8b66a6125103a12f

Kosloski_Statement_for_Record_SASC_Open_Hearing_Nov2024.pdf

AARO·Portal_Documents·pdf·161 KB·3 pages

Scores

5.3
Document value
8.6
Cross-references
5.0
Provenance
3.9
Info density
7.0
Topic relevance
0.0
Anomalousness

Events this document cites (6)

OCR'd text preview (3 of 3 pages)

Source: embedded

page 0
Statement for the Record 
Dr. Jon Kosloski, Director, All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office 
Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities 
November 19, 2024 
 
Thank you, Chairwoman Gillibrand, Ranking Member Ernst, and distinguished members of the 
subcommittee. It is a pleasure to be here on behalf of the Department of Defense as the new 
Director of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office.  I appreciate the opportunity to provide a 
status update on AARO’s work and respond to your questions about unidentified anomalous 
phenomena, or UAP.  
 
On behalf of the depa
page 1
 
To date, AARO has over 1,600 UAP reports in its holdings from across the U.S. government. I’ll 
share a slide in just a few minutes of updated UAP analytic trends. You’ll see that many reports 
resolve to commonplace objects like birds, balloons, and unmanned systems, while others lack 
sufficient data for comprehensive analysis. Only a very small percentage of reports AARO 
receives are potentially anomalous; these are the cases that require significant time, resources, 
and a focused scientific inquiry by AARO and its wide network of partners. It is important to 
underscore that, to date, 
page 2
appropriate committees in Congress that are authorized by the law or House and Senate 
leadership to receive the information.  
 
It is important to note that AARO does not unilaterally declassify information. Instead, we work 
with the originator of a classified record to ensure that declassifying that record does not 
inadvertently harm national security. This can take time. Nonetheless, the Department is 
committed to declassifying and publicly sharing more information on UAP, while protecting 
sensitive sources and methods.  I’ll be sharing some newly declassified imagery in just a few 
mi

Full text and original imagery available on Internet Archive →