House Intelligence's Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, and Counterproliferation held the May 17, 2022 hearing titled "Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (Open and Closed)" in HVC-210, with the open session scheduled for 9:00 a.m. and a closed portion listed for noon.12
The open record matters because it was the first public congressional UAP hearing in decades: Chairman Andre Carson's opening statement tied the hearing to the end of Project Blue Book more than 50 years earlier, the 2017 public reporting on renewed Defense Department UAP work, and Congress's rewrite of that work into AOIMSG.34
The hearing also introduced official AOIMSG-era testimony. Ronald S. Moultrie, Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security, and Scott W. Bray, Deputy Director of Naval Intelligence, testified on the Defense Department's UAP process, the Navy-led UAP Task Force foundation, standardized reporting, safety and security risks, and the need to reduce reporting stigma.456
Read alongside the surrounding government record, this link sits at the hinge between the 2021 ODNI preliminary assessment, the November 2021 creation of AOIMSG as the UAP Task Force successor, and the July 2022 expansion and renaming of that effort into AARO.789
The transcript and official video are useful because they preserve the public claims in one checkable record: members asked about transparency, classification, near misses, sensor data, legacy cases, and possible foreign-adversary technology, while witnesses emphasized data limits and a flight-safety and national-security frame.410