May 17, 2026

On May 8, 2026, the United States government initiated an unprecedented rolling declassification of records concerning Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs). Fulfilling a directive issued by President Donald Trump in February 2026, the Department of Defense launched a dedicated transparency portal to host the files.

The digital archive, known as the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters (PURSUE), was published via a new government website. Demonstrating intense public curiosity, the platform shattered records by logging 340 million hits within its first 12 hours of operation.


Overview of the Initial Tranche

The initial release consists of 162 distinct files sourced from a multi-agency transparency initiative involving the Department of Defense, FBI, NASA, and the State Department.

MetricTotal Count / Volume
PDF Documents120 files
Videos28 files (41 minutes total runtime)
Image Files14 files
Redaction Status108 files contain partial redactions

Note on Redactions: The Pentagon confirmed that information was withheld solely to protect the identities of eyewitnesses, the locations of government facilities, or sensitive military sites. Under the presidential directive, no redactions were made to information detailing the actual nature or existence of the UAP encounters.


Key Historical and Modern Revelations

The released materials span multiple decades, combining historical archives with highly recent military reports from 2024 and 2025.

1. Archival Space Mission Data

The release features previously unseen photographs and communication transcripts from early NASA missions:

  • Apollo 11: Declassified debriefing transcripts reveal that astronaut Buzz Aldrin reported a “sizeable” object alongside a “bright light source” near the Moon during the historic 1969 mission.
  • Apollo 12 & 17: The cache includes lunar sky photographs from December 1972 capturing three “dots” in a distinct triangular formation, alongside images overlaid with investigative “areas of interest” boxes.

2. The FBI “Flying Disc” Files

An 18-document case file from the FBI details investigations into unidentified objects and “flying discs” spanning from 1947 to 1968. The dossier contains photographic evidence from sensitive locations—such as Oak Ridge, Tennessee—eyewitness sketch overlays, and technical proposals evaluating potential unestablished propulsion systems.

3. Modern Military Encounters (2020–2026)

The bulk of the 41 minutes of video footage features infrared tracking data captured by military aircraft.

  • The “Aegean Sea” Incident (2023): A military report documenting an object flying just above the ocean surface, executing multiple 90-degree turns while maintaining a speed of approximately 80 mph.
  • The “Eye of Sauron” Report (2023): A detailed Pentagon file detailing accounts from federal employees who observed a strange airborne orb resembling the fictional “Eye of Sauron.”
  • Operational Theater Sightings: Dozens of recent encounter reports from service members and drone pilots tracking white, fast-moving, or “bouncy ball” shaped specks over Iraq, Syria, the Persian Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf of Aden, and Greece.

4. International Diplomatic Cables

The State Department contributed a series of diplomatic cables sent to Washington from 1985 through late 2025. These documents trace UAP incidents reported by foreign officials and witnessed in countries including Papua New Guinea, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Georgia, and Mexico.


Official Government Position and Next Steps

Despite the historic volume of data, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Pentagon officials emphasized that the materials represent “unresolved cases.”

“These files detail unresolved cases, meaning the government is unable to make a definitive determination on the nature of the observed phenomena.”

The administration explicitly stated that the documents do not provide confirmed evidence of extraterrestrial life or recovered alien technology, echoing conclusions drawn in a 2024 comprehensive report. Instead, the government has welcomed private-sector analysis of the data.

The PURSUE website notes that this May 8 publication is merely the first tranche of an ongoing, expanding release. Additional documents are scheduled to be uploaded on a rolling basis every few weeks as they are processed. The next major tranche is projected to debut in June 2026.

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