PENTAGON RELEASES NEW BATCH OF UFO FILES SHOWING UNEXPLAINED UAP ENCOUNTERS, INCLUDING MILITARY VIDEOS AND EYEWITNESS REPORTS. (PHOTO).
The Pentagon has released another batch of declassified UFO-related materials, continuing a rolling disclosure of once-classified files ordered by President Donald Trump for public release. The latest drop includes more than 50 videos and documents involving unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), the government’s official term for UFOs, adding to a growing archive of material that has fueled public interest and debate about unexplained aerial activity.
Among the newly released records are multiple military and surveillance videos showing unexplained objects in flight. One clip, recorded by a U.S. Coast Guard infrared sensor in April 2024, appears to show an object moving near an aircraft over the Southeastern United States. Another, labeled “Syrian UAP instant acceleration,” was captured in 2021 by a U.S. military platform and later uploaded to a classified system in 2024, according to officials. A separate 2020 video taken in a U.S. Central Command area appears to show a spherical object flying over a populated region before accelerating upward and disappearing into the sky. The release also includes a written account from a senior intelligence officer describing a 2024 encounter in which “two large orbs” reportedly appeared alongside a helicopter, emitting bright orange light and later appearing to move in coordination with fighter jets sent to investigate.
Officials with the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office have stated that, after multiple investigations, there is no evidence suggesting any of the recorded incidents are of extraterrestrial origin. However, they also acknowledge that many cases remain unresolved due to limited data or inconclusive analysis.
This latest release brings the total number of disclosed UAP-related files to more than 200, continuing a broader transparency initiative that has included materials dating back decades. Earlier releases featured records from as far back as the late 1940s and were published on a public-facing website that has reportedly drawn massive global traffic since its launch.
The disclosure effort follows directives aimed at increasing transparency regarding government-held information on unidentified aerial phenomena, with officials emphasizing that the public can now review the materials directly and draw their own conclusions.

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