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Cover of DOW-UAP-D35, Mission Report, Greece, October 2023
DOW Mission Report UNCLASSIFIED

2023 DOW-UAP-D35, Mission Report, Greece, October 2023

DOW Mission Report — Declassified UFO document from UFO Files Archive.

Archive ID: DOW-UAP-D35, Mission Report Greece October 2023 | Release 01 | 2023
Document Details
Agency
DOW
Type
Mission Report
Classification
UNCLASSIFIED
Pages
2
Date
2023
Location
Europe
Download PDF
Original Document
Cover of DOW-UAP-D35, Mission Report, Greece, October 2023
Original Document
Mission Report · 2 pages · Official Source
AI Briefing

⚠️ 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 9337873 Narrative Declassified by MG Richard A. Hamson USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Declassified on: 22 January 2026 AT 15042,I 1.4a ITOOK OFF FROM LGLR. AT 151$2,~HANDED OVER FROM T…’ aiBriefing: ’## Document Overview

This is a declassified Mission Report (MISREP) from United States Central Command (USCENTCOM), detailing an intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) flight that included a possible UAP observation. The document was declassified on 22 January 2026 and approved for release to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).

Source: Page 1 narrative header, declassification statement, and “Approved for Release to AARO” marking.

What This Document Contains

  • A mission narrative for an Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) ISR flight, which took off from LGLR, conducted FMV/SIGINT collection at a specified location, and returned to base after a 20-hour mission.

  • At 0811Z, the crew reported one possible Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon (UAP), designated “UAP 1,” with associated full motion video exploited by a ground element.

  • The report is a declassified MISREP, originally classified under a classification guide with a declassification date of 20481028, and it was released to AARO in January 2026 under USCENTCOM MDR 26-0019.

Source: Page 1 OCR narrative, classification administrative data, and release approval lines.

Key Observations

  • “AT 081 lZ,~BSERVED IX POSS UAP (SEE UAP 1).” (The notation “IX” likely indicates “1X” or one possible UAP; the reference directs to a separate UAP report not included in this document.)

  • The full motion video (FMV) from the mission was exploited by GET, and the UAP sighting presumably occurred during the FMV/SIGINT collection phase near 36S YC 401.4a!5~.

Source: Page 1 OCR text, lines reporting the observation and mission collection details.

Context & Significance

  • This document is an official military MISREP declassified and provided to AARO, highlighting how routine ISR missions capture potential UAP incidents. It demonstrates the formal reporting and video exploitation chain used for such observations within U.S. Central Command’s area of responsibility.

Source: Document metadata indicating USCENTCOM origin, AARO approval, and AFSOC/ISR mission type.

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • A U.S. Air Force ISR crew logged a possible UAP sighting at a specific time during a sortie, and the event was documented with full motion video that was later analyzed.

  • The sighting was deemed significant enough to be included in the mission report and referenced as a separate UAP case file (UAP 1).

What this document does NOT show:

  • No description of the UAP’s appearance, flight characteristics, or any environmental context.

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.

  • No definitive identification of the observed phenomenon; it remains labeled as “possible UAP.”

  • Independent analysis should refer to the original document and the unprovided UAP 1 attachment.

[WARN] Assessment: The evidentiary value of this document alone is low. It only confirms that a potential UAP was observed and reported through formal channels, but it offers no descriptive data to support further analysis. The reference to an external UAP report suggests additional information exists but is not included here, limiting any conclusions.’ keyFindings: [] tags:

  • DOW
  • Mission Report
  • Europe relatedFiles: [] featured: false heroImage: /pdf-covers/dow-uap-d35-mission-report-greece-october-2023.png documentType: Mission Report region: Europe decade: 2020s releaseBatch: Release 01 coverImage: /pdf-covers/dow-uap-d35-mission-report-greece-october-2023.png archiveId: DOW-UAP-D35,_Mission_Report,_Greece,_October_2023 warGovUrl: https://www.war.gov/ufo/#DOW-UAP-D35, Mission Report Greece October 2023 officialDescription: ’--- Page 1 --- Misrep 9337873 Narrative Declassified by MG Richard A. Hamson USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Declassified on: 22 January 2026 AT 15042,I 1.4a ITOOK OFF FROM LGLR. AT 151$2,~HANDED OVER FROM THE LRE.(l;:]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

This is a declassified Mission Report (MISREP) from United States Central Command (USCENTCOM), detailing an intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) flight that included a possible UAP observation. The document was declassified on 22 January 2026 and approved for release to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).

Source: Page 1 narrative header, declassification statement, and “Approved for Release to AARO” marking.

What This Document Contains

  • A mission narrative for an Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) ISR flight, which took off from LGLR, conducted FMV/SIGINT collection at a specified location, and returned to base after a 20-hour mission.
  • At 0811Z, the crew reported one possible Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon (UAP), designated “UAP 1,” with associated full motion video exploited by a ground element.
  • The report is a declassified MISREP, originally classified under a classification guide with a declassification date of 20481028, and it was released to AARO in January 2026 under USCENTCOM MDR 26-0019.

Source: Page 1 OCR narrative, classification administrative data, and release approval lines.

Key Observations

  • “AT 081 lZ,~BSERVED IX POSS UAP (SEE UAP 1).” (The notation “IX” likely indicates “1X” or one possible UAP; the reference directs to a separate UAP report not included in this document.)
  • The full motion video (FMV) from the mission was exploited by GET, and the UAP sighting presumably occurred during the FMV/SIGINT collection phase near 36S YC 401.4a!5~.

Source: Page 1 OCR text, lines reporting the observation and mission collection details.

Context & Significance

  • This document is an official military MISREP declassified and provided to AARO, highlighting how routine ISR missions capture potential UAP incidents. It demonstrates the formal reporting and video exploitation chain used for such observations within U.S. Central Command’s area of responsibility.

Source: Document metadata indicating USCENTCOM origin, AARO approval, and AFSOC/ISR mission type.

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • A U.S. Air Force ISR crew logged a possible UAP sighting at a specific time during a sortie, and the event was documented with full motion video that was later analyzed.
  • The sighting was deemed significant enough to be included in the mission report and referenced as a separate UAP case file (UAP 1).

What this document does NOT show:

  • No description of the UAP’s appearance, flight characteristics, or any environmental context.
  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.
  • No definitive identification of the observed phenomenon; it remains labeled as “possible UAP.”
  • Independent analysis should refer to the original document and the unprovided UAP 1 attachment.

[WARN] Assessment: The evidentiary value of this document alone is low. It only confirms that a potential UAP was observed and reported through formal channels, but it offers no descriptive data to support further analysis. The reference to an external UAP report suggests additional information exists but is not included here, limiting any conclusions.

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