DOW-UAP-PR067 Multiple Spherical UAP USO near Sub

Link to War.gov page with original video download link
Link to Reddit discussion that alerted me

I want to discuss one specific moment in this video. At 3:02 a few bright spots at the top left are moving in different directions. One seems to disappear and reappear, zipping off in a new direction.
At the beginning of the video, the slowly floating spot made me think "balloon", potentially with some parallax effects. But having multiple spots floating in different directions, and potentially changing directions, reduces the likelihood of balloons and makes parallax a non-explanation.

My next hypothesis was birds. But the speed of the movement at 3:04 makes me question whether any pelagic birds move this fast. I am assuming they would be pelagic rather than migratory because they are moving independently rather than in a group. If we assume this is one object that changes directions and not two different objects, there is a separate question about acceleration, but let's just focus on speed.

To put an upper bound on the speed, we can estimate speed over the surface of the water. The zoom of the camera at 3:04 looks similar to the zoom around 3:18-4:25 when the sub is in the frame. Submarines are similar in size to each other, but let's guess this is a Delta IV class sub and we are looking at about half of its 166m length. I would guess the spot at 3:04 moves about that same length in around 30 frames (1 second). So a maximum speed of around 83 meters per second, or about 185 mph, or 298 kph.

If the bird was much closer to the camera, it could appear to be going faster. But drones like this only fly as low as 25,000 ft, and unlike migratory birds, pelagic birds stay within 50m of the water surface.

ChatGPT reports that the fastest a pelagic bird will dive is around 100 mph for "some large gull, skua, or gannet under exceptional wind conditions". So unless my estimate of the submarine size is very wrong, and there are "exceptional wind conditions" as well, this is almost certainly not a bird.

Here is a diagram, showing an accumulation of the bright spots during the 3:04-3:05 fast section, plus a separate shot of the submarine at 3:17 composited on top and flipped left-right.

max_frames_000025-000125 copy.png
 
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Hard to be 100% sure without more location/speed data, but I think it can be explained by the filming drone movement and a bird "maneuvering".

At first the bird movement has a component in the same direction as the forward movement of the drone, then it turns a bit and this component is now in the opposite direction :
bird.png

The parallax would make the first part of the flight look way slower than the second part.

Here is a quick animation of this scenario in blender :

The orb is moving at the same speed in both halves of the video, but on opposite directions, the apparent speed difference is due to the camera movement.
 
Super interesting video. I looked through the list of active sub types on wikipedia, and I think its an Iranian Fateh class sub. It has that hatch right in front of the conning tower, and bow upper hull has that distinctive little hunchback look.
fateh.jpg


Also, those dots are birds.
 
I corrected the first link, thank you very much for the heads up ♡

The "link to video" just gives a 404 error. The 2nd link seems to work:

https://www.war.gov/UFO/search/DOW-...ear-Sub-CALLSIGN-20220325-in-and-out-of-water

That's why best practice is to embed and show exactly what you're talking about. Same with the reddit link, if it's just a heads up than say so, if there is something significant we should know from reddit, pleas copy and paste that info so we don't have to search for it.

Submarines are similar in size to each other, but let's guess this is a Delta IV class sub and we are looking at about half of its 166m length. I would guess the spot at 3:04 moves about that same length in around 30 frames (1 second). So a maximum speed of around 83 meters per second, or about 185 mph, or 298 kph.

That would be an upper limit "at sea level". If the object is higher than sea level, it's moving slower.

If the bird was much closer to the camera, it could appear to be going faster. But drones like this only fly as low as 25,000 ft, and unlike migratory birds, pelagic birds stay within 50m of the water surface.

While the drone may be at 25'k and the sub is at sea level, we still don't know how high the object is, only that it is between the drone and the sub. What does your calculation say about the speed of the object if it were at 50m? And are we limited to 50m?

At the 3:02 Mark, the sub is not visible, so trying to say the zoom is the same and therefore IF the sub were visible it would appear the same based on how the waves look? Maybe. What is noticeable is that, either this sub was under constant attack from UFOs, or the platform/operator filmed a lot of birds flying around.

One comes by at 02:13:

Screenshot 2026-05-22 2.43.44 PM.png


There's one in the lower corner at 00:46 that the operator follows:

Screenshot 2026-05-22 2.45.52 PM.png


The one above is then followed and a 2nd one comes in from the bottom:

Screenshot 2026-05-22 2.47.55 PM.png


Just prior to the one your describing, the operator is following one at 02:56, near the center and the zoom or something changes a couple of times prior to the fast one in the upper left:

Screenshot 2026-05-22 2.50.37 PM.png


These sure look like birds and the fast one your commenting on seems consistent with a diving bird accelerating into the sea.
 
Submarines are similar in size to each other, but let's guess this is a Delta IV class sub and we are looking at about half of its 166m length.

Contemporary military submarines with a very roughly similar configuration (long essentially cylindrical hull, vertical "fin" or "sail") vary in length.
North Korea's Sang-O class is 34 metres long https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sang-O-class_submarine), Russia's Borei class, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borei-class_submarine; US Ohio class https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio-class_submarine are 170 metres.*

So a Borei is 5 times longer than a Sang-O.
A Delta IV is toward the upper end of this range (166 m, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta-class_submarine#Delta_IV_(Project_667BDRM_Delfin)_7_boats) but the sub in the video is not a Delta IV.

The sub in the video, note the pronounced "step" along the forward part of the hull top, the circular feature in front of the fin, the lack of hydroplanes on the fin:

ssk prov 1.jpg


Delta IV.

div.jpg


The sub in the video is probably an Iranian Fateh class, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fateh-class_submarine, only 48 metres long.
(While writing this I noticed @3db beat me to it!)

rroi fateh.jpg


The Fateh is a shade under 30% the length of a Delta IV. This will have a significant impact on the estimates of the speed of the (probably) flying features in the video, which I suspect are birds.

The Iranian Navy rarely conducts operations far from its coastline, meaning a greater variety of bird species might be seen in footage of their vessels than might be encountered e.g. mid-Atlantic, mid-Pacific.


*There might be smaller subs of older design in service; there are much smaller specialist and non-military subs with different configurations. The largest subs ever built, the USSR's Typhoons, were 175 metres long.
 
Perhaps more interesting than the likely birds, is this comment that goes with the video (bold by me):

External Quote:

On March 6, 2026, eight members of the U.S. House of Representatives requested access to 51 potentially UAP-related records allegedly held by the Department of War and the Intelligence Community. The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) identified a collection of responsive materials held on a classified network. Many of these materials lack a substantiated chain-of-custody.

AARO assesses that this video, whose uploader-defined title is, "Multiple Spherical UAP USO near Sub. [CALLSIGN] 2022/03/25 in and out of water," is likely derived from an infrared sensor aboard a U.S. military platform. A user uploaded this video to a classified network in May 2024.
Someone uploaded this a couple of years ago, with no provenance. How many of these videos are just something that some anonymous user uploaded?
 
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