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758 FILES·LAST 15D AGO
01 · DisclosuresFD · FindingsDENMARK4 of 4

Denmark findings

Findings in this surface are derived from each file's indexed summary, key points, and cited pages. The full files surface is browse all Denmark files →

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4 of 4 findings

  1. 01PDFFlyvevåbnet (Royal Danish Air Force)p.2

    Pages 100-199 of the Flyvevåbnet 2009 archive. The middle stretch of Denmark's NATO-member-state UAP file, where the running ledger of incident reports across two decades builds into a continuous institutional record.

    Part 2 covers the middle of Denmark's wholesale archive. The institutional record at this point is dense with running pilot, ATC, and ground-witness reports, the kind of steady-state UAP correspondence that NATO air forces of the same period were also accumulating but not releasing.

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

  2. 02PDFFlyvevåbnet (Royal Danish Air Force)p.2

    Pages 200-280, the late stretch of the Flyvevåbnet 2009 release. The institutional record running into the 1990s and early 2000s, the period in which most other NATO members were still holding their UAP files behind closed doors.

    Part 3 runs into the 1990s and early 2000s. The Danish Air Force was still receiving and logging UAP reports at the institutional perimeter of a NATO member, with the file maintaining the same incident-report format it had used in the late 1970s.

    Flyvevåbnet UFO Archive 2009, Part 3 (pp. 200–280)

  3. 03PDFFlyvevåbnet (Royal Danish Air Force)p.1

    Pages 1-99 of the Royal Danish Air Force's January 2009 release. Military UAP observation reports spanning 1978-2002, one of the first wholesale disclosures of its kind by a NATO member state.

    In January 2009, the Royal Danish Air Force (Flyvevåbnet) released its full archive of military UAP observation reports covering 1978-2002. The release is one of the first wholesale UAP disclosures from a NATO member state. Pages 1-99 cover the opening years of the archive, the late-1970s reports that established the Danish military's incident-report conventions for the next two and a half decades.

    Flyvevåbnet UFO Archive 2009, Part 1 (pp. 1–99)

  4. 04PDFFlyvevåbnet (Royal Danish Air Force)p.1

    Pages 280-329, the tail of the Flyvevåbnet 2009 release. The final 50 pages of Denmark's wholesale disclosure, closing out a continuous 1978-2002 record from a single NATO air force.

    Part 4 closes out the wholesale disclosure. The last 50 pages bring the continuous 1978-2002 record to its institutional end-point, the moment the Flyvevåbnet decided the back catalogue could be released as a single declassified package rather than parcelled out across years.

    Flyvevåbnet UFO Archive 2009, Part 4 (pp. 280–329)

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