Home Pentagon Files DoW Policy Framework PURSUE Led to Release of 2015 UAP Report PR70

DoW Policy Framework PURSUE Led to Release of 2015 UAP Report PR70

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DoW Policy Framework PURSUE Led to Release of 2015 UAP Report PR70

Eglin Air Force Base, May 23, 2026 — infopulsetoday.com — The Department of War’s decision to declassify a 2015 UAP encounter near Eglin Air Force Base did not happen in a vacuum. It is the direct result of a policy framework called PURSUE, mandated by the Office of the Secretary of Defense. That framework compels transparency.

And on May 6, 2026, it produced document PR70. The report describes a 90-second event.

An aircrew, flying a platform equipped with an AN/APG-79 radar system, detected an object over the Gulf of Mexico at 23:30 local time on March 1, 2015.

The radar track file is labeled IIR-1-655-S0301-23. The object held steady at 20,000 feet.

Speed: 150 knots. No deviation. No change.

That steadiness is what the sensor data captured.

The crew also saw it. They described a metallic sphere.

No markings.

No lights. No visible propulsion system.

No aerodynamic control surfaces.

Just a sphere, hanging in the dark above the water. Why release this now? The PURSUE policy, established by the Office of the Secretary of Defense, requires periodic declassification of UAP reports.

This is not a leak. It is a scheduled disclosure.

The Department of War is following its own rules.

The report itself offers no analysis of what the object was or where it came from. That is not its job.

Its job is to document what the sensors and the crew recorded. It does that. Eglin Air Force Base is a major hub for fighter aircraft and advanced sensor testing.

The report does not specify the exact type of aircraft involved, but the AN/APG-79 radar is a system found on modern fighter jets.

The platform carried sensor suites typical of aircraft stationed at that base. The encounter occurred during routine training operations.

So what is the context?

The military has acknowledged for years that pilots see things they cannot explain. The difference now is that the government is releasing the raw data.

The radar track file is part of the public record.

The video of the sensor footage accompanies the report. The public can see the same steady track the aircrew saw. This is not a large dataset.

One object. One flight.

One crew.

Ninety seconds. But it is a concrete piece of evidence, released under a formal policy, not through anonymous channels.

The report does not speculate. It does not conclude. It states what the radar showed and what the crew reported.

That is all.

The PURSUE framework forces this kind of release. It takes reports that would have remained classified and puts them into the public domain.

PR70 is one of those reports.

It is not the first. It will not be the last.

The policy is ongoing.

The object remains unidentified. The Department of War did not assign a probable cause. No analysis of origin or nature is included.

The report simply presents the encounter and leaves it there. The steady 150-knot sphere over the Gulf, seen by a crew and tracked by a radar, is now a matter of public record.

That is the story.

Not what it was. Just that it happened, and that the government decided to tell us.

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