Pentagon to Dump UAP Files—If They Actually Exist
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is doubling down on Trump's promise to crack open the Pentagon's alleged vault of UFO materials. The catch: nobody's saying what's actually in it.
The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO)—the Pentagon's official UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, for those keeping score) outfit—is now handling over 2,000 cases. That's the number. Whether any of them involve actual spacecraft remains the trillion-dollar question.
Hegseth told reporters the Trump administration plans aggressive transparency on the UAP front. Pentagon brass welcomed the idea, at least publicly. Translation: they're not fighting it, which is unusual.
Here's the reality: decades of UAP reports exist. Most have mundane explanations—weather balloons, classified military hardware, sensor glitches. Some don't. The Pentagon has never produced a single credible photograph or physical evidence of non-terrestrial aircraft. Not one.
Trump promised disclosure during his first term. We got the Navy jet footage and official confirmation that pilots saw something they couldn't identify. That's different from proof of aliens.
AARO was created in 2022 specifically to centralize this mess. It's been gathering cases ever since. Now they're saying the Trump team wants transparency.
The real story: if they had proof of extraterrestrial visitors, we'd know by now. What they have is a growing pile of unexplained incidents and a political promise to release more documents about them.
Source: DefenseScoop
Status: Developing

