On May 8, 2026, the Pentagon did something it has spent decades trying very hard not to do: it opened the UFO filing cabinet. The Department of Defense released the first tranche of declassified records under the PURSUE (Public Understanding and Review of Sightings from Unidentified Events) program, dumping 162 files onto a government website and essentially saying, “Here you go, America — we still have no idea what these things are.” Welcome to the most transparent shrug in the history of national security.
Release date: May 8, 2026
Total records: 162
Format breakdown: 120 PDFs, 28 videos, 14 images
Sources: Pentagon (82), FBI (56), NASA (12), State Dept. (8), Unidentified (4)
Available at: WAR.GOV/UFO
Content: Military reports, witness interviews, pilot accounts, drone operator sightings
Process: Rolling disclosure — more tranches expected
162 Files, A Universe of Questions
The numbers alone are fascinating before you even get to the content. The 162 records include 120 PDF documents, 28 video files, and 14 still images. The Pentagon itself contributed the lion’s share — 82 records — followed by 56 from the FBI, 12 from NASA, 8 from the State Department, and 4 from sources that are, fittingly, unidentified. You cannot make this stuff up. Well, apparently, someone might have — that is sort of the whole question.
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The records span decades of UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, because the government loves a good rebrand) encounters. There are formal military investigation reports, transcribed witness interviews, pilot debriefs from carrier-based aviators who tracked objects performing maneuvers that would turn a human pilot into jelly, and even accounts from drone operators who observed unexplained aerial activity during surveillance missions. The material ranges from dry bureaucratic memos to genuinely unsettling eyewitness descriptions of objects that defied known physics.
The Platform: WAR.GOV/UFO
In a move that feels like it was designed by a government communications intern with a flair for drama, the files are hosted at WAR.GOV/UFO. The site features a searchable database, rudimentary filtering by source agency and date range, and download links for every record. The videos are hosted in standard MP4 format; the images are high-resolution scans of original photographs and sensor readouts. It is not exactly Netflix, but for anyone who has spent years filing FOIA requests and getting back pages of black redaction bars, it is a revelation.
— Department of Defense spokesperson, May 8, 2026
Early analysis by independent researchers has flagged several records of particular interest. At least three of the video files appear to show objects tracked simultaneously by multiple sensor systems — infrared, radar, and visual — which is significant because multi-sensor correlation is the gold standard for ruling out instrument error. Several pilot accounts describe objects accelerating from a hover to hypersonic speed with no visible propulsion signature, a characteristic that has been reported in UAP encounters for years but has rarely been documented with this level of official corroboration.
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Rolling Disclosure — or Rolling Stonewalling?
The Pentagon has been careful to frame this as the first tranche of a rolling disclosure process. More records are coming, officials say, though they have declined to provide a timeline or estimate the total volume. Skeptics point out that 162 records from a program that has allegedly investigated thousands of incidents over multiple decades is a drop in the ocean — or, more accurately, a drop in the restricted airspace.
Congressional pressure has been mounting since 2023, when the UAP hearing circuit began in earnest. Multiple whistleblowers have testified under oath about programs involving recovered materials and biological specimens, claims that the Pentagon has neither confirmed nor convincingly denied. The PURSUE program itself was mandated by legislation, which means this is not the Pentagon being generous — it is the Pentagon being compliant, grudgingly, with the law.
Still, 162 files is 162 more than we had last week. The videos are real. The pilot accounts are on the record. The sensor data is, at minimum, interesting. Whether any of this constitutes evidence of non-human intelligence, advanced foreign technology, or simply the universe’s most elaborate collection of weather balloons and lens flares remains, as the Pentagon would say, “under ongoing assessment.” Translation: they do not know. But at least now, neither do we — together.
The UFO vault is open. The answers, predictably, are still classified.
Sources: Department of Defense PURSUE program release; WAR.GOV/UFO database; congressional UAP oversight committee records; independent UAP research community analysis.




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