
Reports
to NARCAP of UAP observations and incidents are riddled with
this type of commentary. Over and over again conservative,
responsible airmen are heard to say that they fear that their
competency will be questioned, that their careers will suffer,
that they will be humiliated for reporting their observations.
A serious result of these fears is inaccurate or incomplete
data regarding potential hazards.
Commercial Aircrew Survey Results Indicate
Under-Reporting Bias
Late in 2001 NARCAP conducted
a survey of a US commercial air carrier. The results were
published as NARCAP Technical Report 5, Haines and Roe, 2001.
This paper presents the results of a confidential aircrew
survey presented to 298 currently rated and flying commercial
pilots employed by a U. S. airline.
Remarkably, a total of 70
completed surveys (23.5%) were returned to NARCAP within a
35 day period suggesting a high degree of general interest
in this subject. Twelve questions were asked, most of which
dealt with the possibility of past sightings of unidentified
aerial phenomena (UAP) and how these pilots dealt with the
experience afterward. Forty respondents were Captains (mean
= 9,130 flight hrs.) and thirty were First Officers (mean
= 4,799 flight hrs.).
A number of interesting
things were learned from this survey. It was found that of
the sixteen pilots (23% of total) who said they had seen something
they could not identify in flight only four (25% of the sixteen)
reported it to their company or to a government authority
and one of these pilots (a First Officer) who saw a UAP felt
that it was a threat to aviation safety and he did not report
it.
A variety of reasons were
given for not reporting their UAP sightings. They included:
not knowing whom to report it to or how to do so, judging
the event to be unimportant, judging the phenomenon to be
a military test, and (being) just too strange to report.
Review of Aviation Incident Databases for UAP data
The FAA, the NTSB and NASA
maintain aviation safety related incident databases. A keyword
search of the FAA Incident/Accident Database and the NTSB
Near Mid-Air Collision database revealed many incidents using
keywords words like "unidentified aircraft" or "unidentified
object".
Even more incidents are
evident when one searches the NASA administrated Aviation
Safety Reporting System Database, a voluntary, confidential
database. It employs a rigorous identification system to validate
the credentials of the reporter while protecting his/her identity
from employers and the FAA. This database contains over 332
thousand incident reports. Below are the results of a keyword
search conducted by Dr. Richard F. Haines in 2000 using phrases
that may mask a UAP encounter and the number of cases that
carry those descriptions:
| "Near miss, unknown aircraft, unidentified
object" |
5,053 cases |
"Near miss, unknown aircraft, unknown
object & Primary problem area = flight crea humar factors"
(This category can refer to difficulties caused by control
inputs made by the Crew to avoid collision.) |
973 |
"In-flight encounter/other &
primary problem area+ aircraft and their subsystems"
(This can refer to transient or permanent component or system
failures that are common effects of close encounters with
UAP) |
125 |
| "Unidentified object" |
9 |
| "Unidentified traffic" |
3 |
| "UFO" |
1 |
| "Flying Saucer, flying disk" |
0 |
| "Unidentified Aerial Phenomena"
|
0 |
Again, it is important
to emphasize the 973 cases where problems arose in the "flight
crew human factors" category under the keyword search
"Near miss, unknown aircraft, unknown object" as
well as the 125 cases involving aircraft subsystems also described
as a "near miss". It is also important to acknowledge
that over five thousand potential UAP cases were described
as a "near miss". Have there been any
cases involving these factors that the crews were not able
to resolve and that resulted in catastrophe?
Given that many encounters
involve unidentified lights rather than unidentified objects
and that the reporting forms used by the ASRS, the FAA and
the NTSB do not have categories for unidentified light(s)
or objects, it is entirely possible that some of these data
are inaccurate and that the cause of the incident is not being
accurately reported. It is suggested that these reporting
forms should be modified to accommodate a wider variety of
observations.
In the NASA ASRS data, potential
UAP cases represent less than 1% of all cases reported. It
is important to remember that the ASRS database is one of
three Federal aviation incident databases. The incidents listed
in the ASRS system should be considered as the minimum number
of incidents because not all incidents are reported, and some
are reported to other databases. When one considers the results
of the NARCAP Aircrew Survey it is reasonable to expect the
numbers to increase if pilots are encouraged to report these
incidents.
The Term "UFO" Contributes to Under-Reporting
Bias
The term "UFO"
is has changed in meaning over the last 50 years. Originally
it was a term coined by the USAF that was intended to bring
objectivity to the discussion of unidentified aerial phenomena..
Now it is synonomous with more subjective words like "flying
saucer", "alien spacecraft", and "extraterrestrial
intelligence".
It is clear that these terms
carry a stigma that inhibits aviation professionals from discussing
observations of unusual phenomena. Even when reports do not
involve an alleged UFO the stigma is strong enough to curtail
discussions of observations or incidents involving unusual
lights.
There have been various
attempts to address this matter of nomenclature. The official
research group of Chile has chosen the more correct term of
"Anomalous Aerial Phenomena", as have other official
research groups. The French research effort at CNES refers
to these phenomena as "Rare Atmospheric Phenomena".
NARCAP has chosen the term
"Unidentified Aerial Phenomena" or UAP to more correctly
address the scope of descriptions and to more accurately describe
the group of observations collectively considered to be anomalous.
The term UAP is defined
as follows:
An
unidentified aerial phenomenon (UAP) is the visual stimulus
that provokes a sighting report of an object or light
seen in the sky, the appearance and/or flight dynamics
of which do not suggest a logical, conventional flying
object and which remains unidentified after close scrutiny
of all available evidence by persons who are technically
capable of making both a full technical identification
as well as a common-sense identification, if one is
possible. (Haines, Pp. 13-22, 1980)
This definition clearly
excludes most of the prosaic explanations one hears about
to explain UAP including rare atmospheric phenomena (e.g.,
sprites; sheet and ball lightning; mirages, sub-suns, etc.).
The residual of cases that remain after all known physical
phenomena are considered and rejected truly confront the scientific
mind with mysteries and challenges in spite of the fact that
up to now science has shown no genuine or lasting interest
in them. (McDonald, 1968).
Aviation Management Contributes to Under-Reporting
Bias
When investigative journalist
Leslie Kean aproached an influential elected member of a prominent
U.S. Aviation union with questions about UAP and pilots, his
reply was "If these things were happening don't you think
I would know about it?" After only a cursory review of
Dr. Haines paper, Aviation Safety in America- A Previously
Neglected Factor, he dismissed the matter outright. In fact,
it was the question "Why didn't he know about it?"
that motivated the author to write this paper.
A prominent aviation safety
organization also dismissed the information outright while
offering no reason other than simply asserting that incidents
involving UAP and aviation safety do not occur. It was clear
that they didn't even read the report.
It is reasonable to suspect
that a bias against even reading the material exists and represents
a collective irrationality that serves to stifle reporting
and investigations.
There are voices of reason
in this endeavor. For example, both Brian E. Smith - Chief
of the Aviation Safety Program Office at NASA Ames Research
Center and Linda Connell - Director of the FAA-NASA Aviation
Safety Reporting System have publicly acknowledged that reports
of UAP encounters which effect aviation safety deserve a thorough
examination. Clearly, mitigation of all potential sources
of near-miss incidents and accidents should be the driving
force in resolving these cases.
Historical Events Have Contributed to Under-Reporting
Bias
A major contributing factor
to bias against reporting UAP incidents and observations is
apparent in the history of attempts to address the UAP problem.
UAP are considered a matter of security by the US military
and intelligence community and no data regarding UAP incidents
have been made available to aviation professionals in the
commercial aviation industry for nearly 50 years. Though detailed
case files have been recently released by the US government,
none of these cases have been reviewed within the context
of aviation safety.
When the US Air Force was
founded in September of 1947 it immediately undertook an intelligence-gathering
program to determine the nature of UFOs. To this end it established
specific units within Air Technical Intelligence Command to
acquire data and evidence regarding UFOs.
In July of 1952 there was
a series of UFO manifestations over Washington D.C. and in
the restricted airspace over the White House and Capitol buildings.
Thousands including military and commercial pilots and radar
operators witnessed these incidents. The incidents were quite
dramatic and persisted for several weeks. The Air Force attempted
to explain these observations as "spurious radar targets"
caused by a temperature inversion. However, the photographs
of the "spurious radar targets" over the Nation's
capitol building that were published that week in the Washington
Post do not support that explanation. It has been since determined
that the weather conditions at the time of the observations
did not support the conclusions of the US Air Force.
Less than a year later,
in 1953, the CIA convened the Robertson Panel to review UFO
reports. A panel of scientists and military experts reviewed
several case files and films of UFOs. While they came to no
definitive conclusions about the nature and source of UFOs,
they did decide that the subject needed to be "stripped
of its special status" to protect the public from "hysteria".
From Air Force Regulation
200-2, dated August 12, 1954 signed by General Nathan Twining
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"Headquarters
USAF will release summaries of evaluated data (of
UFO), which will inform the public
on this subject. In response to local inquiries, it
is permissible to inform news media representatives
on UFOB's when the object is positively identified
as a familiar object. For those objects
which are not explainable, only the fact that ATIC
will analyze the data is worthy of release, due to
the many unknowns involved."(italics
mine) |
All UFO information was
forwarded to the Commander, Air Defense Command; the nearest
Air Defense Division; the Commander, Air Technical Intelligence
Center; and the Director of Intelligence at Air Force Headquarters,
and some cases were forwarded on to the CIA, the NSA, and
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
In 1954 officials from the
US military and from the Airline industry held a press conference
announcing a Joint Army, Navy Air force publication (JANAP
146) outlining Communications Instructions for Reporting Visual
Intelligence Sightings (CIRVIS). The US did not have the satellite
capability to fly over the Soviet Union and provide advance
warning of an impending attack. Commercial airline pilots
were considered an integral part of a forward observation
corps.
JANAP 146 and CIRVIS were
instituted as a mandatory reporting system that eventually
included both American and Canadian commercial and general
aviation. All unusual observations were to be forwarded through
the CIRVIS system to the US Air Force. Once an observation
had been reported, the reporting aviator was obligated not
to disclose the report to the press or public under threat
of fine and imprisonment. JANAP 146/CIRVIS was initiated to
acquire intelligence related reports regarding unfamiliar
aircraft, formations of unfamiliar aircraft, missiles, and
UFOBs.
In 1958, 450 airline pilots
signed a petition to publicly protest the JANAP 146 order.
Many of these pilots claimed that the Air Force investigators
had an agenda to debunk their reports and that they had been
warned not to disclose their observations to the public under
penalty of a prison term and a fine.
Concurrently, from 1947
to 1969 the Air Force conducted an investigation into UFOs
under several code names including Projects Sign, Grudge and
Bluebook. Reports of unusual observations, including military
and civil aviation reports, were forwarded to Air Technical
Intelligence Command for review by air force investigators
and civilian contractors. Project Bluebook closed in 1969
with assurances that UFOs were not a threat to national security,
that there was no evidence that they were extraterrestrial
vehicles and that further research was unnecessary.
The Condon Report, commissioned
by the US Air Force and undertaken by the University of Colorado
concurred. Since that time the science community and the US
Air Force has acknowledged the existence of unusual atmospheric
phenomena like sprites, blue sprites, ball lightning, blue
jets, etc., many of which were not known at the time of Project
Blue Book and the Condon report though some of these phenomena
were certainly reported as UFOs. That acknowledgement seems
to be contradictory to the conclusions of Blue Book and the
Condon Report. In the face of well-documented incidents and
observations of UAP that continue to this date, neither of
these reports can be considered definitive.
In 1977, after satellite
monitoring of the Soviet Union was implemented, JANAP 146E
was released. This version relaxed the mandatory reporting
requirement and suggested instructions to report if the reporter
felt that the observation represented a matter of national
security.
The fact is
that from 1947 to 1977 and even to the present, the data has
flowed directly away from civil aviation and into the restricted
arena of the military/intelligence domain via JANAP 146, the
CIRVIS reporting system, Projects Sign, Grudge and Blue Book
and through other data collection programs and systems.
When the JANAP 146 order
was relaxed, commercial and private pilots found themselves
with no specific instructions regarding these unusual incidents
and observations. When the various databases of the FAA, NTSB
and NASA were established, the categories of observation for
UFO/UAP events were not included.
Reasons for this exclusion
may have included personal opinions and beliefs, a general
lack of experience with the phenomena or even the lack of
knowledge regarding the existence of unidentified aerial phenomena,
or perhaps it was the understandable conclusion that the matter
was being handled elsewhere (i.e. the military/intelligence
community). Popular culture and conspiracy theorists have
muddied the waters by supporting an environment of fear. All
of these factors have contributed to a bias against reporting
honest, legitimate incidents involving UAP.
Since the close of Project
Blue Book in 1969 there have been thousands of UAP/UFO reports
made by military and civil aviators, air traffic controllers
and citizens representing all walks of life. These reports
have come from almost every nation on Earth. Examples of UAP
incidents occuring after the close of Project Blue Book can
be found on the websites of both the National Security Agency
and the Central Intelligence Agency.
Currently the US Air Force
does not investigate UFOs. The USAF does receive UFO reports
through CIRVIS, and through the Air Route Traffic Control
Centers (ARTCC) system and NORAD as well as from its own pilots
and air controllers. The question regarding whether or not
other government agencies study UAP/UFO reports remains unresolved
though there are no known public agencies involved in UFO
investigation.
Most importantly, there
has never been a formal inquiry into these observations and
incidents by the US aviation system. The majority
of the cases that have been declassified have been made available
in the last decade and the information has simply not been
compiled in a fashion that can be examined by the aviation
community.
There are probably very
good reasons for the military and intelligence community to
acquire and develop UAP data. However, the aviation community
is directly affected by these phenomena. Those aviation professionals
who witness UAP or experience safety related UAP encounters
deserve respect and support from all levels of the US aviation
system and the scientific community.
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