Pentagon releases new batch of UFO files
The release adds 40 files, including 19 videos and 4 audio recordings, as officials say more records will follow.
- The Pentagon published its fourth major tranche of declassified UFO files on Friday, adding 40 new records to its public database under an ongoing transparency initiative.
- The fresh batch consists of 14 documents, 19 videos, four audio files, and three images pulled from a multi-agency sweep that includes records from the CIA, FBI, NASA, and the Energy Department.
- A standout report details a tense drone-like intrusion over a secure nuclear weapons facility—the Pantex plant near Amarillo, Texas, in September 2015—where security guards placed the facility on lockdown and used binoculars to chase a completely silent, unidentified object with no visible propulsion system.
- The disclosure features striking military first-hand accounts, including testimony from a veteran military aviator who described encountering an object that was "unlike anything I had seen" in 28 years of active flight service.
- The ongoing rollouts stem from a broader executive order signed by President Trump, establishing the "Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters" to systematically release unresolved historical files on a rolling basis.
54 Articles
54 Articles
The latest disclosure includes 40 files comprising 14 documents, 19 videos, 4 audio recordings and three images from government agencies.
The reports of the "phenomenon" that looked like a weather balloon stand out, while another document speaks of a six-pointed star.
The U.S. government recognizes that cases are included that remain without a definitive explanation.
New Pentagon UFO files reveal mystery object near Texas nuclear plant
The Pentagon has published a fourth batch of declassified unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) files, expanding its public archive with dozens of new documents, videos and images that detail unexplained sightings reported by military personnel and federal agencies. The release includes incidents near sensitive military sites, unusual airborne objects tracked by surveillance systems, along with additional historical records from NASA’s Apollo p…
The U.S. Department of Defense released a new batch of files on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) on Friday, better known as UFOs. Among the material stands out an object described as a “six-point star” detected by military sensors on the Yellow Sea near China.
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