PR33 Syria Clip
DVIDS identifies DOW-UAP-PR33 as a courtesy B-roll video from the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, published on May 7, 2026, with video ID 1006079, VIRIN 241002-D-D0360-6161, location Syria, a 16:9 frame, and a five-second duration.1 PURSUE Release 01 pairs the PR-33 media record with DOW-UAP-D32, the Department of War mission report for Syria in October 2024.23
The DVIDS description says USCENTCOM submitted the UAP report to AARO based on full-motion video from a U.S. military platform in 2024.1 For this PR33 clip, the visible record is described from 00:01 to 00:03 as two semi-transparent, irregular orange areas overlaid on the background imagery, each persisting for less than two seconds.14 DVIDS cautions that the description is informational and should not be treated as an analytical judgment or final determination about the event.1
D32 Sortie Details
The paired D32 PDF is a redacted USCENTCOM MISREP originally marked SECRET//REL TO USA, FVEY, declassified by USCENTCOM Chief of Staff MG Richard A. Harrison on October 24, 2025, and approved for release to AARO.3 Its administrative fields place the sortie under Operation Inherent Resolve in the air domain, with USCENTCOM as the combatant command, AFSOC as the major command, the 609th listed in operations-center fields, and 12 SOS named as the originator.3
The mission narrative records takeoff from OJMS at 0823Z on October 20, 2024, multiple FMV and SIGINT collection periods, and UAP activity during a dynamic target-development tasking from 1559Z to 1644Z.3 In the UAP section, the report describes light or glare of unknown origin crossing the FMV camera feed, logs direct crossings at 1559Z, 1602Z, and 1644Z, and separately records halo effects at the top of the FMV feed at 1609Z and 1620Z.3
The UAP description field calls the appearance a "misshapen and uneven ball of white light." The same form records no observer response change, no sensor interrogation, no observer engagement, no effects on persons, no recovered material, no advanced capabilities, and no indication of intelligent control; the aircrew assessed no mission impact or change, considered the event benign, and assessed it was not a lasing event.3
Clip and Report Remain Unresolved
PR33 matters because the public media is only a five-second excerpt, while the paired mission report places the observation inside a longer ISR sortie with timing, sensor context, and contemporaneous reporting language.13 The clip's DVIDS description narrows the visible moment to roughly two seconds, but the D32 document shows the same observation window also produced related entries for direct FMV-camera crossings and halo effects.13
Read together, the video record and mission report preserve provenance without resolving the underlying object or effect. They show how PURSUE Release 01 presents short public media, a redacted operational report, and explicit interpretive cautions as separate pieces of the same AARO-submitted UAP record.123