Enigma app has logged 9,000 USO sightings within 10 miles of US shorelines — and the maps are unsettling
Most of the PURSUE conversation has been about aerial UAP — the infrared blobs, the Greece video, the Apollo photos. But there's a parallel data story happening right now that I think deserves more attention on this forum.
The Enigma app — which describes itself as the largest standardized repository of anomalous sightings — has been tracking Unidentified Submersible Objects (USOs) along US coastlines. The numbers are hard to ignore. Out of roughly 30,000 total UAP sightings logged since the app launched in 2022, around 9,000 of them were reported within 10 miles of US shorelines or major bodies of water. They've released maps showing clusters of orange dots running up and down both coasts. California has nearly 400 reports. Florida has over 300.
USOs are defined as any object detected underwater that cannot be immediately identified or explained. Witnesses consistently describe the same characteristics: extremely high speeds underwater, sharp directional changes, and transmedium behavior — meaning they transition between water and air without slowing down or creating a splash.
The national security angle here is what gets me. Retired Navy Rear Admiral Tim Gallaudet put it plainly: the fact that unidentified objects with unexplainable characteristics are entering US water space and the DOD is not raising a giant red flag is itself evidence that the government isn't sharing everything it knows about all-domain anomalous phenomena. There's also a 2019 video of an object buzzing the USS Omaha before diving into the Pacific without a trace that keeps getting referenced in connection with this.
Here's why this matters right now: tranche two of PURSUE is expected around June 7th and is rumored to focus specifically on underwater encounters. If that's true, the Enigma data is essentially the civilian side of the same story the government is about to start telling.
Are any of you using Enigma or other tracking tools? And what do you make of the coastal clustering specifically — is there a pattern there worth taking seriously? Source https://janet51.com