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"This is huge. This is worldwide." Congressman Tim Burchett UAP Caucus co-chair, House Foreign Affairs Committee member

CERTAINTY INDEX


The Outcome Counseling UAP Certainty Index is built upon examination of hundreds of interviews, books, papers, imagery, and reports and boiled down to three categories: Certainly, Probably, Maybe. Below this matrix is a compilation of units that would likely manage, support, and execute global retrieval missions.


Certainly

Almost all UAPs are not U.S. or adversarial craft

The U.S. maintains an crash retrieval program and possesses at least ten craft

The U.S. has a governmental and private aerospace back-engineering program

The U.S. possesses compelling videos and still images of UAPs

The most common types seen are orbs, disks, and triangles

UAPs have been involved in near-miss incidents with military aircraft

UAPs commonly evade human vision

UAPs have been recorded on forward-looking infrared displaying extreme variations in temperature

UAPs are attracted to military operational areas, weapons facilities, and nuclear assets

Negative psychological affects of interactions include dread and a feeling of being watched

Positive psychological affects of interactions include empathy and meaningful introspection

Some craft pose physical health risks to those who get near them when craft are operational

Craft travel through space, Earth's atmosphere, Earth's water – they're transmedium

Craft travel at speeds in excess of 46,000 mph (Mach 60) and acceleration is instantaneous

Craft can travel underwater at high speed with no cavitation

Craft hide in our oceans, one location being the Puerto Rico Trench

There is a consciousness component to craft, their occupants, or both

Phenomenon known as the "hitchhiker effect" affects UAP experiencers

A UAP crashed in Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947 and was recovered with occupants

There are seven UAP "models" – orbs, eggs, cubes, Tic-Tacs, boomerangs, triangles, jellyfish


Probably

UAPs are made of smart materials that interact with the operator's consciousness

UAPs use anti-gravitic propulsion systems

A UAP occupant survived the Roswell crash

Russia and China possess UAPs and are attempting to back-engineer them

U.S. Special Operations Forces have been seriously injured during UAP encounters

Orbs have been recorded by military platforms within all modern combat zones

Some experiencers brought forth their encounters using CE5 techniques

UAPs have been seen across recorded history and have exceedingly ancient origins

Civilians and non-civilians have been murdered in an attempt to keep UAPs secret

Small arms and Harpoon and Hellfire missiles have been fired at UAPs to no effect


Maybe

UAPs are able to manipulate the spacetime continuum or travel interdimensionally

UAPs possess cloaking abilities

Pilots have died or disappeared while engaging UAPs

UAPs cannot evade forward-looking infrared

UAPs travel to Earth from other star systems

A UAP crashed near Trinity, New Mexico, in 1945 and was recovered

A UAP crashed near Aztec, New Mexico, in 1948 and was recovered

A UAP crashed near Kingman, Arizona, in 1953 and was recovered

A UAP crashed near Del Rio, Texas, in 1955 and was recovered 

A UAP crashed on Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, in 1962, and was recovered

A UAP crashed near Kecksburg, Pennsylvania, in 1965 and was recovered


Crash Retrievals

Special operations members, government insiders, and researchers have confirmed an active program. These eighteen units would likely manage, support, and execute global retrieval missions.


Air Force 24th Special Tactics Squadron

Headquarters: Pope Field, NC

Force: 600

Mottos: "First There," "That Others May Live," "The Professionals"

Mission: Precision strike, asset recovery, high-value target acquisition, battlefield surgery, hostage rescue

Deployments: Afghanistan, Djibouti, Iraq, Pakistan, Panama, Philippines, Syria, Thailand, Yemen

UAP function: Secure and defend sites, provide lifesaving care, transport recovered craft


Army 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment – Delta

Headquarters: Fort Bragg, NC

Force: 1,000

Motto: "Without Equal"

Mission: Hostage rescue, high-value target acquisition, reconnaissance, direct action, protection

Deployments: Afghanistan, Balkans, Colombia, Grenada, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Kuwait, Libya, Pakistan, Panama, Philippines, Somalia, Syria, Yemen

UAP function: Secure and defend sites


Army 20th Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, Explosives Command

Headquarters: Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD

Force: 4,500

Motto: “Liberty We Defend”

Mission: All-hazards response including detection, identification, render safe, dismantle, exploit, eliminate

Deployments: Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, South Korea, Syria

UAP function: Assess and mitigate hazardous materials at sites


Army 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment

Headquarters: Fort Campbell, KY

Force: 3,200

Motto: "Night Stalkers Don't Quit"

Mission: Direct action, insertion and extraction, search and rescue, combat life support, reconnaissance

Deployments: Afghanistan, Australia, Brazil, Chad, Chili, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Somalia, South Korea, Syria, Thailand, Uzbekistan, Yemen

UAP function: Transport personnel to and from sites, secure and defend sites


Army and USMC infantry units

Headquarters: Washington, D.C.

Forces: 160,000 and 65,000

Mottos: "This We'll Defend" and "Semper Fidelis"

Mission: Direct action, joint exercises, embassy protection, global readiness, ally force strengthening

Stations: Australia, Baltics, Colombia, Germany, Guam, Honduras, Iraq, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Norway, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Syria, Thailand

UAP function: Secure sites until more specialized units arrive


Army Rangers

Headquarters: Fort Benning, GA

Force: 3,600

Motto: "Rangers Lead the Way"

Mission: Direct action, airfield seizure, reconnaissance, intelligence gathering, site exploitation

Deployments: Afghanistan, Grenada, Iraq, Kosovo, Pakistan, Panama, Somalia, Syria

UAP function: Secure sites until more specialized units arrive


Army Special Forces

Headquarters: Fort Bragg, NC

Force: 3,500

Motto: "To Free the Oppressed"

Mission: Force building and advising, unconventional warfare, direct action, counter-terrorism

Deployments: Afghanistan, Balkans, Bosnia, Cambodia, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Kosovo, Kuwait, Laos, Libya, Nicaragua, Niger, Pakistan, Panama, Philippines, Poland, Somalia, Syria, Ukraine, Vietnam, Yemen

UAP function: Secure and defend sites


Central Intelligence Agency Office of Global Access

Headquarters: Langley, Virginia

Force: 200

Motto: "Third Option"

Mission: Asset retrieval coordination, denied area access, non-permissive environment operations

Deployments: Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria

UAP function: Facilitate entry to sites via covert means, manage special operations resources


Central Intelligence Agency Special Activities Center 

Headquarters: Langley, Virginia

Force: Unknown

Motto: "Third Option"

Mission: Paramilitary operations, sabotage, intelligence gathering, unconventional warfare, political action

Deployments: Afghanistan, Balkans, Bolivia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, El Salvador, Georgia, Guatemala, Herzegovina, Honduras, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Kosovo, Laos, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Mexico, Nicaragua, North Korea, Pakistan, Philippines, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Somalia, South Korea, Syria, Vietnam, Yemen

UAP function: Secure and defend sites


Department of Defense Foreign Materiel Program

Headquarters: Washington, D.C., and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH

Force: Unknown 

Motto: "Protecting Our Nation"

Mission: Identify, acquire, and assess foreign assets, coordinate efforts, back-engineer

Deployments: Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Syria, Ukraine, Yemen

UAP function: Acquire, assess, and exploit technology


Department of Defense National Air and Space Intelligence Center

Headquarters: Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH

Force: 3,600

Motto: "Knowing the Past, Understanding the Present, Preparing for the Future"

Mission: Foreign material exploitation, technical intelligence, aerospace research and development

Deployments:: Iraq, Syria, Ukraine

UAP function: Collect and analyze GEOINT, HUMINT, IMINT, MASINT, OSINT, SIGINT, TECHINT


Department of Defense National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

Headquarters: Springfield, VA, and St. Louis, MO

Force: 14,500

Motto: "Know the Earth, Show the Way, From Seabed to Space"

Mission: Collect, analyze, and distribute space-derived geospatial intelligence

Deployments: Space domain

UAP function: Collect and analyze GEOINT, HUMINT, IMINT, MASINT, OSINT, SIGINT, TECHINT


Department of Defense National Reconnaissance Office

Headquarters: Chantilly, Virginia

Force: 3,000

Motto: "Above and Beyond"

Mission: Satellite infrastructure, imagery and signals intelligence, reconnaissance information

Deployments: Space domain

UAP function: Collect and analyze GEOINT, HUMINT, IMINT, MASINT, OSINT, SIGINT, TECHINT


Department of Energy Nuclear Emergency Support Team

Headquarters: Washington, D.C. 

Force: 800

Motto: "Scientifically Informed, Operationally Focused"

Mission: Radiological and nuclear emergency response, technical support, nuclear forensics

Deployments: Unknown

UAP function: Assess and mitigate hazardous materials at sites


Naval Warfare Command (SEALs)

Headquarters: San Diego, California, and Virginia Beach, Virginia

Force 2,900

Motto: "The Only Easy Day Was Yesterday" 

Mission: Maritime direct action, high-value target acquisition, reconnaissance, hostage rescue

Deployments: Afghanistan, Balkans, Grenada, Iraq, Panama, Somalia, Vietnam, Yemen

UAP function: Secure and defend sites


Office of Naval Intelligence

Headquarters: Suitland, MD

Force: 3,000

Motto: "Always Vigilant"

Mission: Collect, analyze, and produce maritime intelligence

Deployments: National and international

UAP function: Collect and analyze GEOINT, HUMINT, IMINT, MASINT, OSINT, SIGINT, TECHINT


Space Force

Headquarters: Washington, D.C.

Force: 14,000

Motto: “Always Above”

Mission: Space-based and ground-based detection and tracking, intelligence gathering, collaboration

Deployments: Space domain

UAP function: Collect and analyze GEOINT, HUMINT, IMINT, MASINT, OSINT, SIGINT, TECHINT


USMC Raiders

Headquarters: Camp Lejeune, NC

Force: 3,000

Motto: "Spiritus Invictus"

Mission: Direct action, counter-terrorism, reconnaissance, partner nation support

Deployments: Afghanistan, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Iraq, Kosovo, Pakistan, Philippines, Somalia, Syria, Yemen

UAP function: Secure sites until more specialized units arrive


While Erik is a licensed clinical social worker, the services provided through Outcome Counseling aren't clinical in nature and don't substitute clinical diagnosis and treatment.


Copyright © 2025 Outcome Counseling ● All Rights Reserved

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