- scripts/03-dedup-entities.py: stop emitting placeholder narrative ("Stub. Will
be enriched in Phase 7"); write summary_status=none + null fields instead.
- scripts/maintain/41_strip_stubs.py: idempotent migration that cleaned the
22,096 entity .md files (now zero stub strings in wiki/).
- scripts/synthesize/01_anchor_events.py: curated 20 anchor UAP events
(Roswell, Nimitz Tic-Tac, Phoenix Lights, Operação Prato, AATIP, etc.) with
bilingual Holmes-Watson narrative via claude -p --model sonnet
(CLAUDE_CODE_OAUTH_TOKEN). All summary_status=curated, confidence=high.
- web/api/timeline + timeline-view: filter narrative-less events by default,
render "curado" badge for hand-vetted ones, drop the date display alone.
- CLAUDE-schema-full.md: document the summary_status enum and the four states.
- docker-compose.yml: SMTP_HOST=mail.spacemail.com configured;
GOTRUE_MAILER_AUTOCONFIRM flipped to false (real email confirmation working).
- .nirvana/outputs/.../systems-atelier/: 5 deliverables of the architecture
audit that produced this roadmap.
6.3 KiB
| schema_version | type | entity_class | event_id | canonical_name | aliases | event_class | date_start | date_end | date_confidence | primary_location | observers | uap_objects | documented_in | total_mentions | documents_count | narrative_summary | narrative_summary_pt_br | summary_status | summary_confidence | enrichment_status | external_sources | last_ingest | last_lint | wiki_version | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.1.0 | entity | event | EV-2017-12-16-aatip-disclosure | AATIP Public Disclosure |
|
uap-disclosure-event | 2017-12-16 | 2017-12-16 | high | New York / Washington, D.C., USA | 0 | 0 | On 16 December 2017, the New York Times published a front-page investigation confirming the existence of the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a Pentagon effort funded at approximately $22 million from 2007 to 2012 through appropriations secured by Senator Harry Reid, with primary research contracts held by Robert Bigelow's Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies. Luis Elizondo, who had resigned from the Office of the Secretary of Defense in October 2017, identified himself as the program's former director and provided three declassified infrared videos—subsequently designated FLIR1, GIMBAL, and GOFAST—documenting U.S. Navy encounters with objects exhibiting aerodynamic performance outside the parameters of any known aircraft. The simultaneous release of the footage through To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science marked the first time the U.S. government acknowledged, however obliquely, a modern classified program dedicated to UAP study. The Pentagon confirmed AATIP's existence but disputed claims about its scope and Elizondo's specific managerial role. The disclosure triggered Senate briefings, prompted the Navy to formalize UAP reporting channels, and set in motion the legislative sequence that produced the UAP Task Force in 2020 and the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office in 2022. | Em 16 de dezembro de 2017, o New York Times publicou uma investigação de primeira página confirmando a existência do Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), um programa do Pentágono financiado com aproximadamente 22 milhões de dólares entre 2007 e 2012, viabilizado por verbas articuladas pelo senador Harry Reid, com os principais contratos de pesquisa entregues à Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies, empresa de Robert Bigelow. Luis Elizondo, que havia se demitido do Escritório do Secretário de Defesa em outubro de 2017, identificou-se como ex-diretor do programa e disponibilizou três vídeos infravermelhos desclassificados — posteriormente designados FLIR1, GIMBAL e GOFAST — que registram encontros de pilotos da Marinha dos EUA com objetos dotados de desempenho aerodinâmico fora dos parâmetros de qualquer aeronave conhecida. A divulgação simultânea das imagens pela To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science marcou a primeira vez em que o governo norte-americano reconheceu, ainda que indiretamente, a existência de um programa classificado moderno dedicado ao estudo de PANs. O Pentágono confirmou a existência do AATIP, mas contestou alegações sobre o escopo do programa e o papel gerencial específico de Elizondo. A revelação desencadeou sessões de briefing no Senado, levou a Marinha a formalizar canais de reporte de PANs e iniciou o processo legislativo que resultaria no UAP Task Force em 2020 e no All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office em 2022. | curated | high | none | 2026-05-18T03:41:50Z | 2026-05-18T03:41:50Z | 0.1.0 |
AATIP Public Disclosure
Description (EN)
On 16 December 2017, the New York Times published a front-page investigation confirming the existence of the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a Pentagon effort funded at approximately $22 million from 2007 to 2012 through appropriations secured by Senator Harry Reid, with primary research contracts held by Robert Bigelow's Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies. Luis Elizondo, who had resigned from the Office of the Secretary of Defense in October 2017, identified himself as the program's former director and provided three declassified infrared videos—subsequently designated FLIR1, GIMBAL, and GOFAST—documenting U.S. Navy encounters with objects exhibiting aerodynamic performance outside the parameters of any known aircraft. The simultaneous release of the footage through To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science marked the first time the U.S. government acknowledged, however obliquely, a modern classified program dedicated to UAP study. The Pentagon confirmed AATIP's existence but disputed claims about its scope and Elizondo's specific managerial role. The disclosure triggered Senate briefings, prompted the Navy to formalize UAP reporting channels, and set in motion the legislative sequence that produced the UAP Task Force in 2020 and the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office in 2022.
Descrição (PT-BR)
Em 16 de dezembro de 2017, o New York Times publicou uma investigação de primeira página confirmando a existência do Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), um programa do Pentágono financiado com aproximadamente 22 milhões de dólares entre 2007 e 2012, viabilizado por verbas articuladas pelo senador Harry Reid, com os principais contratos de pesquisa entregues à Bigelow Aerospace Advanced Space Studies, empresa de Robert Bigelow. Luis Elizondo, que havia se demitido do Escritório do Secretário de Defesa em outubro de 2017, identificou-se como ex-diretor do programa e disponibilizou três vídeos infravermelhos desclassificados — posteriormente designados FLIR1, GIMBAL e GOFAST — que registram encontros de pilotos da Marinha dos EUA com objetos dotados de desempenho aerodinâmico fora dos parâmetros de qualquer aeronave conhecida. A divulgação simultânea das imagens pela To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science marcou a primeira vez em que o governo norte-americano reconheceu, ainda que indiretamente, a existência de um programa classificado moderno dedicado ao estudo de PANs. O Pentágono confirmou a existência do AATIP, mas contestou alegações sobre o escopo do programa e o papel gerencial específico de Elizondo. A revelação desencadeou sessões de briefing no Senado, levou a Marinha a formalizar canais de reporte de PANs e iniciou o processo legislativo que resultaria no UAP Task Force em 2020 e no All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office em 2022.