Gillibrand, Kirsten
Statements, Media, Interviews
Date | Detail |
06-13-2023 |
“We need to just look into whether there are rogue SAP programs that no one is providing oversight for,” says Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a New York Democrat who led the Senate’s April UAP hearing.
Gillibrand is sponsoring an amendment she hopes to attach to this year’s must-pass National Defense Authorization Act to mandate that no money can be spent on SAP’s unless it's been reported to Congress.
“So if there are SAPs out there that are somehow outside of the normal chain of command and outside the normal appropriations process, they have to divulge that to Congress,” Gilibrand says.
As for whether she thinks there’s any veracity to the whistleblower’s claims? “I have no idea,” Gillibrand says.
“So I'm going to do the work and analyze it and figure it out.” |
06-27-2023 |
Matt Laslo: “Any update on the UAP stuff?”
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07-18-2023 |
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) says Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s new UAP measure seems to have more to do with his predecessor, Harry Reid, than with UFO whistleblower David Grusch.
“But this is a good measure that very much dovetails with the work that we do with both Intel. and Department of Defense.”
In our exclusive interview, Gillibrand gives Ask a Pol subscribers a glimpse into her investigation into David Grusch.
“It's very interesting, and we're continuing to probe and get information. No developments yet,” Gillibrand says.
“But if I had them, I would give them.”
While Reps. Tim Burchett (R-TN) and Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) have faced some pressure, eye rolls and shade ahead of next week’s House UFO hearing, Gillibrand says she’s got no concerns with the House investigation.
“No,” Gillibrand replies. “No.” |
07-27-2023 |
KG: "I didn't see his testimony, whistleblower's testimony, but I've read all the testimony and I know what the nature of all the allegations are, and they're very serious allegations that we have to get to the bottom of what I did three years ago is create an office to do this work. It's called Arrow. And the purpose is to look at all of these unidentified aero phenomenon and all of these anomalous incidents and analyze them and tell us is it a Chinese drone? Is it a Chinese spy balloon? Is it Russian, is it Iranian, or is it something else? And they are now reviewing 600 of these incidents, including the video that the pilots talked about yesterday, what they saw." |
08-08-2023 |
Question:
"What were your biggest takeaways from the recent testimony about alleged secret government programs involving UFOs?"
Gillibrand:
"They are very serious allegations. The hearing had two sets of testimony. The first was from pilots who saw an object flying in the sky that looked like a Tic Tac that had very strange patterns and abilities. Those pilots were retaliated against, and their careers were derailed, which is how I got involved in the issue. We want our pilots and our service members to come forward when they see things that they cannot identify, which is why I created the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office to review all of these unidentified aerial phenomena in a scientific and thorough way.
So far, they are looking at about 600 (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) reports and data sets and they’ve only finished about half of them. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence made a report on what AARO accomplished in January. There they assessed the first 366 unidentified aerial phenomena, about 26 were basically drone-like systems, 163 were balloon or balloon like-entities, six were birds or debris, but they couldn’t identify 171. We realized for AARO to really work better we are going to need a lot more sensors around military bases, nuclear sites, on our aircrafts. That is going to be one of my to-dos for the new Congress. Some of the unidentified aerial phenomena is going to be Chinese, some is going to be Russian, some is going to be Iranian and some may be others. But we need to know what we can know and at least identify the knowable so our pilots are safer, so that we know what else is in the sky. We were not tracking these spy balloons when the AARO office was created. That’s a problem. We need to know when our adversaries are spying on us. We need domain awareness, and we need air superiority. If our adversaries have technology that we don’t have, we need to know about it.
The second testimony was about a service member whose job was to investigate all UAP programs and co-locate them and write an assessment. Through that effort, this whistleblower met several people who said they had worked on alien-related programs where they either had crash material or that crash material resulted in dead aliens. I have no ability to verify that testimony because we’ve not been told of any such programs. We’ve asked for all information related to all programs and have not been given that detail. One of three things are true: Either it doesn’t exist and they worked on programs that were alien-related which weren’t, or they are making it up, or these programs do exist and the Department of Defense is not either read in on it, or the need to know is so small that the people that have been testifying in front of us don’t know about it, or they are just misrepresenting the facts.
I intend to get to the bottom of it. I think these service members – certainly the whistleblowers that I’ve met – are very thoughtful, serious people. So I really want to investigate it to its fullest. An arrow stands for (All-domain) Anomaly Resolution Office." |
09-06-2023 |
“I’ve got to follow up on getting the meetings. I don't know what happened to the requests for meetings with the whistleblowers, but I don't know where it is right now so I gotta find out,” Gillibrand tells Ask a Pol. “Just have to get things on the schedule.” |
09-27-2023 |
ML: “I’m curious, there’s rumors floating around—I asked Warner about it earlier, but…—claims that Warner himself shut down any UAP hearings in the Senate. What do you…?” Gillibrand’s face instantly says, “WTF?”
ML: “I know!”
KG: “I've not heard that.”
ML: “But he doesn't have that power?”
KG: “Yeah. I've definitely not heard that before.”
ML: “Any update on your…?”
[Subscriber-only content.]
KG: “I've asked for a meeting, and I think it's going to be scheduled soon—especially with that one whistleblower.”
ML: “Any update on…”
I stop myself and confirm.
ML: “‘That one whistleblower’—Grusch? David Grusch?”
Gillibrand nods in affirmative.
ML: “Any update on your desire for an open hearing on UAPs?”
KG: “I did one open hearing, and you came to that, right?”
ML: “Yeah.”
KG: “Yeah. So I did one open hearing. And there's going to be a public report by AARO very soon, so that’s due in probably like a month or so. So I'm looking forward to that, and I'll probably have another hearing aligned with that public report.”
ML: “Oh, interesting. And, like, after the House had their Oversight hearing with Grusch. What, like, 50% of his claims—or when he testified, he said, ‘I have to be in a SCIF…’”
KG: “These claims are very serious, and I take all of them very seriously. And I want to make sure our service members know they can come forward and disclose all projects they worked on. And it's important that the whistleblower community feels comfortable talking to AARO and having those conversations in SCIFs so that AARO can do its job thoroughly. Otherwise, they can't. So if the whistleblowers don't come forward, they can't assess their claims, they can't find programs that they're talking about.”
ML: “This other thing Warner said, he said, him and Rubio sat down with Kirkpatrick themselves. I inquired about whether they brought up [Sen. Mike] Rounds’ concern, which is just that, whistleblowers feel like they can’t…”
KG: “They have to trust the process that Sen. Rubio and Sen. Rounds and I have set up to do this work, and if they don't trust it we can't get to the bottom of anything because we can't do all the interviews that are needed to figure out what's existing, what's not existing and, frankly, what creation of programs we need in the future to better to monitor our skies, have air dominance, have—pilot safety. Things that really matter.”
ML: “It just feels like there's less impetus, less pressure…” |
10-19-2023 |
Matt Laslo: “So right now, there’s reports that the House, they’ve gonna be able to bring in Grusch in a SCIF.”
Gillibrand: “Oh, that’s great!” Laslo: “Along with with some other folks.” Gillibrand: “Oh, I’ll try to get invited to that.”
Laslo: “Oh, will you?”
Gillibrand: “Yes, I will ask to be invited. When are they doing that?
Laslo: (inaudible)
Gillibrand: “But he lives in California (Colorado). There’s no reason he can come in and testify in a SCIF."
Laslo: “I know, right?“
Gillibrand: “He spoke to our intelligence staff at some point in time."
Laslo: "Have you had trouble?"
Gillibrand: “Yes.”
Laslo: “Have you been able to work it out?”
Gillibrand: “He doesn’t wanna… He needs me to pay for his flight.”
Laslo: “Oh yeah?”
Gillibrand: “Because I don’t have a budget to pay for his flight or hotels. So, I can talk to him on the phone but then he can’t tell me anything classified.”
Laslo: “But maybe you can piggyback on?”
Gillibrand: “Yeah, if the House has anything I can go to, I’ll go.” |
10-25-2023 |
Senator Gillibrand has phone call with David Grusch. |
11-14-2023 |
ML: “Curious, do you — have you looked at that report from AARO and Kirkpatrick?”
KG: “Not yet.”
ML: “That declassified one?”
KG: “Is it out yet? When did it come out?” |
12-14-2023 |
Matt Laslo: “How do you think this UAP amendment came out?”
Kirsten Gillibrand: “I need more information.”
ML: “Did you see Schumer's floor speech?”
KG: “I did, and I need more information about that.”
ML: “Have you met Kirkpatrick’s new replacement?”
KG: “Not yet, but I will. But I had a long debrief with Kirkpatrick. It went very well. So I'm gonna meet the new guy, and we’ll assess what the status is because I wasn't sure about it. I didn't know about Chuck [Schumer]’s speech, but I happened to be there. So I’m gonna assess it.”
ML: “It feels like the mood’s changed on the issue related to Grusch stuff.”
KG: “How do you see it changed?”
ML: “It’s just—less interest. There's not much of an investigation going on over here, it doesn’t seem.”
KG: “No. I need to look into it. I need to figure out what's going on. I don't know yet, so I'll give you more later, as soon as I figure more things out.”
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01-24-2024 |
Sen. Gillibrand takes part in a classified UAP hearing. |
01-25-2024 |
Matt Laslo: “Still standing. Did you meet with the interim head of AARO yesterday [CORRECTION: Tuesday]?”
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01-28-2024 |
Steven Greenstreet: Can you please comment on Kirkpatrick's claim that Congress has been duped by a small group of UFO "conspiracists"? |
02-11-2024 |
Matt Laslo: “Having fun secret meetings underground?”
Kirsten Gillibrand: “We do. They’re always fun.”
ML: “I just saw [Sen. Susan] Collins (R-ME) go down [to the SCIF].”
KG: “Oh, I’m just going to the Dominican Republic…”
ML: “Was curious, what was your guys’ classified UAP briefing in January? You have it on your public schedule.”
KG: “Umm. It wasn’t about UAP.”
ML: “Oh really, it wasn’t?”
Gillibrand shakes her head.
ML: “Typo.”
KG: “No. It was in the context of that, but it was not about that. It was about broader…”
Gillibrand flashes, ‘I can’t say’ look, as they pass through the heavy fireproof doors leading into the CVC.
ML: “Have you reached out to AARO [All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office] at all?“
KG: “Not yet, but I’ve asked to meet the guy. Remember, I’m going to meet with the interim guy?”
Gillibrand looks to her staffer.
ML: “I think it’s Tim Phillips?”
They agree.
KG: “Yeah, I mean, Tim Phillips.”
ML: “You’ve already met with him in the past, you just didn’t know he was interim?”
KG: “Have I met with Tim Phillips in the past?”
ML: “I don’t know.”
KG: “I don’t think I have.”
ML: “I haven’t.”
KG: “I’m going to meet with him. I’m gonna meet with him. Umm.”
ML: “Feels like this is still the start of — oh no, kind of a slow start to the year, but it’s a campaign year and all that. The border deal kinda sucks a lot of the oxygen out of the town?”
KG: “Yeah.”
ML: “Yeah? Umm.”
KG: “But we’ll get back to it, I promise.” |
02-29-2024 |
SCENE: Gillibrand just cast a vote on the Senate floor and is heading for the closest elevator, when she’s surprised to bump into Ask a Pol’s Matt Laslo.
Matt Laslo: “Hey senator.”
Kirsten Gillibrand: “Oh hey.”
ML: “Separate topic.”
KG: “Yeah.”
ML: “I’m wondering about your trip to Nevada with the Air Force.”
KG: “Excellent.”
ML: “What [were] the topics de jour? I was a little surprised to see you out there.”
KG: “Manufacturing.”
ML: “Manufacturing?”
KG: “Yeah.”
ML: “Cause, you know, in the House they’re investigating whether…”
KG: “I was in Nevada and California, and so I got to tour a couple of different manufacturers, and what they’re doing for the Air Force is very exciting.”
ML: “Cause in the House they’re investigating the UAP issue and whether Northrop Grumman and Lockheed are part of the ‘cover-up.’ Did that come up at all?”
KG: “Yeah, I know that allegation. I know the allegation. Did not come up in my review.”
ML: “No?”
KG: “But I was very grateful to see the excellent work that our military’s doing.”
ML: “Yeah? Was that campaign stuff for your colleagues?”
KG: “Everything I was doing was classified that was Air Force-related. But what I was doing in Nevada after and California after, was for my campaign.”
ML: “You guys have so much fun with your classifications.”
KG: “I know!”
ML: “Have fun, ma’am! Preciate ya.” |
03-16-2024 |
ML: “Have you had time to check out that new AARO report yet? The declassified one?” KG: “Haven’t read it yet.”
ML: “No?”
KG: “I read the reports on what it said, but I don’t have it yet.”
ML: “Yeah? I’ll look for you next week on it.”
KG: “Yeah. I’ll read it. Thank you.” |
03-21-2024 |
Matt Laslo: “I wanted to ask you, did you see that Joint Chiefs of Staff letter last May? The one about — or on UAPs but kind of just alerting…?”
Kirsten Gillibrand: “I don’t remember what it said. I imagine I saw it, but I think what they’re most worried about is safety for pilots and domain awareness around bases and around nuclear sites. It’s essential that we have full domain awareness in our most specialized, most top-secret locations. We don’t want spying by adversaries. and so, we hadn’t developed the technology or the ability to detect all these items, and there’s been a couple of drone attacks* that are concerning.” *Gillibrand misspoke.
ML: “Yeah?”
KG: “So…”
ML: “Oh interesting, ‘attacks’?”
KG: “What?”
ML: “Attacks? Or surveillance?”
KG: “That’s not the right word.”
One of Gillibrand’s aides went ahead to the Senate Dining Room — which is Senators Only — and keeps sticking his head out every lil bit to speed her and her other aide up.
Gillibrand aide: “Senator, you really have to get going.”
KG to aide: “I know. Oh my gosh.” Gillibrand turns back to Ask a Pol.
KG: “You’re right, drone ‘attack’ isn’t the right word, but drone…”
ML: “Incursions?”
KG: “Incursions. That are disturbing and need to be known and seen and be able to be taken down. So we had that — we had some hearings on that already.”
ML: “Interesting. ‘Preciate ya.”
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05-02-2024 |
Matt Laslo: “I haven’t seen you since you met with Timothy Phillips at AARO — their interim director.”
Kirsten Gillibrand: “Yes, I did.”
ML: “How did that go?”
KG: “Very well. I think he's incredibly competent. He was working with Dr. [Sean] Kirkpatrick all along. I let him know that I'd like to have a public hearing this summer. And so he's gonna put together some data and information to disclose in a public hearing to show what work they've done, especially examples of things that were unknown that they've been able to figure out and examples of things that were unknown that they still haven't figured out…”
ML: “Interesting.”
ML: “That's interesting, cause their declassified report kinda made it feel like case closed. But so you want…” KG: “Oh, it's definitely not case closed. I think that their report was just that their analysis of everything they were shown and everyone they talked to, cause they had no basis to say there's a secret program. But of note, the two whistleblowers that I've met with did not meet with AARO and refused to meet with AARO. And so maybe the next director they'll meet with, but I can't assess them unless AARO can talk to them, cause I don’t — I mean, AARO knows what they know and what they've seen and what they've been shown.”
ML: “Have you met with David Grusch yet?”
KG: “No. We invited him to come, and I was supposed to meet with him and Dr. Kirkpatrick together, but they ultimately declined that meeting.”
ML: “Interesting. I'll keep my ears out for the hearing this summer.”
KG: “Yeah, so we're gonna try to do something this summer to just, again, keep the public aware of where we are, what we know, what we don't know and how we're going to gather data from here going forward so we have more robust information.”
ML: “Interesting. Have you heard anything about people at the Pentagon, like [National Security Advisor] Jake Sullivan or [Defense Secretary] Lloyd Austin working to kinda gut the Schumer — your amendment last year in the NDAA with [Senate Majority Leader Chuck] Schumer?”
KG: “I did not hear about that. I think it was very important that the way the amendment was worded, that it didn't disclose SAPs [Special Access Programs] related to US-based programs. I think it was much more about, let's frame this the right way so that we're not disclosing programs that we don't think should ever be made public, that have nothing to do with the issue of concern, unidentified aerial phenomena.”
ML: “Because they've never really had these conversations or had to release it publicly?”
KG: “Right. I think it was maybe just worded too broadly. So, I think, if there was any effort, it was to just make sure it disclosed UAP-specific things.”
ML: “Any work on that amendment for this NDAA?”
KG: “The required disclosure?”
ML: “Yeah, or expanding it or...”
KG: “I don't know. I thought we passed the provisions of that amendment.”
ML: “Yeah, but some people — like folks on the House Congressional UAP Caucus — they want it.”
KG: “They wanna have a different version of it?”
ML: “I think so…”
KG: “I'll take a look at whatever — I thought we passed what we were hoping to pass.”
ML: “….about them saying Schumer — or your amendment with Schumer got really watered down.”
KG: “Mine's different. I thought Chuck got done what he wanted to get done, but maybe I'm mistaken. I thought he accomplished what he wanted. The work I wanna keep doing is to have much more thorough data collection, because we are still seeing so many unidentified aerial phenomena and we don't know what they are. And that's very frustrating.”
ML: “It's terrifying.”
KG: “It's terrifying from a national security perspective and just for these pilots to have to fly and do their jobs to not be safe and to not know what they're running up against. And I'm just very worried about technology that we're not aware of, particularly if it's from an adversary that's doing it for malign interests, whether it's Russia, China, Iran or others. Very important.” |
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