PR35 in PURSUE Release 01
DOW-UAP-PR35 is a Department of War video record released in PURSUE Release 01 on May 8, 2026 and hosted by DVIDS under the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. The record describes a United States Central Command submission to AARO: 24 seconds of infrared-sensor video from a U.S. military platform in 2023, connected to an unresolved UAP report from Greece in October 2023.12
Infrared Track Over Water
The public video description says the sensor narrows its field of view at 00:02 to zoom toward an area of contrast near the center of the frame. From 00:03 through 00:19, the sensor tracks that area of contrast against an ocean background. At 00:20, as the background changes from mostly water to land, the area of contrast becomes indistinguishable.2
DVIDS lists the media as a 24-second, 16:9 video with a 1920-by-1080 MP4 derivative available for direct playback. The release text cautions that the description is informational and should not be treated as an analytical judgment, investigative conclusion, or factual determination about the event's validity, nature, or significance.23
Matched D35 Mission Report
The PURSUE release pairs PR35 with DoW-UAP-D35, a seven-page USCENTCOM mission report for an October 2023 Greece incident. The report was declassified on January 22, 2026 and approved for release to AARO on January 26, 2026.14
The mission report places the sortie in the air domain under USCENTCOM, with an ISR mission type, full-motion video as the primary sensor, and LGLR listed as both takeoff and landing location. It records takeoff at 1504Z on October 28, 2023, arrival on station at 2018Z, departure from station at 0542Z on October 29, and landing at 1105Z after 20 hours and 1 minute of total mission time.4
The UAP section records initial contact at 0811Z on October 29, 2023. It describes the reported UAP as seemingly circular and too small to make out details, flying just above ocean water toward land before the feed lost it. The same section lists estimated velocity as 30 miles per hour, physical state as solid, propulsion as unknown, observer assessment as benign, no maneuverability observations, no signatures, no effects on persons or equipment, no recovered material, and no reported intelligent control.4
A Traceable USCENTCOM Chain
PR35 matters because the public clip and the paired mission report preserve different parts of the same evidentiary chain. The video record shows the released infrared excerpt and timestamped viewing description; the mission report supplies operational timing, sensor context, reporter language, redaction boundaries, and the structured fields AARO received from USCENTCOM.24
Read together, the records document a short near-surface ocean observation without identifying the object. Their value is not a conclusion about what the UAP was, but a traceable public record of how a military sensor observation moved from mission reporting into a PURSUE release item.124