The Trump administration cut loose the first batch of classified UAP files on May 8, 2026. The Pentagon posted the raw package—videos, sensor logs, operator reports, and analyst notes—straight to a public portal under the Department of War. This was not some gradual drip. It was the opening move on Trump’s February order that forced every agency with a hand in the UAP game to hand over records they had buried for decades.
The package contains three fresh unresolved cases that the Pentagon’s own All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office cannot explain.
- June 2024, Gulf of Oman near UAE airspace: an inverted teardrop object with a rigid vertical appendage shows up on infrared from a U.S. platform. It holds position against the wind, moves at speed, then vanishes from tracking without a heat signature or propulsion trail. Twenty-one seconds of clean data. No match to drone, balloon, or aircraft. Unresolved.
- December 2022, over Iraq: a small bright object streaks west to east in under ten seconds. Central Command operators logged it during a routine mission. Speed and trajectory rule out known missiles or commercial traffic. The file notes the object simply appeared, crossed the frame, and disappeared. Unresolved.
- October 2023, off the Greek coast: a small circular object skims the ocean surface, turns sharply toward land, and executes multiple ninety-degree maneuvers at low altitude. Twenty-four seconds of primary footage plus a longer segment. Military sensors captured the full run. No exhaust, no wings, no transponder. Unresolved.
These are not civilian sightings. They come from calibrated military systems during operational flights. Pilots and sensor operators filed them through formal channels that feed directly into the intelligence pipeline. The fact that senior reviewers with full clearances still label them unresolved after months of analysis exposes the gap the bureaucracy has guarded for generations.
🚨 BREAKING: TRUMP DROPS FIRST UFO FILES
Trump administration just released the first batch of classified UFO/UAP documents and videos ordered by President Trump.
Unresolved footage includes:– Inverted teardrop object over UAE (June 2024)
– Unknown object streaking over Iraq… pic.twitter.com/B91v9JHHNQ— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) May 8, 2026
The real story sits underneath the footage. For seventy years the intelligence community and defense establishment maintained a parallel system of classification that kept UAP data locked inside special access programs (More Info on gazetteller.com). They controlled the flow, the funding, and the narrative. Presidents came and went. Congress held hearings. The public got PowerPoint slides and promises of “further study.” The machine stayed intact because the machine benefited.
Secrecy protected budgets. Black projects absorbed billions without oversight. Contractors built detection systems and countermeasures while the public was told the skies were empty. Intelligence agencies used the classification wall to run operations that never required elected approval. When objects demonstrated performance beyond known U.S. or allied technology—rapid acceleration, zero observable propulsion, trans-medium travel—the default protocol was to file it, compartmentalize it, and deny its existence. That protocol kept the public docile and the power structure secure.
Trump’s directive shattered the rhythm. He ordered the full sweep: paper archives, digital files, sensor data spanning from the 1940s forward. No exemptions for legacy programs. The bureaucracy fought it behind closed doors. Internal memos, reviewed in the release package itself, show resistance from elements inside ODNI and the old AARO leadership who argued release would “damage strategic stability.” Translation: it would expose how much they had hidden from the chain of command.


The timing matters. These cases cluster in high-interest zones—UAE, Iraq, eastern Mediterranean. Areas where U.S. forces maintain constant presence and where adversaries test new systems. If any of this hardware belongs to China or Russia, the secrecy regime left American operators blind and the public uninformed. If it does not, the implications cut deeper into strategic planning. Either way, the old guard lost control of the information war.
This first release sets the operational tempo. More tranches follow every few weeks. Historical files from the Apollo era, Vietnam sightings, and Cold War intercepts are queued. The process forces inter-agency coordination that never existed before. Agencies that once hoarded data now compete to clear it fastest. That friction reveals the fractures Trump’s order created inside the system.
The American people now hold the sensor data. They can run their own analysis on the flight paths, heat signatures, and maneuver profiles. No gatekeeper decides what counts as real. That transfer of power is the point (More Info on gazetteller.com). The old network—intelligence bureaucrats, defense contractors, and the political class that shielded them—built its strength on monopoly over these facts. Trump broke the monopoly.

The files expose more than objects in the sky:
- They expose the machinery that kept the truth classified while operators in the field faced unknown threats without clear rules of engagement.
- They expose the financial streams that flowed into unaccountable programs while Congress was briefed with sanitized summaries.
- They expose the coordination between agencies that treated the American public as the final security risk.
BREAKING! UFO FILES RELEASED — SECRET MILITARY RECORDS ABOUT UFO ENCOUNTERS FINALLY PUBLIC
The release is complete. The old cover-up structure is now on the defensive, and every future tranche will tighten the pressure. The bureaucracy that ran the secrecy game for decades just lost its best weapon: silence.
