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Cover of DOW-UAP-D75, Mission Report, Gulf of Aden, July 2024
DOW Mission Report SECRET

2024 DOW-UAP-D75, Mission Report, Gulf of Aden, July 2024

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

Archive ID: DOW-UAP-D75, Mission Report Gulf Of Aden July 2024 | Release 01 | 2024
Document Details
Agency
DOW
Type
Mission Report
Classification
SECRET
Pages
3
Date
2024
Location
Middle East
Download PDF
Original Document
Cover of DOW-UAP-D75, Mission Report, Gulf of Aden, July 2024
Original Document
Mission Report · 3 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 --- Recommendation by MG Brandon R. Tegtmeier USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Recommended on: 2 June 2025 FOUO / Privacy Act applies SECRET//REL TO USA, FVEY Misrep 10194673 Narrative (S//REL TO U…’ aiBriefing: ’## Document Overview

A mission report (MISREP) from U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM), recommended for release on 2 June 2025, documents an intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) flight that recorded a single UAP observation. The document is part of USCENTCOM MDR 25-0072, approved for release to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) with handling caveats.

Source: Page 1 header, Recommendation line, and MDR number; OCR text pages 1-3.

What This Document Contains

  • A sanitized narrative of an ISR mission flown by an Air Force asset on 14 July 2024 (Zulu time), including departure, arrival on station, target development tasks, and a UAP sighting at 140517Z.

  • Administrative metadata: mission hours, imagery exploitation, classification (SECRET//REL TO USA, FVEY), originating unit (124 ATKS), and approval chain through 379 AEW and USCENTCOM.

  • The UAP observation is noted with a cross-reference “(SEE UAP1)”, but the referenced attachment or imagery is not included in this release.

Source: Page 1 narrative block; Pages 2-3 administrative sections.

Key Observations

The narrative states (with redactions): “1.4a OBSERVED 1X UAP AT 140517ZJUL24 IVO 38P MT 53 1.4a 17 1.4a (SEE UAP1).” No further description of the object’s characteristics, behavior, or sensor data appears in the released text.

Source: Page 1, lines from the “Narrative” section.

Context & Significance

The MISREP is a routine operational reporting format used by Air Force ISR units to summarize mission events. Its inclusion of a UAP entry reflects that such observations are logged in operational channels. The document was declassified and released to AARO under a Mandatory Declassification Review (MDR) request, indicating official interest in cataloging UAP encounters from military assets. No assessment of the UAP’s nature is provided; the entry is purely observational.

Source: Page 1-3 classification and declassification markings; “Approved for Release to AARO” annotation.

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • A U.S. military ISR platform detected one object that the reporting crew categorized as a UAP at a specified time and grid location within the USCENTCOM area of responsibility.

  • The observation was integrated into a standard mission report and later cleared for sharing with AARO.

What this document does NOT show:

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.

  • No definitive identification of the observed phenomena.

  • No imagery, telemetry, or follow-up analysis is present; the “UAP1” reference suggests additional data exists but is not part of this release.

Assessment: The document is a single-line log of a UAP encounter with no descriptive details, limiting its evidentiary value. It demonstrates that UAP sightings are formally recorded by operational units and can be surfaced through declassification processes, but offers no basis for attribution. Independent analysis should seek the full, unredacted MISREP and associated sensor data.’ keyFindings: [] tags:

  • DOW
  • Mission Report
  • Middle East relatedFiles: [] featured: false heroImage: /pdf-covers/dow-uap-d75-mission-report-gulf-of-aden-july-2024.png documentType: Mission Report region: Middle East decade: 2020s releaseBatch: Release 01 coverImage: /pdf-covers/dow-uap-d75-mission-report-gulf-of-aden-july-2024.png archiveId: DOW-UAP-D75,_Mission_Report,_Gulf_of_Aden,_July_2024 warGovUrl: https://www.war.gov/ufo/#DOW-UAP-D75, Mission Report Gulf Of Aden July 2024 officialDescription: ’--- Page 1 --- Recommendation by MG Brandon R. Tegtmeier USCENTCOM Chief of Staff Recommended on: 2 June 2025 FOUO / Privacy Act applies SECRET//REL TO USA, FVEY Misrep 10194673 Narrative (S//REL TO USA, FVEY) TAIL NUMBER 1.4a 1.4a TOOK OFF FROM 1.4a AT 140222ZJUL24 VIA 1.4a AND ARRIVED ON STATION AT 140300ZJUL24. 1.4a UTILIZED 1.4a THROUGHOUT MISSION BETWEEN HANDOVER AND HANDBACK.’ 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 mission report (MISREP) from U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM), recommended for release on 2 June 2025, documents an intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) flight that recorded a single UAP observation. The document is part of USCENTCOM MDR 25-0072, approved for release to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) with handling caveats.

Source: Page 1 header, Recommendation line, and MDR number; OCR text pages 1-3.

What This Document Contains

  • A sanitized narrative of an ISR mission flown by an Air Force asset on 14 July 2024 (Zulu time), including departure, arrival on station, target development tasks, and a UAP sighting at 140517Z.
  • Administrative metadata: mission hours, imagery exploitation, classification (SECRET//REL TO USA, FVEY), originating unit (124 ATKS), and approval chain through 379 AEW and USCENTCOM.
  • The UAP observation is noted with a cross-reference “(SEE UAP1)”, but the referenced attachment or imagery is not included in this release.

Source: Page 1 narrative block; Pages 2-3 administrative sections.

Key Observations

The narrative states (with redactions): “1.4a OBSERVED 1X UAP AT 140517ZJUL24 IVO 38P MT 53 1.4a 17 1.4a (SEE UAP1).” No further description of the object’s characteristics, behavior, or sensor data appears in the released text.

Source: Page 1, lines from the “Narrative” section.

Context & Significance

The MISREP is a routine operational reporting format used by Air Force ISR units to summarize mission events. Its inclusion of a UAP entry reflects that such observations are logged in operational channels. The document was declassified and released to AARO under a Mandatory Declassification Review (MDR) request, indicating official interest in cataloging UAP encounters from military assets. No assessment of the UAP’s nature is provided; the entry is purely observational.

Source: Page 1-3 classification and declassification markings; “Approved for Release to AARO” annotation.

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • A U.S. military ISR platform detected one object that the reporting crew categorized as a UAP at a specified time and grid location within the USCENTCOM area of responsibility.
  • The observation was integrated into a standard mission report and later cleared for sharing with AARO.

What this document does NOT show:

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.
  • No definitive identification of the observed phenomena.
  • No imagery, telemetry, or follow-up analysis is present; the “UAP1” reference suggests additional data exists but is not part of this release.

Assessment: The document is a single-line log of a UAP encounter with no descriptive details, limiting its evidentiary value. It demonstrates that UAP sightings are formally recorded by operational units and can be surfaced through declassification processes, but offers no basis for attribution. Independent analysis should seek the full, unredacted MISREP and associated sensor data.

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