Congressional oversight into UAPs is shifting focus directly toward defense contractors—and a new 10-page letter reveals the exact strategy being deployed.
Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO) has issued a detailed demand to The MITRE Corporation (a major FFRDC), tracking a trail that leads directly into the nation's largest aerospace giants.
Here is what the documents and public filings reveal about this expanding dragnet:
1️⃣ The Wedge: Private contractors are largely insulated from traditional FOIA requests. Congress is targeting FFRDCs (like MITRE and MIT Lincoln Labs) as an analytical on-ramp to audit external holdings.
2️⃣ The Scope: The May 22 letter demands the identification, preservation, and production of unclassified and classified UAP records dating all the way back to 1930.
3️⃣ The Target Network: The inquiry specifically orders MITRE to disclose any UAP-related work involving major prime contractors, explicitly naming:
• Lockheed Martin & Northrop Grumman
• Raytheon/RTX & Boeing
• General Dynamics, SAIC, & Leidos
• Battelle, Aerospace Corp, & Booz Allen Hamilton
• BAE Systems & Bigelow Aerospace
Current Status: On May 27, MITRE confirmed it is actively reviewing its archives to comply with the congressional request and will coordinate with federal agencies if relevant material is uncovered.
This marks a highly coordinated effort to bypass agency roadblocks by following the data directly into the corporate defense ecosystem.
What are your thoughts on this strategy? Will targeting FFRDCs successfully open up visibility into proprietary contractor files?
(Sources In Comments ⏬)
The paradox of being an experiencer is this: skeptics (rightly, in their framework) demand evidence, and grainy photos only create more doubt. Still you learn to drop materialism because the materialist world ain’t where we’re going.