USS Nitze
USS Nitze (DDG-94) is an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer in the United States Navy, commissioned in 2005 and named after former Secretary of the Navy and Secretary of Defense Paul Nitze. As a modern guided-missile destroyer equipped with advanced radar and sensor systems, the Nitze operates Aegis combat systems capable of tracking air, surface, and subsurface targets simultaneously.
| Type | ship |
|---|
Connection to 2019 Spherical UAP Event
The USS Nitze is the ship from which the 2019 spherical-shaped UAP water entry video was reportedly filmed. This footage, later released by journalist Jeremy Corbell, shows a spherical object entering the water in what appears to be a trans-medium transition (air to water). The video's ambient audio— recorded shipboard during the event— has been used as a comparative baseline for analyzing the Flyby Footage.
Audio Comparison with Flyby Footage
During analysis of the flyby footage, researchers compared the ambient background noise in that recording to the ambient sounds captured aboard the USS Nitze during the 2019 UAP water entry event. Similarities in the audio profile have been noted, raising the possibility that the screen recording that produced the flyby footage may have been created aboard a U.S. Navy vessel, potentially the USS Nitze itself or a similar ship. The comparison is complicated by the fact that the flyby footage is a Second-Generation Recording, with audio representing the recording environment rather than original cockpit sound.
If the flyby footage's screen recording was indeed created aboard the USS Nitze, this would suggest the ship served as a location where classified UAP footage was being reviewed, analyzed, or stored— consistent with the Navy's documented role in recent UAP documentation and investigation efforts.