Military Whistleblowers Present New UAP Evidence to Congress
Military insiders presented fresh evidence of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) at a House hearing Tuesday—the first such proceeding dedicated entirely to UAP transparency by the Oversight Committee's declassification task force.
Details on the specific evidence remain sparse. DefenseScoop reported the testimony but didn't disclose what whistleblowers revealed, suggesting either classification restrictions or an ongoing news development.
The hearing marks a shift in how Congress treats the UAP file. For years, Pentagon officials deflected questions or stonewalled. Now House committees are actively soliciting military personnel willing to go on record—a sign either the evidence has become too substantial to ignore or political pressure for answers has reached critical mass.
What matters: Congress is hearing directly from witnesses instead of relying on official channels that have repeatedly failed to produce answers. Whether this produces actual declassification or just more testimony that vanishes into the bureaucracy remains to be seen.
The task force's stated mission—declassifying federal secrets around UAP—suggests lawmakers believe the government is sitting on material it shouldn't be hiding.
Next steps unclear. No announcement of follow-up hearings or declassification timelines.
Status: Developing. Full testimony details not yet public.
Source: DefenseScoop

