The Hidden UAP Bureaucracy: The Infrastructure Nobody Covers
AARO’s public face gets all the attention. The institutional infrastructure feeding into AARO is mostly absent from coverage despite being a matter of public record.
AARO’s public face gets all the attention. The institutional infrastructure feeding into AARO is mostly absent from coverage despite being a matter of public record.
Aviation produces the most credible UAP reports in the official record. Here’s why pilots, ATC, and the structures around them matter more than civilian witnesses.
When a commercial pilot sees something they cannot explain, the report moves through three separate systems and two federal agencies. The infrastructure is the more interesting story.
The week’s archival activity worth tracking: the April 27 congressional deadline, AARO’s GREMLIN sensor deployment, and quieter primary-source updates.
Most UAP coverage collapses three fundamentally different verdicts into one. Resolved, insufficient data, and unresolved are not interchangeable.
House Oversight gave the FBI, DoD, DoE, and NASA until April 27 to brief on the missing scientists. The deadline passed. Only the FBI has publicly confirmed engagement.