🚨 Exclusive Radar Data Confirms Swarm of Unknown Objects Around U.S. Navy Destroyer
LAS VEGAS, NV – The national debate surrounding Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs), now formally referred to as Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs), has been fundamentally bolstered by the release of sensitive new evidence. For the first time, not just videos, but radar images recorded inside a U.S. Navy ship have confirmed the persistent presence of multiple unknown objects that swarmed a destroyer for hours.
The story, broken by i-Team reporter George Knapp on Mystery Wire, details an astounding encounter involving the USS Omaha off the coast of San Diego in 2019.
The Two-Hour Swarm
The core of the new evidence centers on the events of the night of July 15, 2019. For two long hours, the crew of the USS Omaha detected unknown objects on multiple sensor systems as the ship moved through ocean waters west of San Diego. The objects effectively surrounded the warship.
According to filmmaker Jeremy Corbell, who released the Navy video, similar events were reported by eight other Navy ships in the same area over three days.
The scope of the encounter was immense. “There was numerous warships that are having similar… it appears to be coordinated interaction,” Corbell stated. “And there was up to 50 to 100 contacts in the last three years.”
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Sensor Data Backs the Videos
While the public has previously seen videos like the famous “Tic Tac” and “Gimbal” incidents, this new release is significant because it includes the sensor data that confirms the visual accounts.
Crew members on the Omaha monitored the approach of the objects on their radar screens, seeing as many as 14 objects at one point all around the ship. Two different radar systems watched the objects and estimated their speed and track, with one object tracked at speeds up to 46 knots.
One specific object, described as a self-illuminated sphere at least six feet in diameter, flew alongside the Omaha for an extended period and was captured through a thermal sensor in the ship’s combat center. This thermal data, combined with the radar track, provides the hard evidence long demanded by skeptics.
The Mystery of Disappearance
The behavior of these UAPs defies conventional explanation. The Pentagon’s UAP Task Force reportedly considers the Omaha spheres to be true unknowns.
The ships under observation were unable to track where the objects came from or where they disappeared to. Notably, the self-illuminated sphere observed near the Omaha vanished into the ocean—and at that point, it also vanished from all sensors.
In one video snippet, nine objects were seen around the ship, but two of them dropped off, becoming invisible to two separate radar systems simultaneously. This supports the hypothesis that these objects possess extraordinary capabilities, such as some sort of cloaking ability.
“It supports the hypothesis that these are not just a balloon dropping into the water… these are true unidentifieds in mass number,” Corbell emphasized.

Official Confirmation
Less than four hours after the video was made public, a Pentagon spokesperson confirmed its legitimacy. The spokesperson verified that the footage was recorded by Navy personnel and is now officially in the hands of the UAP Task Force—the unit created to prepare a comprehensive report for Congress, which is due next month.
The combined evidence—thermal video, optical sightings, and verified radar tracks—raises profound security questions: If these are foreign-made high-tech drones, “how do they fly with no wings, rotors, or detectable exhaust?” As George Knapp noted, the sensor data forces the national security leadership to confront what are truly “unidentified” phenomena.