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Cover of State Department UAP Cable 5, Mexico, September 16, 2003
DOW Cable UNCLASSIFIED

2003 State Department UAP Cable 5, Mexico, September 16, 2003

DOW Cable — Declassified UFO document from UFO Files Archive.

Archive ID: State Department Uap Cable 5 Mexico September 16 2003 | Release 01 | 2003
Document Details
Agency
DOW
Type
Cable
Classification
UNCLASSIFIED
Pages
4
Date
2003
Location
US
Download PDF
Original Document
Cover of State Department UAP Cable 5, Mexico, September 16, 2003
Original Document
Cable · 4 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 --- UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASSIFIED set! MRN: 23 MEXICO 2544 Date/DTG: Sep 16, 2023 / 160150Z SEP 23 From: AMEMBASSY MEXICO Action: WASHDC, SECSTATE Routine E.O: 13526 TAGS: PGOV, PREL, ASEC, TSP…’ aiBriefing: ’## Document Overview

This is a U.S. Department of State UNCLASSIFIED cable from the American Embassy in Mexico, dated September 16, 2023. It is a “Weekly Political Blotter” summarizing Mexican domestic political developments. Among the listed highlights is an entry that the Mexican Congress heard testimony on “alien life.”

Source: Document metadata, official description, and OCR extracted text (Page 1).

What This Document Contains

  • A routine diplomatic summary of Mexican political events, including candidate disputes, electoral commission appointments, and security official changes.

  • A brief, one-line mention that the Mexican Congress held a hearing featuring testimony on “alien life,” with no further details provided in the available excerpt.

  • The document is UNCLASSIFIED, carries handling tags focused on politics, government, and security, and was released in full.

Source: Official description; OCR extracted text, Page 1, subject line and bullet list.

Key Observations

The only reference to UAP-related content is the bullet: “Mexican Congress Hears Testimony on Alien Life.” No additional text from that segment appears in the supplied OCR extract (first 3000 characters). The cable provides no names, dates, content, or context for the testimony.

Source: Page 1, “set!” section bullet list; subsequent OCR text cuts off before that item is expanded.

Context & Significance

This cable captures U.S. diplomatic monitoring of routine Mexican political events. The inclusion of a congressional hearing on “alien life” indicates the embassy considered it of note in a political update, but the document itself contains no analysis or follow-up. For UAP research, it serves only as a tertiary confirmation that such a hearing took place; the cable’s primary purpose is political reporting.

Source: Document TAGS (PGOV, PREL, ASEC, TSPA, KJUS, KCRM, MX) and Routine action marking.

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • The U.S. Embassy in Mexico was aware that the Mexican Congress received testimony on “alien life” during the week of September 11–15, 2023, and flagged it as a political blotter item.

What this document does NOT show:

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.

  • No description of the testimony’s content, witnesses, or conclusions.

  • No U.S. government assessment or verification of the claims made.

  • Independent analysis should refer to the original full cable and Mexican congressional records for substantive details.

[WARN] Assessment: The document offers only a passing mention with no substantive information. Its evidentiary value for UAP research is negligible beyond establishing that the hearing occurred and the embassy took cursory notice. The lack of detail precludes any evaluation of the testimony’s nature or credibility.’ keyFindings: [] tags:

  • DOW
  • Cable
  • US relatedFiles: [] featured: false heroImage: /pdf-covers/state-department-uap-cable-5-mexico-september-16-2003.png documentType: Cable region: US decade: 2000s releaseBatch: Release 01 coverImage: /pdf-covers/state-department-uap-cable-5-mexico-september-16-2003.png archiveId: State_Department_UAP_Cable_5,_Mexico,_September_16,_2003 warGovUrl: https://www.war.gov/ufo/#State Department Uap Cable 5 Mexico September 16 2003 officialDescription: ’--- Page 1 --- UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASSIFIED set! MRN: 23 MEXICO 2544 Date/DTG: Sep 16, 2023 / 160150Z SEP 23 From: AMEMBASSY MEXICO Action: WASHDC, SECSTATE Routine E.O: 13526 TAGS: PGOV, PREL, ASEC, TSPA, KJUS, KCRM, MX Captions: Reference: A) 23 MEXICO 2468 B) 23 MEXICO 2166 C) 23 MEXICO 2346 Subject: (U) Mexico: Weekly Political Blotter, Sep 11-15 (U) Mexico: Weekly Political Blotter, Sep 11-15
    1. ~ This edition of Mission Mexico”s Political Blotter features: • Ebrard Challenges MORENA Election, Threatens to Leave Party • INE Names Commission Members Ahead of 2024 Election • Mexico City Security Secretary Steps Down, Might Run for Mexico City Head of Government • Pablo Vazquez Becomes Mexico City”s New Security Secretary • Former MORENA Senate Leader Ricardo Monreal Will Not Run for Mexico City Head of Government • Criminals Targeting and Killing Prosecutors in Guerrero • Guadalajara May’ evidenceLevel: Historical Record hasUAPObservation: true mentionsPhysicalEvidence: false 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 U.S. Department of State UNCLASSIFIED cable from the American Embassy in Mexico, dated September 16, 2023. It is a “Weekly Political Blotter” summarizing Mexican domestic political developments. Among the listed highlights is an entry that the Mexican Congress heard testimony on “alien life.”

Source: Document metadata, official description, and OCR extracted text (Page 1).

What This Document Contains

  • A routine diplomatic summary of Mexican political events, including candidate disputes, electoral commission appointments, and security official changes.
  • A brief, one-line mention that the Mexican Congress held a hearing featuring testimony on “alien life,” with no further details provided in the available excerpt.
  • The document is UNCLASSIFIED, carries handling tags focused on politics, government, and security, and was released in full.

Source: Official description; OCR extracted text, Page 1, subject line and bullet list.

Key Observations

The only reference to UAP-related content is the bullet: “Mexican Congress Hears Testimony on Alien Life.” No additional text from that segment appears in the supplied OCR extract (first 3000 characters). The cable provides no names, dates, content, or context for the testimony.

Source: Page 1, “set!” section bullet list; subsequent OCR text cuts off before that item is expanded.

Context & Significance

This cable captures U.S. diplomatic monitoring of routine Mexican political events. The inclusion of a congressional hearing on “alien life” indicates the embassy considered it of note in a political update, but the document itself contains no analysis or follow-up. For UAP research, it serves only as a tertiary confirmation that such a hearing took place; the cable’s primary purpose is political reporting.

Source: Document TAGS (PGOV, PREL, ASEC, TSPA, KJUS, KCRM, MX) and Routine action marking.

Evidence Assessment

What this document shows:

  • The U.S. Embassy in Mexico was aware that the Mexican Congress received testimony on “alien life” during the week of September 11–15, 2023, and flagged it as a political blotter item.

What this document does NOT show:

  • No confirmation of extraterrestrial origin or technology.
  • No description of the testimony’s content, witnesses, or conclusions.
  • No U.S. government assessment or verification of the claims made.
  • Independent analysis should refer to the original full cable and Mexican congressional records for substantive details.

[WARN] Assessment: The document offers only a passing mention with no substantive information. Its evidentiary value for UAP research is negligible beyond establishing that the hearing occurred and the embassy took cursory notice. The lack of detail precludes any evaluation of the testimony’s nature or credibility.

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