USCENTCOM

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independentJun 7

“If You Knew What I Knew!” -Jeremy Corbell UNLEASHES On Jesse Michels

independentMay 29

All 50 UFO Videos RELEASED by Pentagon: Batch 2

USCENTCOM UAP • JUNE 2020 DOW-UAP-PR059 👀 https://t.co/2zal0HGYAQ

Forensic attributes of the Department of War UAP Video Release: 66% of PDFs rasterized in the 4 days before launch. 95.7% AES-256 encrypted with copy disabled. 32 of 73 DOW sequence numbers withheld (longest run: D66-D73, eight consecutive). 242 active (b)(1) national-security redactions still visible. [Quoted] PURSUE Release 01 was held during the war. The portal launched 3 days after the Iran ceasefire. The USCENTCOM Chiefs of Staff who cleared the files commanded the war the files were wit...

PURSUE Release 01 was held during the war. The portal launched 3 days after the Iran ceasefire. The USCENTCOM Chiefs of Staff who cleared the files commanded the war the files were withheld through. Same airbase that hosted the UAP-encounter aircraft was struck by Iranian missiles 2 months before public release. Full forensic analysis 🔗👇

RT @BenHansen00: In a USCENTCOM Mission Report released with UAP vid, the types of questions on the standard form imply that it happens eno…

https://t.co/4zVldPPBjX [Quoted] The War Dot Gov UFO Release 01 is not 17 files. It is 173. We hashed every artifact. We ran the geographic analysis. 48% of the geo-tagged subset came from CENTCOM AOR. Syria. Iraq. The Persian Gulf. The Strait of Hormuz. The active war zone. A UAP transparency release https://t.co/u9AMSghvfY

ReportAnalyzed
govMay 8, 2026
DOW-UAP-D020, Mission Report, Iraq, 2023
Department of War6 pagesMay 8, 2026RELEASE-01-FILE-045-DOW-UAP-D020-MISSION-REPORT-IRAQ-2023

This document is a Mission Report (MISREP), a standardized reporting form the U.S. Military uses to record the circumstances surrounding its operations. U.S. military services often use MISREPs to report Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) to AARO. The GENTEXT, or “general text” section of these reports often contains important qualitative, contextual information, distinguishing it from the more quantitative, or numerical, data found elsewhere in the report. A U.S. military operator reported observing “several bright objects maneuvering quickly” west to east northeast. The operator reported achieving a track on the UAP via an onboard targeting pod for approximately 20 seconds. The report describes that UAP then dimmed and disappeared from the targeting pod. All descriptive and estimative language contained in this report reflects the reporter’s subjective interpretation at the time of the event. Such characterizations should not be interpreted as a conclusive indication of the presence or absence of any intrinsic object features or performance characteristics.

ReportAnalyzed
govMay 8, 2026
DOW-UAP-D10, Mission Report, Middle East, May 2022
Department of War6 pagesMay 8, 2026RELEASE-01-FILE-035-DOW-UAP-D10-MISSION-REPORT-MIDDLE-EAST-MAY-2022

This document is a Mission Report (MISREP), a standardized reporting form the U.S. Military uses to record the circumstances surrounding its operations. U.S. military services often use MISREPs to report Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) to AARO. The GENTEXT, or “general text” section of these reports often contains important qualitative, contextual information, distinguishing it from the more quantitative, or numerical, data found elsewhere in the report. A U.S. military operator reported observing “5x UAP fly across the screen.” The report continues by describing one of those observations as a “possible missile” and the remaining four as “possible birds.” All descriptive and estimative language contained in this report reflects the reporter’s subjective interpretation at the time of the event. Such characterizations should not be interpreted as a conclusive indication of the presence or absence of any intrinsic object features or performance characteristics.

ReportAnalyzed
govMay 8, 2026
DOW-UAP-D12, Mission Report, Iraq, May 2022
Department of War6 pagesMay 8, 2026RELEASE-01-FILE-036-DOW-UAP-D12-MISSION-REPORT-IRAQ-MAY-2022

This document is a Mission Report (MISREP), a standardized reporting form the U.S. Military uses to record the circumstances surrounding its operations. U.S. military services often use MISREPs to report Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) to AARO. The GENTEXT, or “general text” section of these reports often contains important qualitative, contextual information, distinguishing it from the more quantitative, or numerical, data found elsewhere in the report. A U.S. military operator reported observing one UAP flying north to northeast. The observer reported following the UAP for as long as possible but was unable to positively identify it. All descriptive and estimative language contained in this report reflects the reporter’s subjective interpretation at the time of the event. Such characterizations should not be interpreted as a conclusive indication of the presence or absence of any intrinsic object features or performance characteristics.

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Tim Gallaudet13
UAP James3
The Sentinel Network3
American Alchemy1
Somewhere in the Skies1
Matt Ford (Good Trouble Show)1