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Flyvevåbnet UFO Archive 2009 — Part 2 (pp. 100–199)

Pages 100–199 of the Royal Danish Air Force's 2009 public UAP archive release, containing military observation reports, handwritten witness statements, case correspondence, and internal memoranda spanning 1978 to 2002.

Brief

The Flyvevåbnet UFO archive was published in four parts on 29 January 2009 via the Forsvaret.dk public portal — one of the earliest wholesale disclosures of military UAP records by a NATO member state. This second portion (pp. 100–199) of the roughly 329-page release originates from Flyvertaktisk Kommando (Air Tactical Command) and covers a 24-year window of Danish military aerial-phenomena reporting. Document types across the full release include typed observation reports, handwritten witness statements, case correspondence, and internal memoranda. Because the PDF is scanned and OCR has not been applied to this portion, no page-level text is extractable.

Metadata

Agency
Flyvevåbnet (Royal Danish Air Force)
Release
2009-01-29
Type
PDF • .pdf
Length
100 pages
Classification
UNCLASSIFIED
Programs
Flyvertaktisk Kommando, Forsvaret.dk UFO archive
Tags
Danish military, NATO member disclosure, aerial observation, 1978–2002, Forsvaret.dk archive, scanned-no-OCR

Key points

  • This file is pages 100–199 of a four-part, approximately 329-page Royal Danish Air Force UAP archive released on 29 January 2009.
  • The releasing authority is Flyvertaktisk Kommando (Air Tactical Command), the operational headquarters of the Flyvevåbnet.
  • The archive covers 1978 through 2002, representing roughly 24 years of institutionalized Danish military UAP reporting.
  • The full release contains typed observation reports, handwritten witness statements, case correspondence, and internal Air Tactical Command memoranda.
  • At the time of publication the Flyvevåbnet release was among the first wholesale military UAP file disclosures by any NATO member state.
  • Publication was voluntary through the defence ministry's own Forsvaret.dk portal — a proactive disclosure rather than a compelled one.

Most interesting

  • Denmark released these files voluntarily through its own defence ministry website, making it a proactive act of transparency rather than a response to a freedom-of-information request.
  • The archive spans nearly a quarter century, from 1978 to 2002, implying a standing institutional procedure within the Royal Danish Air Force for documenting anomalous aerial encounters.
  • At 329 pages across four parts, the release represents a substantial body of accumulated reporting — not isolated incident files but a sustained bureaucratic record.
  • The inclusion of handwritten witness statements alongside typed administrative reports suggests a dual-layer collection process: informal field recording followed by formal processing through Air Tactical Command.
  • The 2009 release predated several other European NATO-member military UAP disclosures, positioning Denmark as an early mover in state-level transparency on the phenomenon.
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