Home Pentagon Files Pentagon Declassifies 2022 Syria UAP Video, Offers No Explanation

Pentagon Declassifies 2022 Syria UAP Video, Offers No Explanation

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Pentagon Declassifies 2022 Syria UAP Video, Offers No Explanation

Syria, May 24, 2026 — infopulsetoday.com — The Pentagon’s latest declassification — a 2022 video of an unidentified object over Syria — answers almost nothing. That may be the point. The footage, released under the PURSUE policy framework, shows a speck moving across a clear sky.

No wings.

No exhaust plume. No deviation from a straight line.

The platform that recorded it, operating under the callsign “HD” on a mission designated “HD,” captured the object at a consistent altitude and speed.

The Department of War has not identified it. The report does not attribute it to any known foreign or domestic technology.

That last sentence is the story.

This is the fourth UAP video released under PURSUE since the policy took effect. Each one follows the same pattern. A military sensor catches something that does not match known aircraft profiles.

The footage gets forwarded to the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, which sits inside the Office of the Secretary of Defense. AARO coordinates analysis across the military and intelligence communities.

Then, after review, the video enters the public record.

The object in this clip was recorded on June 13, 2022. The sensor was airborne.

The “HD” descriptor in the file name — “dow-uap-pr074-callsign-missionhd-20220613” — suggests a high-definition electro-optical or infrared system. The sky behind the object is clear. No atmospheric anomalies are visible.

The object itself shows no sign of propulsion.

No heat signature. No control surfaces.

None of this is unusual for UAP footage.

What is unusual is the speed of the release. The PURSUE framework, established to standardize reporting across the Department of Defense, mandates transparency.

But transparency has a cost.

Each declassification invites scrutiny. Each video becomes a Rorschach test. Some see a drone.

Some see a sensor artifact. Some see something else entirely.

The Department of War has not weighed in on any of those interpretations.

The report simply states the facts of the recording and leaves the object unidentified. That is the correct bureaucratic move.

Identify nothing until you are certain. And certainty, in this field, is rare. AARO’s job is to change that.

The office was created to bring rigor to UAP analysis.

Standardized reporting forms. Centralized data collection.

Cross-agency coordination.

The goal is to move from anecdote to evidence. But evidence takes time.

The 2022 Syria footage is now three years old.

It was declassified under a policy that did not exist when it was recorded. That lag is built into the system. Sensors capture data.

Analysts review it. Classification levels are adjudicated.

Only then does the public see what the military saw.

What the public sees in this video is a moving dot. That is all the metadata confirms.

An object. A sensor. A date.

A location.

The rest is inference. The PURSUE policy was designed to make that inference less necessary.

By releasing footage like this, the Department of War hopes to build a baseline.

A public record of what is being seen, where, and by whom. Over time, patterns may emerge.

Objects that appear in multiple sensors.

Objects that maneuver in ways that defy known physics. Objects that can be correlated with civil aviation data or satellite tracking. None of that applies to the Syria video.

It is a single sensor capture of a single object on a single flight path. No deviation.

No acceleration.

No explanation. The report does not say what the object was.

It does not say what it was not. It says only what the sensor recorded. That is the limit of the data.

And that limit is the story.

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