Cosimo Galluzzi
One Nice Bug Per Day

JVL
Claire Keane

TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Love Begins

Janaina Medeiros

tannertan36
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Kaledo Art
$LAYYYTER
i don't do bad sauce passes
sheepfilms
Show & Tell
dirt enthusiast
we're not kids anymore.

shark vs the universe
d e v o n
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
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seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@omniuniversalworkstream062525

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How could you leave such a magnificent location!?
Goat Rocks Wilderness, Washington
1981
baker
okhanogan with LAH
wihy
and no name?
ping for Gina
and no AUzzie fdue to Victoria lee
so get them out of there and away so they don't get B day myun
backwards from past to
@watsonly Direct feed into
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This annual report of worldwide threats to the national security of the United States responds to Section 617 of the FY21 Intelligence Authorization Act (Pub. L. No. 116-260). This report reflects the collective insights of the Intelligence Community (IC), which is committed to providing the nuanced, independent, and unvarnished intelligence that policymakers, warfighters, and domestic law enforcement personnel need to protect American lives and America’s interests anywhere in the world. This assessment focuses on the most direct, serious threats to the United States primarily during the next year. All these threats require a robust intelligence response, including those where a near-term focus may help head off greater threats in the future.
The 2025 Annual Threat Assessment (ATA) is the Intelligence Community’s (IC) official, coordinated evaluation of an array of threats to U.S. citizens, the Homeland, and U.S. interests in the world. A diverse set of foreign actors are targeting U.S. health and safety, critical infrastructure, industries, wealth, and government. State adversaries and their proxies are also trying to weaken and displace U.S. economic and military power in their regions and across the globe. Both state and nonstate actors pose multiple immediate threats to the Homeland and U.S. national interests. Terrorist and transnational criminal organizations are directly threatening our citizens. Cartels are largely responsible for the more than 52,000 U.S. deaths from synthetic opioids in the 12 months ending in October 2024 and helped facilitate the nearly three million illegal migrant arrivals in 2024, straining resources and putting U.S. communities at risk. A range of cyber and intelligence actors are targeting our wealth, critical infrastructure, telecom, and media. Nonstate groups are often enabled, both directly and indirectly, by state actors, such as China and India as sources of precursors and equipment for drug traffickers. State adversaries have weapons that can strike U.S. territory, or disable vital U.S. systems in space, for coercive aims or actual war. These threats reinforce each other, creating a vastly more complex and dangerous security environment. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea—individually and collectively—are challenging U.S. interests in the world by attacking or threatening others in their regions, with both asymmetric and conventional hard power tactics, and promoting alternative systems to compete with the United States, primarily in trade, finance, and security. They seek to challenge the United States and other countries through deliberate campaigns to gain an advantage, while also trying to avoid direct war. Growing cooperation between and among these adversaries is increasing their fortitude against the United States, the potential for hostilities with any one of them to draw in another, and pressure on other global actors to choose sides. This 2025 ATA report supports the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s commitment to keeping the U.S. Congress and American people informed of threats to the nation’s security, representing the IC’s dedication to monitoring, evaluating, and warning of threats of all types. In preparing this assessment, the National Intelligence Council worked closely with all IC components, the wider U.S. Government, and foreign and external partners and experts to provide the most timely, objective, and useful insights for strategic warning and U.S. decision advantage. This 2025 Annual Threat Assessment details these myriad threats by actor or perpetrator, starting with nonstate actors and then presenting threats posed by major state actors. The National Intelligence Council stands ready to support policymakers with additional information in a classified setting.
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@dod
@FBI
Findings: Following in-depth computational analysis of Navy aircraft’s flight characteristics and sensor readings, AARO, in coordination with S&T partners, assesses with high confidence the object did not demonstrate anomalous speeds or flight characteristics. ▪ Analytic Factors: AARO assesses with high confidence that the object’s altitude was approximately 13,000 feet above sea level and its speed was approximately between 5 and 92 miles per hour. ▪ Contemporaneous weather data for the area at the time of event record winds at approximately 69 miles per hour at 13,000 feet. ▪ The object maintained relatively straight flight path during the observation, consistent with an object drifting with the wind. The object slowly rose and fell slightly during the recording. ▪ High confidence analysis of the UAP’s exact position was not possible given a lack of precise positional data from the observing Navy aircraft.
Findings: AARO and its IC and S&T partners assess with moderate confidence that the object was a balloon. AARO and its partners assess with high confidence that the object drifted with the wind approximately 170 kilometers from the volcano and did not demonstrate anomalous performance characteristics. ▪ Analytic Factors: AARO’s assessment is informed by full-motion video analysis, 3D modeling, pixel examination, and novel speed and distance calculation techniques. ▪ AARO estimated the distance between the UAS and the object by incorporating historical weather data, including wind speed and cloud deck movement. ▪ AARO and its partners found that the object did not transit the ash plume by comparing the luminosity of the object’s pixels to those around it. ▪ AARO used 3D modeling and wind calculations to predict the object’s location during frames where it was visually undetectable. ▪ Digital postprocessing tools revealed the object to be where AARO’s modeling suggested it would be, further validating the findings
Connect and make contact with
HIRE
DEPUTY SECRETARY OF DEFENSE 1010 DEFENSE PENTAGON WASHINGTON, DC 20301-1010 JUL 15 2022 MEMORANDUM FOR SENIOR PE TAGON LEADERSHIP COMMANDERS OF THE COMBATA T COMMANDS DEFENSE AGE CY AND DOD FIELD ACTIVITY DIRECTORS SUBJECT: Establishment of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office On ovember 23, 2021, I directed the Under Secretary ofDefense for Intelligence and Security (USD(I&S)) to establish the Airborne Object Identification and Management Synchronization Group (AOIMSG) to synchronize efforts across the Department ofDefense (DoD) and with other Federal departments and agencies to detect. identify, and attribute objects of interest in special use airspace. I also established the Airborne Object Identification Management Executive Council (AOIMEXEC) to provide oversight and direction to the AOIMSG. Prior to the establishment ofthe AOIMSG the ational Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 was enacted with a provision that requires the Secretary of Defense to establish an office, in coordination with the Director of ational Intelligence (DNI), with responsibilities that include those that were to be assigned to the AOIMSG. Therefore, following coordination with the DNI, I hereby approve the following amendments to my original direction in Deputy Secretary of Defense Memorandum, "Establishment ofthe Airborne Object Identification and Management Group," ovember 23, 2021, to meet the DoD requirements in section 1683 ofthe NDAA for FY 2022:
The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) will be established to carry out the duties that were to be fulfi lled by the AOIMSG. The mission ofthe AARO will be to "synchronize efforts across the Department and with other Federal departments and agencies to detect, identify, and attribute objects of interest in, on, or near military installations, operating areas, training areas, special use airspace, and other areas of interest, and, as necessary, to mitigate any associated threats to safety of operations and national security." This includes anomalous, unidentified space, airborne, submerged, and transmedium objects.
The AOIMEXEC is renamed the AARO Executive Council (AAROEXEC). The mission ofthe AAROEXEC will be to provide oversight and direction to the AARO.
I direct the USD(I&S) to establish the AARO, in coordination with the Director of Administration and Management. Consistent with section 1683 ofthe NDAA for FY 2022, I also direct the Secretary of the Navy to disestablish the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force (UAPTF) no later than the date the AARO is established, and to support the orderly transition ofthe UAPTF, including the transfer ofany data, analysis, or other relevant material, to the AARO.
The Defense Department established AARO in 2022 to investigate mysterious craft operating in air and space, on land, in the sea or under the sea that are not immediately identifiable and might pose a threat to national security.
The new reporting form, which will be made available on AARO's website, allows current and former service members and employees to provide unclassified summary details about programs they may have knowledge of along with details about their affiliation with the U.S. government and their contact information.
Once that information is reviewed AARO officials may request further details.
"We want to hear from you," said Sean M. Kirkpatrick, the director of AARO. "The information you submit in the form will be protected. Additionally, any information that you provide in a subsequent interview will be protected according to its classification."
All information will be safeguarded as personal and confidential, he said.
"By law AARO can receive all UAP-related information including any classified national security information involving military intelligence or intelligence-related activities of classification, regardless of any restrictive access controls, special access programs, or compartmented access programs," Kirkpatrick said.
AARO can also receive UAP-related information regardless of where that information originates within the U.S. government, he said.
Kirkpatrick emphasized that no classified information should be disclosed, however, in the initial form available on AARO's unclassified website.
The new reporting form marks the second phase of AARO's secure reporting mechanism.
In May, the Joint Staff issued guidance to the services and combatant commands on
___________________________________
"The cyber warriors are the ones when the adversary wants to come in, they're not going to launch a missile first," she said. "When Russia was going to invade Ukraine, they turned off the power first. So, the cyber warrior is the first line of defense we have in a non-kinetic war."
All across the department, Kassem said, IT teams and individuals are doing work to protect the nation, which merits recognition.
"Within the DOD and the federal workforce, IT teams are doing fantastic work, but they are also exceptionally busy," he said. "The department can't recognize the best performers unless they are nominated by their leadership. We ask for nominations to allow plenty of time for leaders to build award packages to get their top talent the recognition they have worked hard all year to earn."
The annual awards program recognizes the exceptional achievements of individuals or teams in delivering capabilities and management practices that advance warfighter lethality, readiness and network efficiency. The major functional area categories covered by the awards program are updated to reflect four technical priority areas:
Cybersecurity: Includes cryptographic modernization, zero trust, cybersecurity of the defense industrial base, cyber hygiene, cross-domain solutions, capability maturity model, and cyber innovations.
The information enterprise: Includes cloud innovation, network transport and optimization, software modernization/development security operations, coalition information sharing, defense business systems improvement and modernization, data center optimization and application rationalization, identity, credentialing and access management, and the special access programs IT ecosystem.
Command, control and communications: Includes C3; telecommunications; position, navigation and timing; 5G/6G/XG mobile networks; national leadership command capability; satellite communications/tactical data links/radio systems; public safety communications; and the electromagnetic spectrum.
Other IT areas: Includes financial and management audits that encompass cost savings and avoidance; IT and cyber budget; IT and communication accessibility; IT and the cyber workforce; industry and international engagements; time division multiplexing elimination; technical debt; and electronic records management.
DOD CIO expects to release the 2025 award program guidance and instructions in late May to give ample time for the department, as well as federal and strategic partners, to participate.
Those eligible for the awards program include individuals or teams supporting the Defense Department mission — including military departments and services, combatant commands and the joint staff, principal staff assistants, defense agencies and field activities, and the department's partners in the intelligence community as well as members of federal civilian agencies.
The performance period for nominations is June 2024 - July 2025, a

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@watsonly Direct feed into
and confirmation of Pioneeers club
for
Karl Kani background understood.
This annual report of worldwide threats to the national security of the United States responds to Section 617 of the FY21 Intelligence Authorization Act (Pub. L. No. 116-260). This report reflects the collective insights of the Intelligence Community (IC), which is committed to providing the nuanced, independent, and unvarnished intelligence that policymakers, warfighters, and domestic law enforcement personnel need to protect American lives and America’s interests anywhere in the world. This assessment focuses on the most direct, serious threats to the United States primarily during the next year. All these threats require a robust intelligence response, including those where a near-term focus may help head off greater threats in the future.
The 2025 Annual Threat Assessment (ATA) is the Intelligence Community’s (IC) official, coordinated evaluation of an array of threats to U.S. citizens, the Homeland, and U.S. interests in the world. A diverse set of foreign actors are targeting U.S. health and safety, critical infrastructure, industries, wealth, and government. State adversaries and their proxies are also trying to weaken and displace U.S. economic and military power in their regions and across the globe. Both state and nonstate actors pose multiple immediate threats to the Homeland and U.S. national interests. Terrorist and transnational criminal organizations are directly threatening our citizens. Cartels are largely responsible for the more than 52,000 U.S. deaths from synthetic opioids in the 12 months ending in October 2024 and helped facilitate the nearly three million illegal migrant arrivals in 2024, straining resources and putting U.S. communities at risk. A range of cyber and intelligence actors are targeting our wealth, critical infrastructure, telecom, and media. Nonstate groups are often enabled, both directly and indirectly, by state actors, such as China and India as sources of precursors and equipment for drug traffickers. State adversaries have weapons that can strike U.S. territory, or disable vital U.S. systems in space, for coercive aims or actual war. These threats reinforce each other, creating a vastly more complex and dangerous security environment. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea—individually and collectively—are challenging U.S. interests in the world by attacking or threatening others in their regions, with both asymmetric and conventional hard power tactics, and promoting alternative systems to compete with the United States, primarily in trade, finance, and security. They seek to challenge the United States and other countries through deliberate campaigns to gain an advantage, while also trying to avoid direct war. Growing cooperation between and among these adversaries is increasing their fortitude against the United States, the potential for hostilities with any one of them to draw in another, and pressure on other global actors to choose sides. This 2025 ATA report supports the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s commitment to keeping the U.S. Congress and American people informed of threats to the nation’s security, representing the IC’s dedication to monitoring, evaluating, and warning of threats of all types. In preparing this assessment, the National Intelligence Council worked closely with all IC components, the wider U.S. Government, and foreign and external partners and experts to provide the most timely, objective, and useful insights for strategic warning and U.S. decision advantage. This 2025 Annual Threat Assessment details these myriad threats by actor or perpetrator, starting with nonstate actors and then presenting threats posed by major state actors. The National Intelligence Council stands ready to support policymakers with additional information in a classified setting.
Remeiation
with EdgeRunner
with Cyberpunk Division contact
and circle back with arasaka to mil ip change
okay
due to Data center
wasabi
and security now for colorado overlay
@dod
@FBI
A transparent, thermally tunable microwave absorber based on patterned vanadium dioxide film
Recently, the rapid development of optoelectronic devices has made human life more convenient. However, these devices emit large amounts of electromagnetic radiation, which not only endanger human health, but also cause unacceptable malfunctions in electronic systems. Therefore, electromagnetic shielding technology that eliminates the adverse electromagnetic waves is of vital importance to protect sensitive circuits from interference and preserve a healthy living environment.
The absorption-based electromagnetic shielding technology is the most ideal method of electromagnetic shielding at present because electromagnetic waves cannot return to space and are completely eliminated. In particular, optical transparent and tunable microwave absorption technology, which can be tuned in real time and applied in visual observations, has attracted great attention for its scientific and application values.
Vanadium dioxide is a promising candidate material for tunable absorbers due to its drastic insulator-to-metal phase transition (the change of sheet resistance is five orders of magnitude in theory) near room temperature and various transition-triggering mechanisms (such as thermal heating, optical excitation, and bias voltage). However, most studies on vanadium dioxide tunable absorbers focus on the terahertz and infrared bands, and the optical transmittance of vanadium dioxide film is almost zero in the visible band, which limits its application in the optical field.
Read more.
ARI, LOOK
YOU ARE MY KID.
TO FINISH YOUR STORY ABOUT YESTERDAY, I WAS WELCOMED THAT I WAS GOING TO BECOME THE PRESENCE. I DIDN’T EVEN KNOW IT REMEMBER NECRO HALVED YEAH FOR TIME BEING BECASUE I WAS WORKING ON ONE ABOVE ALL. KNOWING HIS TIME UNDERSTANDING IT WAS ONE AND DO ONE BELOW ALL THAT CAN SUPPORT THREE KINGDOM AND CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE. LIE ABOUT THE MISSION AND SUPPLEMENTAL STREET SMART SOCIAL ENGINEERING AND UNDERSTANDING TO PICK UP THE PLAYS.
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Arbitrator
by Panos Souleles
Requested
Via Bob The Presense Protocols
and
Kevin Office of Program Director reporting to DOD Joint Chief
currently been along with conjoining with awareness and international support for International Court of Justice for past intakes and linearly figuring out the crime run rates and time of due to halvening it's been unfair when they don't know how they grew up to be within the family members and feud. of original Italian and German 4th rich but elminated all past of Comey and company of Prey councils
AARO researched and interviewed numerous people, programs, and leads. It has determined that modern allegations that the USG is hiding off-world technology and beings largely originate from the same group of individuals who have ties to the cancelled AAWSAP/AATIP program and a private sector organization’s paranormal research efforts. These individuals have worked with each other consistently in various UAP-related efforts.
Persons 1-5 and Interviewees 1, 3, 9, 12, 13, and 14 have repeatedly voiced these claims in various public and private venues, and they have petitioned Congress in various capacities on UAP issues. They have not provided any empirical evidence of their claims to AARO. 120 • Persons 1 and 3 and Interviewees 1, 3, and 12 were involved with the paranormal research conducted under AAWSAP/AATIP. 121 • Person 5 and Interviewees 3, 9 and 14 were involved with the alleged crashed UAP materials that were provided to the U.S. Army and subsequently to AARO for examination.122 • Persons 4, 7, and 8 and Interviewees 1, 3, and 13 investigated UAP on their own and were responsible for successfully expanding the remit of an existing IC program to include UAP exploitation language.123 • AARO notes that Persons 1 and 4 never formally sat down with AARO to provide official, signed statements; these individuals have been mentioned by other interviewees frequently as sources of their claims. Person 8 held an informal interview and Interviewee 14 sat for an official interview but has not signed the memo for the record documenting this interview.
@watsonly Direct feed into
and confirmation of Pioneeers club
for
Karl Kani background understood.
This annual report of worldwide threats to the national security of the United States responds to Section 617 of the FY21 Intelligence Authorization Act (Pub. L. No. 116-260). This report reflects the collective insights of the Intelligence Community (IC), which is committed to providing the nuanced, independent, and unvarnished intelligence that policymakers, warfighters, and domestic law enforcement personnel need to protect American lives and America’s interests anywhere in the world. This assessment focuses on the most direct, serious threats to the United States primarily during the next year. All these threats require a robust intelligence response, including those where a near-term focus may help head off greater threats in the future.
The 2025 Annual Threat Assessment (ATA) is the Intelligence Community’s (IC) official, coordinated evaluation of an array of threats to U.S. citizens, the Homeland, and U.S. interests in the world. A diverse set of foreign actors are targeting U.S. health and safety, critical infrastructure, industries, wealth, and government. State adversaries and their proxies are also trying to weaken and displace U.S. economic and military power in their regions and across the globe. Both state and nonstate actors pose multiple immediate threats to the Homeland and U.S. national interests. Terrorist and transnational criminal organizations are directly threatening our citizens. Cartels are largely responsible for the more than 52,000 U.S. deaths from synthetic opioids in the 12 months ending in October 2024 and helped facilitate the nearly three million illegal migrant arrivals in 2024, straining resources and putting U.S. communities at risk. A range of cyber and intelligence actors are targeting our wealth, critical infrastructure, telecom, and media. Nonstate groups are often enabled, both directly and indirectly, by state actors, such as China and India as sources of precursors and equipment for drug traffickers. State adversaries have weapons that can strike U.S. territory, or disable vital U.S. systems in space, for coercive aims or actual war. These threats reinforce each other, creating a vastly more complex and dangerous security environment. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea—individually and collectively—are challenging U.S. interests in the world by attacking or threatening others in their regions, with both asymmetric and conventional hard power tactics, and promoting alternative systems to compete with the United States, primarily in trade, finance, and security. They seek to challenge the United States and other countries through deliberate campaigns to gain an advantage, while also trying to avoid direct war. Growing cooperation between and among these adversaries is increasing their fortitude against the United States, the potential for hostilities with any one of them to draw in another, and pressure on other global actors to choose sides. This 2025 ATA report supports the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s commitment to keeping the U.S. Congress and American people informed of threats to the nation’s security, representing the IC’s dedication to monitoring, evaluating, and warning of threats of all types. In preparing this assessment, the National Intelligence Council worked closely with all IC components, the wider U.S. Government, and foreign and external partners and experts to provide the most timely, objective, and useful insights for strategic warning and U.S. decision advantage. This 2025 Annual Threat Assessment details these myriad threats by actor or perpetrator, starting with nonstate actors and then presenting threats posed by major state actors. The National Intelligence Council stands ready to support policymakers with additional information in a classified setting.
Remeiation
with EdgeRunner
with Cyberpunk Division contact
and circle back with arasaka to mil ip change
okay
due to Data center
wasabi
and security now for colorado overlay
@dod
@FBI

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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State of California
and PEns not state penn
No Fino Preiest
no Boeing offsites
Oklahoma
No Hockey
No Louisiana trust land deal
no Russian and or prior Soviet of Alaska
NO Cuban no Staten island immagration books
@watsonly Direct feed into
and confirmation of Pioneeers club
for
Karl Kani background understood.
This annual report of worldwide threats to the national security of the United States responds to Section 617 of the FY21 Intelligence Authorization Act (Pub. L. No. 116-260). This report reflects the collective insights of the Intelligence Community (IC), which is committed to providing the nuanced, independent, and unvarnished intelligence that policymakers, warfighters, and domestic law enforcement personnel need to protect American lives and America’s interests anywhere in the world. This assessment focuses on the most direct, serious threats to the United States primarily during the next year. All these threats require a robust intelligence response, including those where a near-term focus may help head off greater threats in the future.
The 2025 Annual Threat Assessment (ATA) is the Intelligence Community’s (IC) official, coordinated evaluation of an array of threats to U.S. citizens, the Homeland, and U.S. interests in the world. A diverse set of foreign actors are targeting U.S. health and safety, critical infrastructure, industries, wealth, and government. State adversaries and their proxies are also trying to weaken and displace U.S. economic and military power in their regions and across the globe. Both state and nonstate actors pose multiple immediate threats to the Homeland and U.S. national interests. Terrorist and transnational criminal organizations are directly threatening our citizens. Cartels are largely responsible for the more than 52,000 U.S. deaths from synthetic opioids in the 12 months ending in October 2024 and helped facilitate the nearly three million illegal migrant arrivals in 2024, straining resources and putting U.S. communities at risk. A range of cyber and intelligence actors are targeting our wealth, critical infrastructure, telecom, and media. Nonstate groups are often enabled, both directly and indirectly, by state actors, such as China and India as sources of precursors and equipment for drug traffickers. State adversaries have weapons that can strike U.S. territory, or disable vital U.S. systems in space, for coercive aims or actual war. These threats reinforce each other, creating a vastly more complex and dangerous security environment. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea—individually and collectively—are challenging U.S. interests in the world by attacking or threatening others in their regions, with both asymmetric and conventional hard power tactics, and promoting alternative systems to compete with the United States, primarily in trade, finance, and security. They seek to challenge the United States and other countries through deliberate campaigns to gain an advantage, while also trying to avoid direct war. Growing cooperation between and among these adversaries is increasing their fortitude against the United States, the potential for hostilities with any one of them to draw in another, and pressure on other global actors to choose sides. This 2025 ATA report supports the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s commitment to keeping the U.S. Congress and American people informed of threats to the nation’s security, representing the IC’s dedication to monitoring, evaluating, and warning of threats of all types. In preparing this assessment, the National Intelligence Council worked closely with all IC components, the wider U.S. Government, and foreign and external partners and experts to provide the most timely, objective, and useful insights for strategic warning and U.S. decision advantage. This 2025 Annual Threat Assessment details these myriad threats by actor or perpetrator, starting with nonstate actors and then presenting threats posed by major state actors. The National Intelligence Council stands ready to support policymakers with additional information in a classified setting.
@watsonly Direct feed into
and confirmation of Pioneeers club
for
Karl Kani background understood.
This annual report of worldwide threats to the national security of the United States responds to Section 617 of the FY21 Intelligence Authorization Act (Pub. L. No. 116-260). This report reflects the collective insights of the Intelligence Community (IC), which is committed to providing the nuanced, independent, and unvarnished intelligence that policymakers, warfighters, and domestic law enforcement personnel need to protect American lives and America’s interests anywhere in the world. This assessment focuses on the most direct, serious threats to the United States primarily during the next year. All these threats require a robust intelligence response, including those where a near-term focus may help head off greater threats in the future.
The 2025 Annual Threat Assessment (ATA) is the Intelligence Community’s (IC) official, coordinated evaluation of an array of threats to U.S. citizens, the Homeland, and U.S. interests in the world. A diverse set of foreign actors are targeting U.S. health and safety, critical infrastructure, industries, wealth, and government. State adversaries and their proxies are also trying to weaken and displace U.S. economic and military power in their regions and across the globe. Both state and nonstate actors pose multiple immediate threats to the Homeland and U.S. national interests. Terrorist and transnational criminal organizations are directly threatening our citizens. Cartels are largely responsible for the more than 52,000 U.S. deaths from synthetic opioids in the 12 months ending in October 2024 and helped facilitate the nearly three million illegal migrant arrivals in 2024, straining resources and putting U.S. communities at risk. A range of cyber and intelligence actors are targeting our wealth, critical infrastructure, telecom, and media. Nonstate groups are often enabled, both directly and indirectly, by state actors, such as China and India as sources of precursors and equipment for drug traffickers. State adversaries have weapons that can strike U.S. territory, or disable vital U.S. systems in space, for coercive aims or actual war. These threats reinforce each other, creating a vastly more complex and dangerous security environment. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea—individually and collectively—are challenging U.S. interests in the world by attacking or threatening others in their regions, with both asymmetric and conventional hard power tactics, and promoting alternative systems to compete with the United States, primarily in trade, finance, and security. They seek to challenge the United States and other countries through deliberate campaigns to gain an advantage, while also trying to avoid direct war. Growing cooperation between and among these adversaries is increasing their fortitude against the United States, the potential for hostilities with any one of them to draw in another, and pressure on other global actors to choose sides. This 2025 ATA report supports the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s commitment to keeping the U.S. Congress and American people informed of threats to the nation’s security, representing the IC’s dedication to monitoring, evaluating, and warning of threats of all types. In preparing this assessment, the National Intelligence Council worked closely with all IC components, the wider U.S. Government, and foreign and external partners and experts to provide the most timely, objective, and useful insights for strategic warning and U.S. decision advantage. This 2025 Annual Threat Assessment details these myriad threats by actor or perpetrator, starting with nonstate actors and then presenting threats posed by major state actors. The National Intelligence Council stands ready to support policymakers with additional information in a classified setting.
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@baesystems
@watsonly
@verizonwireless
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DEPUTY SECRETARY OF DEFENSE 1010 DEFENSE PENTAGON WASHINGTON, DC 20301-1010 JUL 15 2022 MEMORANDUM FOR SENIOR PE TAGON LEADERSHIP COMMANDERS OF THE COMBATA T COMMANDS DEFENSE AGE CY AND DOD FIELD ACTIVITY DIRECTORS SUBJECT: Establishment of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office On ovember 23, 2021, I directed the Under Secretary ofDefense for Intelligence and Security (USD(I&S)) to establish the Airborne Object Identification and Management Synchronization Group (AOIMSG) to synchronize efforts across the Department ofDefense (DoD) and with other Federal departments and agencies to detect. identify, and attribute objects of interest in special use airspace. I also established the Airborne Object Identification Management Executive Council (AOIMEXEC) to provide oversight and direction to the AOIMSG. Prior to the establishment ofthe AOIMSG the ational Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 was enacted with a provision that requires the Secretary of Defense to establish an office, in coordination with the Director of ational Intelligence (DNI), with responsibilities that include those that were to be assigned to the AOIMSG. Therefore, following coordination with the DNI, I hereby approve the following amendments to my original direction in Deputy Secretary of Defense Memorandum, "Establishment ofthe Airborne Object Identification and Management Group," ovember 23, 2021, to meet the DoD requirements in section 1683 ofthe NDAA for FY 2022:
The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) will be established to carry out the duties that were to be fulfi lled by the AOIMSG. The mission ofthe AARO will be to "synchronize efforts across the Department and with other Federal departments and agencies to detect, identify, and attribute objects of interest in, on, or near military installations, operating areas, training areas, special use airspace, and other areas of interest, and, as necessary, to mitigate any associated threats to safety of operations and national security." This includes anomalous, unidentified space, airborne, submerged, and transmedium objects.
The AOIMEXEC is renamed the AARO Executive Council (AAROEXEC). The mission ofthe AAROEXEC will be to provide oversight and direction to the AARO.
I direct the USD(I&S) to establish the AARO, in coordination with the Director of Administration and Management. Consistent with section 1683 ofthe NDAA for FY 2022, I also direct the Secretary of the Navy to disestablish the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force (UAPTF) no later than the date the AARO is established, and to support the orderly transition ofthe UAPTF, including the transfer ofany data, analysis, or other relevant material, to the AARO.
All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO)
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💬 0 🔁 0 ❤️ 0 · AARO Advertising · Recruitments 💬 0 🔁 4 ❤️ 1 · (A) All reported unidentified aerial phenomena-related events that occu
Common objects/causes frequently reported as UAP include:
Airborne clutter: Includes windborne debris like plastic bags and mylar balloons, or birds. These may appear anomalous due to their unpredictable motion and small size. Even technical sensors like radar can misperceive these objects as acting strangely.
Commercial or scientific balloons: High-altitude balloons used for weather, research, or communications often lack identifying markings and can look strange when viewed from certain angles or under certain conditions. The National Weather Service launches hundreds of these balloons daily, and businesses, universities, and local weather stations launch hundreds more. Worldwide, thousands are launched every day.
Commercial or military aircraft: Misidentified conventional aircraft—particularly when viewed from unusual angles, in low-visibility conditions, or using infrared/optical sensors can appear anomalous.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (i.e., drones): Drones can exhibit erratic or rapid movement, lack visible navigation lights, and often evade radar classification because of their small size.
Space launches: Rocket launches and stage separations can produce high-altitude luminous events, spiral patterns, or lingering exhaust plumes, often leading to misclassification as UAP.
Satellites: Sunlight reflecting off satellite surfaces (e.g., solar panels, antennas) can produce bright lights (flares or glints), commonly mistaken for fast-moving UAP or “orbs.”
Celestial objects: Bright planets like Venus and Jupiter, meteors, and other astronomical bodies can be misperceived as hovering or maneuvering objects due to perceptual or relative motion optical effects.
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