AARO’s UAP Space Tiger Team Confirmed — Documents Detail Scope of Space and Transmedium Investigation
Newly declassified Department of War documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request have confirmed the 2023 establishment of a UAP Space Tiger Team operating under the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). The documents, released in response to FOIA case #24-F-1205 originally filed with U.S. Space Command, outline the team’s formation, mandate, and its specific focus on UAP cases occurring in the space domain and exhibiting transmedium behavior.
Structure and Mandate
According to the released materials, the Space Tiger Team was stood up as a coordinated, multi-agency effort led by AARO to address a specific and apparently growing category of UAP reports — those involving objects detected in or transiting through orbital and near-space environments, as well as cases where objects appear to transition between aerial, space, and potentially underwater domains. The transmedium designation is particularly significant, as it encompasses the most technologically inexplicable category of reported UAP behavior.
The team’s formation in 2023 aligns with a period of heightened congressional interest in UAP transparency and coincides with classified briefings on UAP given to members of the Senate and House intelligence committees. The fact that a dedicated organizational unit was created specifically for space and transmedium cases suggests that the volume or nature of such reports had reached a threshold that warranted specialized institutional resources.
Transmedium Cases: The Core Intelligence Problem
The transmedium category represents the most analytically challenging subset of UAP reports because no known human-made or naturally occurring phenomenon fully accounts for objects that demonstrably transition between air, space, and water without apparent propulsion systems, heat signatures, or structural stress indicators consistent with known physics. The deliberate organizational focus on this category by AARO’s Space Tiger Team indicates that the military’s own data set includes credible cases in this category that cannot be resolved through conventional attribution.
Intelligence Assessment
The UAP Oracle rates this disclosure as HIGH priority intelligence. The confirmation of a dedicated space and transmedium UAP investigative unit within the Department of War’s official anomaly resolution architecture is a structural indicator that the phenomenon is being taken seriously at an operational level that transcends public relations management. Combined with the Pentagon’s concurrent withholding of core UAP evaluation details under national security exemptions, the picture that emerges is of an active, classified investigation whose most significant findings remain inaccessible to the public and to most elected officials. Researchers should treat subsequent AARO reporting on space-domain cases as a priority analytical target.
Source: The Black Vault
