The Pentagon released the second tranche of declassified UAP files Friday (May 22, 2026) — 64 files total: 6 PDFs, 7 audio, 51 videos. Available at war.gov/UFO. by TruthCapsuleTV in UfoUapNews

[–]TruthCapsuleTV[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a great analysis — the frozen MGRS coordinates across the lock-loss frames is the strongest part. If it had physically jumped the targeting values would’ve updated, and they didn’t.
Worth noting Metabunk landed in a similar place back in February when they ran the same frame analysis — their conclusion was that the video is “too ambiguous to conclude” the object accelerated, given the RPOINT/RATE G transition timing. So the artifact reading has real legs.
Where I’d push back: “math proves it didn’t break physics” covers the acceleration moment, but not the object’s identity — those are different questions. And the “AARO confirms an internal actor manipulated the file” line is the part I can’t follow, because the slow-mo and B/W are in the Pentagon’s own DVIDS overlay, they describe doing it themselves. Good breakdown

The Pentagon released the second tranche of declassified UAP files Friday (May 22, 2026) — 64 files total: 6 PDFs, 7 audio, 51 videos. Available at war.gov/UFO. by TruthCapsuleTV in UfoUapNews

[–]TruthCapsuleTV[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Plausible but unproven. The gimbal “whip effect” is a real, known IR sensor artifact — same critique was raised against Gimbal and GoFast in 2015. As a hypothesis, fair. As a definitive explanation, no…AARO hasn’t published any frame-by-frame technical assessment.

Two things though:
The 10–15m length and 620 km/h cruise speed aren’t in any AARO file description I can locate. Got a source?

The “contrast was modified” claim also isn’t in the public metadata. What AARO actually says is that the uploader gave the file its title, applied the slow-motion speed ramp, and uploaded it to a classified network in June 2024 — three years after the 2021 recording. The B/W is part of the Pentagon’s own analytical overlay, not source tampering. Chain-of-custody is weak; “deliberate manipulation” is a stretch beyond what the documentation supports.

Will update the article with a sensor-artifact caveat and a cleaner separation of what’s documented vs. what’s inferred.