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Pentagon Declassifies New Batch of UAP Files

A military aviator described an object with flight characteristics "unlike anything I had seen" in 28 years of service, headlining a fresh release of 40 government files detailing unidentified anomalous phenomena. The documents span decades of sightings, ranging from high-speed aerial encounters to an intrusion over a nuclear weapons facility.

Pentagon Declassifies New Batch of UAP Files

The Pentagon published the material on its official UAP website, fulfilling an executive order signed earlier this year. The collection includes 14 documents, 19 videos, four audio files, and three images sourced from agencies including NASA, the CIA, the FBI, and the Energy Department. Roughly half of these records date to 2010 or later, featuring infrared footage captured across the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Middle East.

In a 2019 incident over the eastern United States, an aviator and four crew members tracked a small, rectangular object moving at high speed. The pilot reported that the craft vanished from the camera’s field of view after a zoom adjustment, leaving experienced personnel unable to identify the source. Other files reveal a 2015 security lockdown at the Pantex nuclear facility near Amarillo, Texas, where guards observed a silent, propulsionless object hovering over the site. Recent entries from 2025 detail sensor data near China, including a six-pointed star captured over the Yellow Sea and devices that appeared to interfere with military electro-optical tracking systems.

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