Credibility Audit
3 factors- Military Witness+3
- Official Report+1
- Govt. Acknowledgment+4
- 0–3
- 4–7
- 8–11
- 12–16
- 17+
DoD Observables
0 of 5- Instantaneous Acceleration
- Hypersonic Velocity
- Low Observability
- Trans-Medium Travel
- Anti-Gravity Lift
Event Description
In 2024, Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs took the extraordinary step of sending an official diplomatic letter to the Taliban's embassy in Islamabad formally documenting two unidentified flying objects that had been observed crossing the Afghan-Pakistan border. The diplomatic letter described the objects' appearance, trajectories, and the Pakistani military's response to the incursions, requesting explanation or acknowledgment from the Afghan side.
The diplomatic channel used to communicate this information — an official Ministry of Foreign Affairs letter to a foreign embassy — elevated the incident to the level of a formal state-to-state communication, distinct from informal military reports or civilian sightings. The Pakistani Foreign Ministry's decision to pursue diplomatic channels suggests that the objects were considered a serious airspace sovereignty matter, not simply an anomalous observation to be filed internally.
Pakistani military radar and ground observation tracked the objects crossing the border. The objects' behavior and characteristics were inconsistent with known Taliban or Pakistani military aircraft, drone types common in the region, or natural phenomena. The failure to attribute the objects to any known source — including the advanced drone fleets operated by the United States, which maintained surveillance operations over Afghanistan — drove the decision to seek formal diplomatic clarification.
The Taliban's response to the Pakistani diplomatic inquiry, and any subsequent joint investigation into the incursions, has not been publicly disclosed. The geopolitical context of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border — one of the world's most heavily monitored and contested airspace zones, with active drone operations by multiple state and non-state actors — makes the existence of genuinely unidentified objects in that environment particularly significant from a national security standpoint.
The 2024 Pakistan Foreign Ministry letter represents one of the most recent examples of a sovereign government using formal diplomatic channels specifically to address UAP airspace incursions, and adds to the growing record of official government-to-government UAP communications that parallels the broader trend of national transparency on UAP matters that began with the U.S. government's 2017 public acknowledgments.
