Do we know if AARO really only has those redacted videos we see, or have access to telemetry or more unredacted data?
I would imagine that varies case by case. Again, classification, redaction and de-classifying are NOT controlled by AARO. Corbell has leaked a few of these videos without redaction, so it's safe to assume some exist in that form. As for "telemetry" or any other data not included in the actual video, it's probably case by case. If someone just uploaded a drone video of a submarine with some birds, there may be nothing more to it. I guess one could spend hours or days trying to track down where the video originated, but what's the point? It's a submarine with birds.
Suspending judgment when analyzing redacted files that lack telemetry is not a leap of faith; it is simply proper scientific caution. Declaring a definitive conclusion based on incomplete data is fundamentally no different than making a premature assumption.
I think this is another misconception people have and has come up in other threads about AARO. Congress created AARO with specific mandates and rules to operate under. The important thing is it wasn't created to do "science" in the formal way we think about it. They were not charged with producing peer-reviewed scientific papers that are acceptable for publication in mainstream journals.
They were mandated, in simple terms, to look into UAP, past and present and then report to Congress. That included a historical review (again), standing up a central reporting system, and investigating claims of UAP, whether video or whistle-blower derived. ANY one that went to AARO with a UAP story, was granted whistle-blower status by default, and were anonymous and could not be investigated.
Any evidence obtained or sent to AARO from US assets, like Reaper drones, could be analyzed, but is under the classification structure of the agency where it originated. AARO may have some videos that included lots of other data, but if the originating agency wants that classified, it's going to remain classified.
Someone was haranguing AARO in a thread about their first report, for not including ALL the raw data about the TTSA sample they looked at. They were complaining that "withholding" the raw data was not how science is done. But it wasn't science, it was a report to Congress. They told Congress, and by default us, that they tested the sample, it was unremarkable and clearly not from a UFO. That's all Congress needed per the congressional mandate that created AARO.