• The U.S. Department of War has declassified and released a huge collection of documents, videos and reports about UFOs (now called UAP). This includes decades of material from the FBI, NASA and military sources, described as a “historic transparency effort” to give the public direct access to formerly secret information.
  • The files include reports from Apollo moon missions. Buzz Aldrin (Apollo 11) saw flashes in the cabin and a bright light he thought might be a laser. Astronauts on Apollo 12 and 17 also described mysterious lights, with one saying it looked “like the Fourth of July.”
  • While some incidents were debunked (like a 1948 sighting later explained as a rocket-assisted jet), many others have no clear conclusion. For example, a 1965 Gemini 7 astronaut reported seeing “hundreds of little particles” outside the spacecraft, but officials offered no explanation.
  • The collection includes reports from 2020 to the present. One redacted 2023 report describes a drone operator seeing a metallic, wingless object with a super bright light that vanished in seconds. Some details were blacked out to protect witness identities and sensitive military locations.
  • The release is part of a larger interagency effort called PURSUE, ordered by President Donald Trump. While officials promise more files soon, they admit most materials have not been fully analyzed. No official government interpretation of the UAP phenomenon was provided, leaving the public to draw their own conclusions.

In what officials are calling a landmark step toward government openness, the U.S. Department of War (DOW) has declassified and released a massive trove of documents related to unidentified flying objects (UFOs), now officially referred to as unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP). The release, published on a dedicated page on the website of the DOW, contains hundreds of documents, videos, intelligence reports and witness accounts spanning decades.

The newly available materials include interviews conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) mission transcripts, U.S. Department of State cables and archival imagery tied to unexplained incidents.

Officials described the move as a “historic transparency effort” aimed at giving the American public direct access to information long shrouded in secrecy.

Military encounters and Apollo mysteries

Among the intriguing newly released materials are reports describing “metallic objects,” unexplained “red lights” in the sky and aerial encounters involving U.S. military personnel.

One highlighted case references a 2024 Indo-Pacific sighting of a football-shaped object near Japanese waters, while another revisits Apollo 17 mission records from 1972 documenting mysterious drifting lights observed above the lunar surface.

The files also contain incidents from the Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 moon missions. In a 1969 debriefing after the Apollo 11 flight, astronaut Buzz Aldrin reported seeing “little flashes inside the cabin, spaced a couple of minutes apart,” while trying to fall asleep.

Aldrin also described seeing “what appeared to be a fairly bright light source, which we tentatively ascribed to a possible laser.”

During Apollo 12 in 1969, astronaut Alan Bean reported “flashes of light” that he described as “sailing off into space.”

Some incidents debunked, others remain unexplained

As explained by the Enoch AI engine at BrightU.AI, the newly released documents show that some incidents were immediately debunked by intelligence officials.

For example, on September 5, 1948, military crew members flying at 30,000 feet over the Netherlands reported an unidentified aircraft with “sudden accelerations and then a climb.” Within a few months, officials concluded it was a single-propelled jet using “rocket assists with tremendous reserve power.”

Other incidents in the files are only described and do not draw conclusions.

There is a transcript of an exchange between astronaut Frank Borman from Gemini 7 in 1965, in which he refers to a “bogey at 10 o’clock high” about 4.5 hours into the spaceflight. Borman then describes the bogey as “hundreds of little particles going by to the left out about three or four miles.”

Recent reports and redactions

The files also include incidents from 2020 to the present as mission reports from the U.S. Air Force identifying “potential” UAPs, with few details on what the object is or when or where it was identified.

Other accounts are reports from people around the country submitted since the 1940s.

Some sightings were redacted, such as a September 2023 report of an FBI FaceTime interview with a drone operator who, along with colleagues, saw a “bright light over the horizon” at a U.S. test site. The document notes that “redactions have been made to protect the identity of eyewitnesses, the location of government facilities or potentially sensitive information about military sites not related to UAP.”

The sighting was described as “a linear object with a super bright light on the east side of the object. The light was bright white and bright enough to see bands within the light. The object was metallic/gray in color. It did not have any wings or exhaust. The object was smaller than a 737, one to two Blackhawk helicopters in length and was definitely bigger than a drone.” Witnesses said the object was about 5,000 feet above ground, moved east to west, and vanished after about 5 to 10 seconds.

A broader declassification effort

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill, along with interested parties ranging from serious scientists to conspiracy theorists, have pressed for the disclosure of these files for years.

The release was coordinated through the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) as part of a broader interagency initiative involving the White House, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, NASA, the FBI, the Department of Energy and other U.S. intelligence agencies.

Officials said additional releases are expected in the coming weeks as part of a broader declassification effort. In February, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of War to disclose “any and all information” related to UFOs and UAP.

There is a caveat, however.

“While all of the files have been reviewed for security purposes, many of the materials have not yet been analyzed for resolution of any anomalies,” the press release stated. “The American people have asked for more transparency on these topics, and President Trump is delivering,” the release added.

The interagency effort to release the UFO files has its own acronym: PURSUE, or the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters. As with previous government document dumps, no interpretation of the unidentified anomalous phenomena was shared by the White House, leaving the public to draw its own conclusions from the newly available records.

Watch this clip as the Health Ranger Mike Adams talks about how Christian pastors were briefed on the recent government-run UFO disclosure agenda.

This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.

Sources include:

RT.com

NBCNews.com

BrightU.ai

Brighteon.com


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