DOW-UAP-PR094 is a Department of War video record released in PURSUE Release 02 on May 22, 2026. The uploader-defined title is "[CALLSIGN] (Mission) - HD 2020-02-13." The agency of origin is the Department of War, the incident date is 2020, and the location is the United States Central Command area of responsibility.12
Provenance And Chain-Of-Custody
On March 6, 2026, eight members of the U.S. House of Representatives requested access to 51 potentially UAP-related records allegedly held by the Department of War and the Intelligence Community. The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) identified a collection of responsive materials held on a classified network. The release cautions that many of these materials lack a substantiated chain-of-custody.
AARO assesses that this video is likely derived from an electro-optical and infrared sensor aboard a U.S. military platform operating within the United States Central Command area of responsibility in 2020. A user uploaded the clip to a classified network in February 2020. DVIDS hosts the matching public video entry and a direct MP4 rendition of the clip.34
What The Clip Shows
The video runs 4 minutes and 59 seconds. After no content through 1:46, an area of contrast enters in the upper right and leaves on the left between 1:47 and 1:51. From 1:52 to 2:10 the sensor pans to track the area of contrast. From 2:11 to 2:17 the sensor zooms out with the area visible in the lower right quarter; it zooms in from 2:18 to 2:28, then zooms in and out several times from 2:29 to 4:38. From 4:40 to 4:43 the sensor changes modalities, causing the area to lose distinctiveness against the background; from 4:44 to 4:53 it changes back to electro-optical collection and the area becomes visible near the center; and from 4:54 to 4:59 it zooms in and out with the area briefly visible in the upper left.
What The Record Supports
DOW-UAP-PR094 documents an extended electro-optical and infrared sensor track of an unidentified area of contrast and the public release path of that media. AARO states the description is provided for informational purposes only and should not be read as an analytical judgment, investigative conclusion, or factual determination about the event's validity, nature, or significance. Taken conservatively, the record preserves an unresolved sensor observation; it does not identify the object or establish anomalous performance.