Congress Kills UFO Disclosure Bill Again

DEVELOPING

Congress has quietly gutted the Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Disclosure Act (UAPDA) by excluding it from the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, which President Trump is expected to sign.

The bill—which would have mandated government transparency on UFO materials and research—won't become law.

This marks another legislative failure on UAP disclosure despite growing public and bipartisan interest. The UAPDA had been positioned as the vehicle to force the Pentagon and intelligence agencies to declassify information on anomalous objects and reverse-engineering programs.

Congressional leadership simply didn't include it in the final NDAA package. No explanation. No public vote. Dead.

The move contradicts recent momentum: Congressional hearings on UAPs have drawn significant attention. Former intelligence officials have testified under oath that the government possesses retrieved craft. Yet when it matters—when bills need to pass—leadership shelves the issue.

Either they don't want answers, or they're afraid of the answers. Possibly both.

The Pentagon will continue operating under current secrecy rules. Any classified UAP materials stay classified. Any programs stay hidden.

Publicly, members will probably claim they "support transparency" while doing nothing to achieve it. Washington's favorite move: talk, then walk.

Source: Liberation Times


Developing: Awaiting statement from House/Senate leadership and Trump transition team.