For readers of this blog, and likely a massive chunk of the human collective…official black and white clips of a black dot moving in the sky don’t actually mean much. We favor the special cloud images, and the work of amateur videographers who happened to be in the right place at the right time.
It says right on the war dot gov site under the UFO tab that “The materials archived here are unresolved cases, meaning the government is unable to make a definitive determination on the nature of the observed phenomena.” That’s a pretty large hidey hole for everything that they have, indeed, made a definitive determination about. Think Roswell, and virtually every interaction that our government has had with off-worlders since the days of President Eisenhower.
Who can gripe, though? Disclosure has to start somewhere.
As of May 8, 2026, the U.S. Department of War released the first major tranche of declassified UAP/UFO files on a new dedicated site: war.gov/ufo. It’s part of the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters, an effort directed by President Trump in response to public interest. It involves the White House, ODNI, NASA, FBI, DOE, AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office), and others, and includes eyewitness accounts, photos, and documents from various agencies and incidents worldwide.
Additional files will be released on a rolling basis (every few weeks) as more records are reviewed and declassified. The site saw 340 million hits in the first 12 hours, which indicates that the human collective is far more ready for disclosure than the decision makers seem to think. Although I have to say…Anons on the research board are definitely not all enjoying coherence on the situation. Many are devout Christians without a lot of exposure to galactic anything.
Perhaps all the missing scientists, in conjunction with this fairly underwhelming effort, will create a confluence of events that actually does start to prepare those who’ve been taught that all ETs are demons for an alternate scenario. I like the idea of using Star Trek TNG as a preparatory documentary, but that’s probably a bit ambitious for these early stages.

