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Disclosure Archives
A view of the institutional spine

The UAP record, mapped as a network.

A radial map of the institutional spine of the modern UAP record. The inner ring is investigative programs and landmark reports; the middle ring is the agencies that host them; the outer ring is the named witnesses and the incidents they witnessed. Each edge is a documented relationship — funding, succession, agency-hosting, or first-person testimony.

8 programs & reports · 9 agencies · 8 witnesses · 6 incidents · 45 edges

AATIPAAWSAPUAPTFAAROBlue BookRobertson PanelODNI AssessmentPURSUE 01DoW (DoD)US NavyUS Air ForceDIAFBINASAODNICIASpace ForceD. FravorR. GravesD. GruschL. ElizondoR. SalasC. HaltD. SpergelS. KirkpatrickTic Tac (2004)East Coast (2014–15)Roswell (1947)Malmstrom (1967)Rendlesham (1980)Hsng. Oversight (2023)

Hover (or tap on touch devices) any node to see its connections, blurb, and the link to its page on this site.

programagencywitnessincidentreport

How to read this map

The map is deliberately a curated subset of the record — roughly thirty nodes selected to make the institutional structure legible at a glance. The full archive contains hundreds of additional entities; if you want to drill in, the four ring categories each have their own browse surface: witnesses, agencies, the timeline of every event, and the AARO, AATIP, UAPTF, and other program hubs.

The edges are the part most readers find clarifying. The chain UAPTF → AOIMSG → AARO is the institutional spine that explains why the modern record looks the way it does. Tic Tac → Navy → UAPTF → AARO is the case-evidence pipeline that turned one 2004 encounter into the 2021 ODNI assessment. Following the edges out from any single node tends to make the surrounding context fall into place.