{"type":"people","slug":"jay-stratton","title":"Jay Stratton","url":"https://disclosdex.com/people/jay-stratton","description":"Naval intelligence official who led the UAP Task Force after AAWSAP and AATIP shaped its disputed origins","date":"2020-08-04T00:00:00.000Z","tags":["Intelligence"],"updated":"2026-05-18T12:54:54.000Z","disclosureRating":5,"connectionCount":7,"content":{"markdown":"John \"Jay\" Stratton is a retired Office of Naval Intelligence senior executive and the first director of the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force, the Navy-led unit that the Department of Defense formally created in 2020 to catalog UAP reports as a national-security problem.[^1][^2] His public importance is institutional: he connects the Navy's post-2017 UAP collection effort, the 2021 ODNI preliminary assessment, the earlier AAWSAP/AATIP circle around [Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies](/organizations/bigelow-aerospace-advanced-space-studies), and the later [AARO](/organizations/all-domain-anomaly-resolution-office) review that challenged many of the same network's strongest claims.[^4][^6]\n\n<Dither src=\"/blog/Jay-SWR.png\" width={2400} height={1351} animate />\n\n## Navy Intelligence Before The Acronym War\n\nRadiance Technologies announced Stratton's post-government hiring in May 2022 and described him as recently retired from a Defense Intelligence Senior Executive role at the Office of Naval Intelligence, with more than 32 years in the National Intelligence Community.[^1] The same company biography credited him with senior congressional briefings, representation of Naval Intelligence in the Certified Defense All-Source Analyst program, multiple military and civilian awards, and service across operations from Desert Shield and Desert Storm through Iraqi Freedom, Enduring Freedom, and Noble Eagle.[^1] John Greenewald's Black Vault reporting, based on FOIA records and a direct Stratton statement, separately identified him as an Office of Naval Intelligence senior analyst from the Nimitz Operational Intelligence Center and former director of the UAP Task Force.[^9]\n\nThose credentials matter because the modern UAP story often blurs private belief, classified access, contractor work, and formal government authority. Stratton's strongest documented credential is not a public proof claim about nonhuman technology; it is that an intelligence-community officer with Navy access became the first official director of the UAPTF and helped move military UAP reporting into a standardized interagency channel.[^1][^2][^4]\n\n## The Task Force Becomes Official\n\nThe Department of Defense announced on August 14, 2020, that Deputy Secretary David L. Norquist had approved the UAPTF on August 4, with the Department of the Navy leading the effort under the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.[^2] DoD defined the mission as detecting, analyzing, and cataloging UAP that could pose a threat to U.S. national security, not as proving an extraterrestrial hypothesis.[^2]\n\nThat official move followed a public sequence in which DoD had already authorized the release of three historical Navy videos in April 2020, one from November 2004 and two from January 2015, after the videos had circulated publicly through unauthorized releases.[^3] DoD said the videos were genuine Navy videos, that their release did not expose sensitive systems or interfere with later investigations, and that the observed aerial phenomena remained unidentified.[^3] The UAPTF became the administrative answer to that narrower problem: unidentified objects near military operations needed consistent reporting, sensor review, and threat assessment.[^2][^4]\n\n## What The 2021 Assessment Actually Said\n\nODNI released the preliminary UAP assessment on June 25, 2021, in response to Senate Report 116-233, and said the UAPTF and ODNI's National Intelligence Manager for Aviation drafted it with input from offices including USD(I&S), DIA, FBI, NRO, NGA, NSA, the military services, Navy/ONI, DARPA, FAA, NOAA, and ODNI components.[^4][^5] The report made the Director of the UAPTF accountable for timely collection and consolidation of UAP data, while limiting the dataset primarily to U.S. government incidents from November 2004 through March 2021.[^5]\n\nThe headline numbers were narrower and more useful than later lore. ODNI reviewed 144 U.S. government reports, identified one with high confidence as a deflating balloon, and left 143 without enough information for a specific explanation.[^5] Eighty reports involved multiple sensors, and the report said some UAP appeared stationary in winds aloft, moved against the wind, maneuvered abruptly, or moved at considerable speed without a discernible means of propulsion.[^5] It also warned that the limited amount of high-quality reporting prevented firm conclusions and that unusual signatures could reflect sensor errors, spoofing, or observer misperception until subjected to additional technical analysis.[^5]\n\n## AAWSAP, AATIP, And Skinwalker Ranch\n\nStratton's most contested background layer is his association with the AAWSAP/AATIP ecosystem that preceded the formal UAPTF. AARO's 2024 historical report states that, at Senator Harry Reid's direction, fiscal years 2008 and 2010 defense appropriations provided $22 million for DIA to assess long-range foreign advanced aerospace threats, and that DIA established AAWSAP in 2009 through a contract with a private-sector organization.[^6] AARO also says the names AAWSAP and AATIP were used interchangeably in some official documents, while AATIP was never a formal DoD program after AAWSAP was cancelled; instead, the AATIP name was later used by an informal UAP community of interest inside DoD.[^6]\n\nAARO's account is also explicit about the Utah ranch problem. Although UFO/UAP work was not specified in the contract statement of work, AARO says the contractor reviewed new cases and older Project Blue Book cases, ran debriefing and investigatory teams, proposed laboratories for recovered UFO materials, and investigated alleged UAP and paranormal activity at a Utah property owned by the head of the private-sector organization.[^6] The same report says the work included reports of shadow figures, creatures, remote viewing, and human-consciousness anomalies, and that AAWSAP/AATIP ended in 2012 after DIA and DoD concerns.[^6]\n\nThe insider narrative comes from James T. Lacatski, Colm A. Kelleher, and George Knapp's Skinwalkers at the Pentagon and its follow-up, Inside the U.S. Government Covert UFO Program: Initial Revelations.[^10][^11] Greenewald's FOIA reporting shows the Skinwalkers manuscript went through DOPSR prepublication review, was routed to DIA, the Air Force, and DHS, and received a May 11, 2021 final determination of \"cleared as amended.\"[^10] Public discussion often identifies the book's pseudonymous \"Jonathan Axelrod\" as Stratton; Art Levine wrote in the Washington Spectator that Steven Greenstreet had made that identification and that Stratton had not disputed the portrayal, but that remains a secondary public identification rather than an official DoD confirmation.[^13]\n\n## Elizondo And The Lineage Dispute\n\nThe [2017 New York Times AATIP article](/events/2017-nyt-aatip-article) by Helene Cooper, Ralph Blumenthal, and Leslie Kean put [Lue Elizondo](/people/lue-elizondo) at the center of public UAP disclosure, and Elizondo's later book Imminent presents his own first-person account of a Pentagon UAP hunt involving AAWSAP, AATIP, Skinwalker Ranch, military sensors, Congress, and claims of nonhuman intelligence.[^12][^14] AARO's later history narrows the institutional picture: AAWSAP was official, AATIP was not a recognized DoD program after AAWSAP's cancellation, and the informal AATIP label persisted among people pursuing UAP sightings as ancillary work.[^6]\n\nThat split is the cleanest way to read Stratton's position. In pro-disclosure accounts, he is treated as continuity across AAWSAP, AATIP, and the UAPTF.[^11][^12] In AARO's official account, the continuity is partly social and informal, while the formal government line runs from AAWSAP's 2009 DIA contract, to the Navy-led UAPTF in 2020, to AOIMSG in 2021, and then to AARO in 2022.[^6][^7][^8]\n\n## AARO's Recheck Of The Network\n\nDoD established AARO in July 2022 after the FY2022 NDAA broadened the UAP mission beyond the earlier Airborne Object Identification and Management Group.[^7] Deputy Secretary Kathleen Hicks's July 15, 2022 memorandum directed the Secretary of the Navy to disestablish the UAPTF no later than AARO's establishment and to transfer UAPTF data, analysis, and relevant material to the new office.[^8] AARO's stated mission covered objects in, on, or near military installations, operating areas, training areas, special-use airspace, and other areas of interest, including space, airborne, submerged, and transmedium objects.[^7][^8]\n\nAARO later credited the UAPTF with standardizing, destigmatizing, and increasing UAP reporting, improving sensor calibration, and helping identify People's Republic of China high-altitude balloons that crossed the continental United States.[^6] The same historical report rejected the core reverse-engineering narrative, stating that AARO found no empirical evidence that any U.S. government, private, foreign, or academic UAP investigatory effort since 1945 had uncovered verifiable information about extraterrestrial beings or craft.[^6]\n\n## After Government Service\n\nAfter retiring from ONI, Stratton joined Radiance Technologies as SME for Intel Strategy, where Radiance said he would work on Scientific and Technical Intelligence, all-source analysis, customer relationships, and new areas of business.[^1] In 2025, Stratton also gave Greenewald an on-record clarification about a rumored triangular UAP photograph, saying no F/A-18 pilot had provided the UAPTF a photo of a triangle emerging from the ocean and that earlier unclassified email language had been misread across multiple cases.[^9] That correction is significant because it shows Stratton still functions as a source for what the UAPTF did and did not receive, while also underscoring how easily classified-context fragments become public myth.[^9]\n\n## Where Stratton's Evidence Is Strongest\n\nStratton's evidentiary value is strongest when the claim concerns the existence, scope, and reporting function of the UAPTF: those points are supported by DoD, ODNI, AARO, Radiance, and FOIA-linked reporting.[^1][^2][^4][^5][^6][^9] The evidence is weaker when public accounts move from his government role to Skinwalker Ranch phenomena, nonhuman technology, or the exact identity of pseudonymous figures in insider books; those claims rely on named authors, later interviews, and secondary identifications rather than official confirmation.[^10][^11][^13]\n\nThe most defensible dossier position is therefore layered. Stratton was a real Navy intelligence official and first UAPTF director.[^1][^2] The UAPTF materially shaped the 2021 ODNI assessment and the modern reporting process.[^4][^5] His earlier AAWSAP/AATIP ties sit inside a disputed network that produced both formal government records and paranormal ranch narratives.[^6][^10][^11] AARO later accepted the UAPTF's bureaucratic usefulness while rejecting the network's strongest extraterrestrial and reverse-engineering claims as unsupported by empirical evidence.[^6]\n\n## References\n\n[^1]: [Radiance Technologies: John F. Stratton Jr. Joins Radiance Technologies as SME for Intel Strategy](https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/john-f-stratton-jr-joins-radiance-technologies-as-sme-for-intel-strategy-301546258.html)\n[^2]: [U.S. Department of Defense: Establishment of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force](https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2314065/establishment-of-unidentified-aerial-phenomena-task-force/source/establishment-of-unidentified-aerial-phenomena-task-force/)\n[^3]: [U.S. Department of Defense: Statement by the Department of Defense on the Release of Historical Navy Videos](https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2165713/statement-by-the-department-of-defense-on-the-release-of-historical-navy-videos/)\n[^4]: [Office of the Director of National Intelligence: Preliminary Assessment: Unidentified Aerial Phenomena](https://www.odni.gov/index.php/newsroom/reports-publications/reports-publications-2021/3550-preliminary-assessment-unidentified-aerial-phenomena)\n[^5]: [Office of the Director of National Intelligence: Preliminary Assessment: Unidentified Aerial Phenomena PDF](https://www.odni.gov/files/ODNI/documents/assessments/Prelimary-Assessment-UAP-20210625.pdf)\n[^6]: [All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office: Report on the Historical Record of U.S. Government Involvement with Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, Volume 1](https://www.aaro.mil/Portals/136/PDFs/AARO_Historical_Record_Report_Vol_1_2024.pdf)\n[^7]: [U.S. Department of Defense: DoD Announces the Establishment of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office](https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/3100053/dod-announces-the-establishment-of-the-all-domain-anomaly-resolution-office/)\n[^8]: [Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks: Establishment of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office memorandum](https://media.defense.gov/2022/Jul/20/2003039074/-1/-1/1/ESTABLISHMENT-OF-THE-ALL-DOMAIN-ANOMALY-RESOLUTION-OFFICE.PDF)\n[^9]: [John Greenewald, The Black Vault: FOIA-Released Emails Mention Alleged Triangular UAP Photo; Former UAP Task Force Director Speaks Out](https://www.theblackvault.com/documentarchive/foia-released-emails-mention-alleged-triangular-uap-photo-former-uap-task-force-director-speaks-out/)\n[^10]: [John Greenewald, The Black Vault: New Documents Detail Slow, Multi-Agency Vetting of Skinwalkers at the Pentagon](https://www.theblackvault.com/documentarchive/new-documents-detail-slow-multi-agency-vetting-of-skinwalkers-at-the-pentagon/)\n[^11]: [James T. Lacatski, Colm A. Kelleher, and George Knapp: Inside the U.S. Government Covert UFO Program: Initial Revelations](https://books.google.com/books/about/Inside_the_U_S_Government_Covert_UFO_Pro.html?id=Yt5a0AEACAAJ)\n[^12]: [Luis Elizondo: Imminent: Inside the Pentagon's Hunt for UFOs](https://books.google.com/books/about/Imminent.html?id=y8f_EAAAQBAJ)\n[^13]: [Art Levine, Washington Spectator: Spaceship of Fools](https://washingtonspectator.org/spaceship-of-fools/)\n[^14]: [Helene Cooper, Ralph Blumenthal, and Leslie Kean: New York Times, \"Glowing Auras and 'Black Money': The Pentagon's Mysterious U.F.O. Program\"](https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/16/us/politics/pentagon-program-ufo-harry-reid.html)","readingTime":"9 min read"},"relatedRecords":[{"ref":{"type":"organizations","slug":"uap-disclosure-network","title":"UAP Disclosure Network","url":"https://disclosdex.com/organizations/uap-disclosure-network"},"direction":"inbound","weight":2},{"ref":{"type":"people","slug":"travis-taylor","title":"Travis S. 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