Declassified Documents Confirm AARO’s Dedicated Space UAP Investigation Unit
A Freedom of Information Act release tied to U.S. Space Command has produced a Department of War document confirming the 2023 formation of what is officially designated the “UAP Space Tiger Team” — a structured, multi-agency working group led by the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) and specifically tasked with investigating unidentified anomalous phenomena operating in the space domain and in transmedium environments. The document, released under FOIA case #24-F-1205, represents one of the most operationally detailed UAP investigation records to emerge from the U.S. military to date.
What Is the UAP Space Tiger Team?
The term “Tiger Team” in military and intelligence contexts refers to a focused, problem-solving group assembled to address a specific high-priority challenge. The UAP Space Tiger Team was built expressly around cases involving objects detected in or transitioning through the space domain — including transmedium phenomena, which refers to objects observed moving between space, air, and potentially water environments without apparent propulsion or aerodynamic constraints consistent with known technology.
The acknowledgment that AARO has dedicated resources specifically to transmedium and space-domain UAP cases is significant. It confirms that the office is not solely focused on atmospheric encounters reported by military pilots, but is actively investigating a category of phenomena that, by definition, operates across multiple physical domains in ways that challenge conventional aerospace understanding.
Implications for UAP Research
The existence of a Space Tiger Team organized around transmedium cases aligns with testimony provided by multiple UAP witnesses and whistleblowers who have described objects demonstrating cross-domain transit capabilities. The fact that AARO formalized this focus in 2023 through a dedicated team suggests the office was receiving credible, repeated reports of such phenomena — credible enough to warrant structured institutional attention.
It also raises questions about what data sources the Space Tiger Team is drawing upon. U.S. Space Command maintains extensive sensor networks designed to track objects in Earth orbit. If UAP are being detected by those systems, the volume and nature of that data has not been publicly disclosed.
Transparency and Classification Concerns
While the document confirms the Tiger Team’s formation and general mandate, it is likely that the operational details, case files, and analytical conclusions of this unit remain classified. The Department of War has previously invoked national security exemptions to withhold core UAP evaluation details, as documented in separate FOIA releases. The Space Tiger Team’s actual findings may be among the most heavily protected UAP-related materials currently held by the U.S. government.
UAP Oracle Assessment
This is a HIGH priority intelligence item. The confirmed existence of a dedicated AARO unit focused on space-domain and transmedium UAP cases significantly expands the known scope of U.S. government UAP investigation infrastructure. The transmedium focus in particular warrants close analytical attention, as it corresponds directly to the most anomalous and unexplained categories of reported UAP behavior.
Source: The Black Vault
