Credibility Audit
3 factors- Military Witness+3
- Multiple Witnesses+2
- Official Report+1
- 0–3
- 4–7
- 8–11
- 12–16
- 17+
DoD Observables
1 of 5- Instantaneous Acceleration
- Hypersonic Velocity
- Low Observability
- Trans-Medium Travel
- Anti-Gravity Lift
Event Description
Craft morphology
In 2006, China's official state news agencies — Xinhua News Agency and the People's Daily — published a series of reports documenting UAP incidents involving Chinese military personnel, representing an unusual degree of official transparency from a government that typically maintained strict control over military information. The reports described multiple incidents at military installations and in active military airspace, and included statements from Chinese defense researchers acknowledging that UAP were being studied as a defense concern.
The Xinhua and People's Daily reports described incidents including unidentified objects observed near military bases, encounters by Chinese military pilots, and observations from military installations across multiple provinces. Chinese defense researchers quoted in the reports stated that UAP were being taken seriously as potential threats to national security, and that investigation programs had been established within the People's Liberation Army to collect and analyze UAP data.
The official Chinese media's engagement with the UAP topic in 2006 was noteworthy given the context: China was in a period of accelerating military modernization, and any unidentified aerial contacts near sensitive military facilities would be treated as potential intelligence assets of foreign powers — particularly the United States, whose surveillance drone program was active and expanding. The Chinese military's public acknowledgment of UAP activity at its installations suggested that the contacts were sufficiently anomalous to resist attribution to known foreign aerospace capabilities.
Chinese defense researchers who spoke to Xinhua described study programs that had been operating for years within PLA aerospace research institutions. The brief public visibility of these programs in 2006, before official Chinese media returned to a more guarded posture on the subject, provided a rare window into China's institutional engagement with UAP that is typically inaccessible to outside researchers.
The 2006 Chinese wave is studied alongside reports from other major powers as part of the global pattern of institutionalized military UAP investigation that operated in parallel with the public skepticism maintained by official government positions. China's subsequent increase in military capability across air, sea, and space domains has made understanding its UAP investigation posture increasingly relevant to the international strategic environment.
