The 5 Observables

Archive Of Leaked or Released Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Footage, Displaying One Or Many of the 5 Observables

About this website and its purpose

There’s something in the skies that we cannot understand, and there’s credible evidence to prove it.

In 2023, members of the US Congress heard stunning testimony (under oath) during a hearing on July 26th with a former intelligence officer-turned-whistleblower (David Grusch) and two pilots (Ryan Graves & David Fravor) about their experiences with strange, seemingly inexplicable objects that hundreds of pilots as well as military operators have reported encountering in recent years.

You can re-watch the full hearing here.

David Grusch a decorated Afghanistan combat veteran and former Air Force intelligence officer who worked in the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) and the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) recently blew the whistle on a secret US recovery program and that it is in possession of “non-human” spacecraft along with their “dead pilots”.

The hearing, held by a House subcommittee, focused on so-called UAP, the formal government name for objects that had previously been known as UFOs. The witnesses shined a light on an issue that has attracted renewed interest over the past several years, but many Americans are turning their attention to the phenomena for the first time.

The5Observables.com was built with one goal in mind: Present in a grounded and non-sensational perspective the video evidence of these UAP’s, grouped into one or more of the 5 Characteristics set by the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP).

This site contains only real video evidence, corroborated by multiple observers or released via an official source, or a leak, which has not been explained yet (otherwise stated). Only footage starting from the year 2000 and forward.

What does “UAP” mean exactly?

UAP is an abbreviation of unidentified aerial phenomenon (or phenomena), a term that refers to things observed in the sky that cannot be identified as aircraft or other known phenomena.

UAP is often used in the same way as the more popular term UFO (which stands for unidentified flying object), including sometimes being pluralized as UAPs when referring to multiple things that have been observed.

However, use of UAP instead of UFO, including in official ways by US government agencies, is sometimes seen as a way of avoiding popular connotations associated with the term UFO, including the implication that they are alien spacecraft.

Still, UAP and UFO are often used interchangeably, and UAP is used by some who believe that some phenomena that have been observed are in fact extraterrestrial in origin.