World offshore windfarm map... not many in the INDOPAC region...
Looking at the footage,
DOW-UAP-PR48, Unresolved UAP Report, INDOPACOM, 2024
https://www.war.gov/UFO/#DOW-UAP-PR48-Unresolved-UAP-Report-INDOPACOM-2024
there appears to be at least two small features of increased brightness associated with the most noticeable one, perhaps most noticeable 40 to 42 seconds in:
Below, same screen detail, features highlighted in yellow (the brightest feature most obvious on watching the video is "c"):
These brighter details move in relation to each other,
There are several other small areas of increased brightness that seem to travel as the sensor head pans; two indicated in the screengrab below but there are others. Possibly many.
From a brief viewing, they don't move much (if at all) relative to each other
or the crosshairs, and move as the camera pans. Perhaps they are on the lens (or "window" fixed in front of it if there is one).
The "UAP" ("c", and its friends "a" and "b" I guess) look like these but is a bit brighter and moves about more relative to the others and the crosshairs.
At approx. 1 min 21 secs into the video, the bright feature is moving left to right but the crosshairs stop moving (relative to the wind turbines).
The bright feature slows, and starts drifting downward.
At approx. 1 min 26 secs the crosshairs move downward and (it seems to me- could be wrong) the bright feature's path downward becomes a little faster, combined with movement to the left.
It made me think of floaters in the eye, and how they sometimes follow the direction of eye movement, and have a bit of momentum, gradually slowing, but capable of being "batted" into a new direction by a new eye movement.
At the moment, I'm thinking along the lines of the "UAP" being something on the surface of, but not fixed to, the surface of the lens, skating about a bit.
The other small bright (but not as bright) features are almost certainly on the lens/ window, perhaps they are less massive and more firmly "adhered" in position, less prone to being kicked around by movements of the sensor.