The underwater dimension of the UAP phenomenon is the least publicly discussed and potentially the most operationally significant. Multiple lines of evidence — from officer testimony, naval incident reports, and UAP Gerb’s documented research — establish that UAPs routinely operate in, enter, and exit water, that the US Navy has a dedicated classified intelligence body tracking this, and that at least one confirmed North Atlantic retrieval operation encountered a large craft on the ocean floor.
NURO — National Underwater Reconnaissance Office: A joint Navy-CIA body more classified than the NRO (National Reconnaissance Office) that handles satellite intelligence. NURO focuses on underwater UAP reconnaissance and retrieval operations. Its existence is acknowledged in limited declassified references but its scope and operational record remain classified. UAP Gerb’s research identifies NURO as the primary US government body for managing the underwater UAP intelligence collection and response mission.
Rockall Trough retrieval (1991-1992): A former US Marine diver described to UAP Gerb participating in a classified retrieval operation in the North Atlantic’s Rockall Trough — a deep oceanic trough west of the British Isles. The witness described a triangular craft approximately 70 feet in length buried in seafloor granite at significant depth. The craft had no visible propulsion systems, no external markings, and no apparent entry points. The retrieval team was compartmentalized and abruptly removed from the operation without being informed of its outcome. The witness’s account has never been publicly challenged or corroborated by official sources.
Trans-medium performance: Multiple documented UAP cases involve objects entering or exiting bodies of water: Shag Harbour (1967), the USS Omaha CIC sphere footage (2019, released by Corbell), Hollanda’s Colares report of lights entering and exiting coastal waters, Gallaudet’s confirmed USO footage from his Navy service. Admiral Gallaudet has specifically cited USO (Unidentified Submerged Objects) in his Congressional testimony. The Pais Navy patents describe craft capable of operating in air, space, and water using the same propulsion mechanism. If the same technology operates in all three domains, the underwater environment — vast, mostly unmonitored, and inaccessible — is where the majority of UAP activity may actually occur.
TAGS: NURO · UNDERWATER UAP · ROCKALL TROUGH · TRANS-MEDIUM · USO · GALLAUDET CONFIRMED
