2023 DOW-UAP-D33, Mission Report, Greece, October 2023
DOW Mission Report — Declassified UFO document from UFO Files Archive.
Document Details
- Agency
- DOW
- Type
- Mission Report
- Classification
- UNCLASSIFIED
- Pages
- 2
- Date
- 2023
- Location
- Europe
⚠️ AI-Generated Summary: This summary is generated from publicly released government documents for informational purposes only. Always refer to the original document linked above for the complete unredacted record.
Page 1 --- Misrep 9329374 Dedasslfied by MG Richard A. Harrison USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Dedassified on· 22 January 2026 Narrative l AT 2339ZJ 1.4a ITOOK OFF FROM LGLR. AT 235 z,~HANDED OVER FROM …’ aiBriefing: ’## Document Overview
A declassified U.S. military Mission Report (MISREP) documents an intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) flight that observed a “poss UAP” (possible Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon). The report was originated by the 33rd Special Operations Squadron under Air Force Special Operations Command and declassified on 22 January 2026 by U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM).
Source: Document metadata and OCR text: “Misrep 9329374 Dedasslfied by MG Richard A. Harrison USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Dedassified on· 22 January 2026”; “Originator (Unit or Squadron): 33 SOS”; “Major Command (MAJCOM): AFSOC”
What This Document Contains
-
A timeline of a nighttime ISR mission that took off from LGLR, conducted tasked operations, and returned to base, with a single UAP observation at 0035Z.
-
Operational details redacted under FOIA exemptions (b)(3), (b)(6) and other codes, including aircraft callsign, personnel names, and specific tasking data.
-
A reference to a separate UAP report (“SEE UAP 1”) that is not included in this MISREP.
-
Metadata indicating the report was subsequently processed for release to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).
Source: OCR extracted text, Mission Narrative section, and classification metadata: “AT 0035Z,[u;JOBSERVED lX POSS UAP (SEE UAP 1)”; “USCENTCOM MDR 26-0019 Approved for Release to AARO”; redaction markings “1.4a”, “3.5c, (b)(6)”
Key Observations
“AT 0035Z,[u;JOBSERVED lX POSS UAP (SEE UAP 1).” The report states that the aircrew observed one possible UAP, with details deferred to a separate UAP report. The nature, appearance, or behavior of the object is not described in this MISREP.
Source: Page 1 OCR text, Narrative section
Context & Significance
This is a contemporary mission report (dated approximately 2024–2025 based on the 2026 declassification) from a special operations ISR platform operating in the USCENTCOM area of responsibility. It indicates that UAP sightings are documented and segregated into dedicated reporting channels (UAP 1) within mission reports, and that such reports are later reviewed for AARO release. The document provides no technical analysis and serves only as a record of the sighting event.
Source: Mission metadata (Operation Domain: AIR, Operations Center: 603rd, COCOM: USCENTCOM); declassification date; “Approved for Release to AARO” marking
Evidence Assessment
What this document shows:
- A U.S. military aircrew positively identified a “possible UAP” during an operational ISR flight, recorded as a discrete event with a cross-reference to a detailed UAP report.
What this document does NOT show:
-
No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.
-
No definitive identification, characterization, or resolution of the observed phenomenon.
-
No sensor data, imagery, or description of the UAP — all details are deferred to a separate report not included here.
-
Independent analysis should refer to original document and any associated UAP 1 report.
[WARN] Assessment: The document provides only a log of a “possible UAP” sighting with no corroborating data. The reference to a UAP-specific report suggests a follow-on analysis may exist, but this MISREP alone offers insufficient evidence to assess the nature or credibility of the observation beyond serving as a record of the event.’ keyFindings: [] tags:
- DOW
- Mission Report
- Europe relatedFiles: [] featured: false heroImage: /pdf-covers/dow-uap-d33-mission-report-greece-october-2023.png documentType: Mission Report region: Europe decade: 2020s releaseBatch: Release 01 coverImage: /pdf-covers/dow-uap-d33-mission-report-greece-october-2023.png archiveId: DOW-UAP-D33,_Mission_Report,_Greece,_October_2023 warGovUrl: https://www.war.gov/ufo/#DOW-UAP-D33, Mission Report Greece October 2023 officialDescription: ’--- Page 1 --- Misrep 9329374 Dedasslfied by MG Richard A. Harrison USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Dedassified on· 22 January 2026 Narrative l AT 2339ZJ 1.4a ITOOK OFF FROM LGLR. AT 235 z,~HANDED OVER FROM THE LRE.~PROCEEDED TO FRAGGED TASKING TO SUPPORT DATA MASKED.’ evidenceLevel: Sensor Data hasUAPObservation: true mentionsPhysicalEvidence: true mentionsBiological: false ocrQuality: high
[WARN] AI-Generated Summary: This summary is generated from publicly released government documents for informational purposes only. Always refer to the original document linked below for the complete unredacted record.
Document Overview
A declassified U.S. military Mission Report (MISREP) documents an intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) flight that observed a “poss UAP” (possible Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon). The report was originated by the 33rd Special Operations Squadron under Air Force Special Operations Command and declassified on 22 January 2026 by U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM).
Source: Document metadata and OCR text: “Misrep 9329374 Dedasslfied by MG Richard A. Harrison USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Dedassified on· 22 January 2026”; “Originator (Unit or Squadron): 33 SOS”; “Major Command (MAJCOM): AFSOC”
What This Document Contains
- A timeline of a nighttime ISR mission that took off from LGLR, conducted tasked operations, and returned to base, with a single UAP observation at 0035Z.
- Operational details redacted under FOIA exemptions (b)(3), (b)(6) and other codes, including aircraft callsign, personnel names, and specific tasking data.
- A reference to a separate UAP report (“SEE UAP 1”) that is not included in this MISREP.
- Metadata indicating the report was subsequently processed for release to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).
Source: OCR extracted text, Mission Narrative section, and classification metadata: “AT 0035Z,[u;JOBSERVED lX POSS UAP (SEE UAP 1)”; “USCENTCOM MDR 26-0019 Approved for Release to AARO”; redaction markings “1.4a”, “3.5c, (b)(6)”
Key Observations
“AT 0035Z,[u;JOBSERVED lX POSS UAP (SEE UAP 1).” The report states that the aircrew observed one possible UAP, with details deferred to a separate UAP report. The nature, appearance, or behavior of the object is not described in this MISREP.
Source: Page 1 OCR text, Narrative section
Context & Significance
This is a contemporary mission report (dated approximately 2024–2025 based on the 2026 declassification) from a special operations ISR platform operating in the USCENTCOM area of responsibility. It indicates that UAP sightings are documented and segregated into dedicated reporting channels (UAP 1) within mission reports, and that such reports are later reviewed for AARO release. The document provides no technical analysis and serves only as a record of the sighting event.
Source: Mission metadata (Operation Domain: AIR, Operations Center: 603rd, COCOM: USCENTCOM); declassification date; “Approved for Release to AARO” marking
Evidence Assessment
What this document shows:
- A U.S. military aircrew positively identified a “possible UAP” during an operational ISR flight, recorded as a discrete event with a cross-reference to a detailed UAP report.
What this document does NOT show:
- No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.
- No definitive identification, characterization, or resolution of the observed phenomenon.
- No sensor data, imagery, or description of the UAP — all details are deferred to a separate report not included here.
- Independent analysis should refer to original document and any associated UAP 1 report.
[WARN] Assessment: The document provides only a log of a “possible UAP” sighting with no corroborating data. The reference to a UAP-specific report suggests a follow-on analysis may exist, but this MISREP alone offers insufficient evidence to assess the nature or credibility of the observation beyond serving as a record of the event.
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