Deadhorse Alaska: UAP Shot Down by F-22 Caused Power Failure at NORAD Command Centre 3,000 Miles Away
On February 10, 2023, a US Air Force F-22 shot down an object designated UAP#20 off the coast of Deadhorse, Alaska. FOIA-released Canadian government documents include NORAD operations logs showing mysterious power fluctuations at the command-and-control facility directing the intercept — located at Tyndall AFB in Florida, over 3,000 nautical miles from the shootdown location. The facility had been rebuilt in 2022 with advanced ‘self-reliance’ power generation systems specifically designed to be resilient. They failed during the UAP intercept.
The Shootdown
UAP#20 was designated and tracked by NORAD and shot down by a US Air Force F-22 off Deadhorse, Alaska on February 10, 2023. It was one of four objects downed over North America in a compressed period following the Chinese balloon shootdown of February 4. The Biden administration never publicly identified what UAP#20 was.
The NORAD Log Anomaly
FOIA-released Canadian government documents include the operations logs of the CONR facility at Tyndall AFB, Florida — the Continental US NORAD Region command centre directing the intercept over 3,000 nautical miles away. The logs document mysterious power fluctuations during the event. The facility had been rebuilt after Hurricane Michael in 2018 as the first ‘Installation of the Future’ prototype, specifically upgraded with microgrids and self-reliance power generation systems installed in 2022.
The additional microgrids and ‘self-reliance’ power generation systems installed in 2022 appear to be no match for a dedicated UAP adversary.
— Liberation Times analysis of NORAD logs
What This Means
A power disruption at a hardened military command-and-control facility 3,000 nautical miles from an aerial object during an intercept operation is not a coincidence. The Tehran 1976 pattern — weapons and instruments failing at the moment of engagement — and the Malmstrom 1967 pattern — ICBMs shutting down while a UAP is overhead — both suggest an active countermeasure capability. The Deadhorse logs extend that pattern to remote infrastructure disruption.
This is the first documented case where a UAP appears to have disrupted NORAD command infrastructure during a live intercept — not a passive observation, but an active engagement. The object was subsequently destroyed by an F-22 AIM-9X. If the object could disrupt NORAD’s power systems remotely while being shot at, the nature of what was shot down deserves considerably more public scrutiny than it received.
The Broader 2023 Pattern
The four February 2023 shootdowns occurred in a compressed 10-day window. Only the Chinese balloon was publicly identified. The other three — including UAP#20 — remain officially unexplained. NORAD subsequently changed its radar sensitivity settings to detect more objects, then stopped reporting publicly what it was detecting. The operational change without public explanation is its own form of disclosure.
