Tuesday, 19 November 2019

Google Website (Brazilian Government) Search/
Google Searches:
Focus On the Official Brazilian Air Force
Decree, Portaria (Ordinance) 551/GC3


The decree regulates what to do with reports of UFOs in Brazil.

COMDABRA is responsible for receiving and cataloging the
occurrences of UFO incidents, according to the official (Brazilian
Air Force) decree, named Portaria (Ordinance) 551/GC3 (dated
9 August 2010), Brazilian UFO researcher A. J. Gevaerd reported
in a UFO UpDates (Toronto, Canada) mailing list post on 10 August

COMDABRA is the acronym for Comando de Defesa Aeroespacial Brasileiro (Brazilian Aerospace Defense Command).

(Search term: “551/GC3” site:gov.br) (All)

(“551/GC3”) (All)

(“Portaria 551/GC3” “OVNI”) (All)

(“Portaria 551/GC3” “OVNIs”) (All)

Wikipedia article: “Brazilian Air Force”:


Reverso Context search results: COMDABRA:


Related posts:

(A. J. Gevaerd Posts Regarding the New Brazilian Government (Air Force) UFO Decree)




realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=CINDACTA










The Coat of Arms of the Brazilian Air Force (FAB)
(wikimedia.org image)

UFO Magazine Article:
“Documento do COMDABRA mostra
quase colisão entre UFO e aviões”
(“COMDABRA document shows near
collision between UFO and airplanes”)


By Thiago Luiz Ticchetti, 1 June 2015
(Revista UFO (Brazilian UFO Magazine), Campo Grande, Brazil)

The UFO incident occurred over Quixadá, Ceará, Brazil, on
24 January 2014, at 12:10 p.m., according to the article.

COMDABRA is the acronym for Comando de Defesa Aeroespacial Brasileiro (Brazilian Aerospace Defense Command).

COMDABRA is responsible for receiving and cataloging the
occurrences of UFO incidents, according to the official (Brazilian
Air Force) decree, named Portaria (Ordinance) 551/GC3 (dated
9 August 2010), Brazilian UFO researcher A. J. Gevaerd reported
in a UFO UpDates (Toronto, Canada) mailing list post on 10 August
2010 (ufoupdateslist.com).


English translation (by Google Translate):


Wikipedia article: “Departamento de Controle do Espaço Aéreo”:


English translation of the Wikipedia article: “Department of Airspace Control”:

“The Department of Airspace Control ( DECEA ) is a military governmental entity of the Brazilian Air Force Command, which in turn reports to the Ministry of Defense. Its mission is to manage the operation of traffic services in Brazil's sovereign airspace, as well as to coordinate their defense with COMDABRA ( Aerospace Defense Command ).


Brazilian Airspace

Responsible flight information regions of Brazil.
The airspace under the responsibility of the country extends beyond its borders. It surpasses the area over its territory and reaches a significant part of the Atlantic Ocean, making a total of 22 million km2, on land and sea, agreed in international treaties.

In other words, in Brazil, air control assumes gigantic proportions, which makes it a strategic and national security task, entrusted by law to one of the Armed Forces.

The Department of Airspace Control (DECEA) is the organization of the Air Force Command responsible for controlling this area. It brings together human resources, equipment, accessories and infrastructure with the mission of providing the safety and fluidity of the region's flights.

Thus, the evolution of air traffic flow in the national airspace is controlled daily by four major operational bases, subordinate to DECEA: the integrated air defense and air traffic control centers, also known as CINDACTA.

They act on airspace subdivisions called Flight Information Region, or FIR, according to official nomenclature. In Brazil, there are five FIRs, on which four CINDACTAs operate:

CINDACTA I (Brasília-DF) Responsible for the Brasília FIR, which covers the central region of Brazil.

CINDACTA II (Curitiba-PR) Responsible for the Curitiba FIR, which covers the south and part of south-central Brazil.

CINDACTA III (Recife-PE) Responsible for the Recife and Atlantic FIR, covering the Northeast and the Atlantic Area

CINDACTA IV (Manaus-AM) Responsible for the Manaus FIR, which extends over much of the Amazon region.

At the same time, CINDACTAs bring together civil air traffic control and military air defense operations. A successful integration solution that has been recommended by the International Civil Aviation Organization (UN activity regulator) to the other signatory countries, as a model of economy of means and operational safety.

The Cindactas are also added by the São Paulo Regional Flight Protection Service (SRPV-SP), which is responsible for controlling the highest flow density traffic in the country, along the São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro air terminals.

Finally, to ensure a balance between capacity and demand at aerodromes and control sectors, there is yet another DECEA unit, the Air Navigation Management Center (CGNA).

Created from the necessity of air flow ordering in order to speed it up where there is opportunity or need, the CGNA operates under a collaborative decision logic, in which representatives of airlines, airport administrators, regulatory organizations, among others, are participants. and they are exposing information daily and sharing responsibilities in order to join forces in the name of more effective decisions.

The CGNA is a kind of operational manager of the country's flight flows, where all air movements are monitored 24 hours a day, in order to enable air circulation, ensuring the effectiveness and operational safety of air transport.”

Wikipedia article: “CINDACTA”:


Related posts:



(A. J. Gevaerd Posts Regarding the New Brazilian Government (Air Force) UFO Decree)

Brazilian ufologists visited COMDABRA (the Brazilian Aerospace Defense Command) in Brasilia on 20 May 2005
(From left to right: Roberto Beck, Rafael Cury, Marco Petit,
A. J. Gevaerd, Fernando Ramalho and Claudeir Covo)

(rense.com photo)














Satellite photo of Quixadá, Brazil (tageo.com)
(tageo.com photo)

UFO Case Directory (RADCAT):
“Asst Security Chief UFO / Knoxville Tracks
October 24, 1950
Oak Ridge, Tennessee”


(NICAP.org)

The whole UFO case report:
Fran Ridge:
Oct. 24, 1950; Oak Ridge, Tennessee
6:30 p.m. FBI documents show several visual sightings at Oak Ridge and a radar track at Knoxville. An unidentified object appeared at 6:30 PM at an altitude of approximately 5,000 feet in the same general vicinity as the object observed by Fry (see FBI doc below). The radar target disappeared at 7:20 p.m. The complete radar report to the CIC investigator says that targets appeared at 6:23 p.m. moving over the restricted flight zone and at 6:26 a fighter was scrambled to the area of the targets but failed to see anything. This series of incidents was not listed among the original BB Unknowns.”

NICAP.org presents U.S. government (Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)) documents that pertain to the UFO case.


Wikipedia article: “Oak Ridge National Laboratory”:


Quote from the Wikipedia article:
History

The town of Oak Ridge was established by the Army Corps of Engineers as part of the Clinton Engineer Works in 1942 on isolated farm land as part of the Manhattan Project.[11] During the war, advanced research for the government was managed at the site by the University of Chicago. In 1943, construction of the ‘Clinton Laboratories’ was completed, later renamed to ‘Oak Ridge National Laboratory.’ The site was chosen for the X-10 Graphite Reactor, used to show that plutonium can be extracted from enriched uranium. Enrico Fermi and his colleagues developed the world’s second self-sustaining nuclear reactor after Fermi’s previous experiment Chicago Pile-1, the X-10 was the first designed for continuous operation.[12] After the end of World War II the demand for weapons-grade plutonium fell and the reactor and the laboratory’s 1000 employees were no longer involved in nuclear weapons,[11][13] instead it was used for scientific research.[12] In 1946 the first medical isotopes were produced in the X-10 reactor, by 1950 almost 20,000 samples had been shipped to various hospitals.”

Related posts:






realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=Radars










“Y-12” Area at Oak RidgeTennessee
(nicap.org photo)













Satellite photo of Oak Ridge, Tennessee (tageo.com)
(tageo.com photo)