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Air Force Analyst Lenval Logan Exposes What AARO Won’t Show You About UFOs

Lenval Logan spent over two decades as an all-source intelligence analyst in the US Air Force and became a key member of the UAP Task Force under Jay Stratton. In an exclusive interview, Logan confirms a claim that has circulated among UAP researchers: the most compelling evidence of unidentified aerial phenomena has never been released to the public. His credentials and access to classified analysis give his statements particular weight in ongoing discussions about government transparency on the subject.

Logan analyzed the Syria UAP video, which he personally requested analysis for during his Task Force tenure. His assessment was direct: “This met all the parameters of a UAP. To the best of my knowledge, yes—instantaneous acceleration, no doubt in my book.” When asked whether he had encountered better footage, Logan’s response was unambiguous: “Yes.” He declined to elaborate on classified material, but stated plainly that “the public is not seeing the best evidence.”

Logan describes how AWACS systems worldwide track objects exhibiting capabilities that defy conventional explanation—instantaneous acceleration, right-angle turns, and speeds inconsistent with known aircraft. He recounts a 1990 sighting from his own aircraft window of a diamond-shaped object matching the later Calvine UFO photograph. He also notes that original Task Force members, including Lue Elizondo and Jay Stratton, were not brought into AARO, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office established to investigate these phenomena.

Logan is developing an application called Phenom to crowdsource UAP data collection and analysis. Following personal attacks and doxxing, he announced a version 2.0 launch planned for April with institutional backing to improve data quality and reduce noise in civilian reporting.

If the most significant UAP evidence remains classified, what standard should the public use to evaluate government claims about having thoroughly investigated these phenomena?

Source: Jeremy Corbell

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