00:00UFOs
00:01UFOs
00:02UFOs
00:03UFOs
00:10I have the booster on my side, it's a brilliant body of the sun, just a black background, there's a
00:17brilliant particles around it.
00:23For decades, the subject of UFOs existed almost entirely on the fringes of public disclosure.
00:31The topic was associated with conspiracy theories, grainy footage, tabloid headlines and extraordinary claims that rarely survived scientific scrutiny.
00:43But over the last several years, that perception has changed dramatically.
00:48Not because definitive evidence of extraterrestrial life has emerged, but because governments, military agencies, intelligence officials, scientists and lawmakers have
01:01begun publicly acknowledging something they once avoided discussing altogether.
01:06There are aerial incidents being recorded by advanced military systems that investigators still cannot fully explain.
01:15In May 2026, that conversation entered a new phase.
01:20The United States Department of War launched a public archive under an initiative called Pursue, the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting
01:29System for UAP Encounters.
01:31The archive included military infrared footage, historical reports, Navy encounter videos, NASA transcripts, embassy cables, pilot testimony and previously classified
01:45files connected to unidentified anomalous phenomena.
01:49For supporters of disclosure, this represented a historic moment.
01:55For skeptics, it was another example of government ambiguity, fueling public speculation.
02:01And for investigators, scientists and journalists, it marked the beginning of a much larger question.
02:07Why is the government taking UFOs seriously now?
02:17One of the clearest signs that the government's approach has changed is the language officials now use publicly.
02:24For decades, the phrase UFO dominated public discussion.
02:29But within military and intelligence circles, that term has largely been replaced with another acronym, UAP, Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena.
02:41The shift is intentional.
02:43Government agencies argue that the term UFO carries decades of cultural baggage and assumptions about extraterrestrial life.
02:50UAP, on the other hand, is designed to be broader and more neutral.
02:56The category includes unidentified alien objects, unexplained radar signatures, thermal anomalies, transmedium objects and incidents observed across multiple sensor systems.
03:10That distinction matters because many recent cases are not based solely on eyewitness testimony.
03:18Some incidents involved, fighter pilots, infrared targeting systems, naval radar platforms, satellite tracking and electronic surveillance systems, all detecting unusual
03:30objects simultaneously.
03:32In response to the growing number of reports, the Pentagon established the All Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or the AARO.
03:40The office was tasked with collecting, analyzing and resolving UAP incidents tied to the national security concerns.
03:49According to the Department of Defense, the primary concern is not extraterrestrial life.
03:55Officials repeatedly emphasize that unidentified objects in restricted airspace could potentially represent
04:04advanced foreign surveillance systems, classified aerospace technology, sensor anomalies, or aviation safety threats.
04:12At the same time, officials also acknowledge that some incidents remain unresolved due to insufficient data.
04:20And it is precisely those unresolved cases that continue fueling public fascination.
04:30Although UFO sightings have been reported for decades, one military encounter in particular is widely considered the turning point in
04:40the modern UAP era, the 2004 USS Nimitz incident.
04:45In November of that year, personnel aboard the USS Princeton, part of the USS Nimitz carrier strike group, operating off
04:53the coast of Southern California, began detecting unusual radar tracks.
04:58According to military personnel involved in the incident, unknown objects appeared to descend rapidly from extremely high altitude towards sea
05:08level before abruptly changing direction.
05:10Operators initially suspected radar errors or technical man functions.
05:16But, after repeated detections, Navy fighter aircraft were directed to investigate.
05:22Among the pilots was Commander David Fravor.
05:25Fravor later described encountering a white object hovering over the ocean near an area of disturbed water.
05:32The object was reportedly oblong in shape, smooth in appearance, approximately 40 feet long, and lacking visible wings or propulsion
05:43systems.
05:44According to pilot testimony, the object appeared to react intelligently to the aircraft's maneuvers before accelerating away at extreme high
05:53speed.
05:54Years later, footage associated with the incident became public.
05:57In 2017, reporting by the New York Times revealed the existence of a previously undisclosed Pentagon UAP investigation program and
06:07published military footage connected to Navy encounters.
06:11The Department of Defense later confirmed the authenticity of the videos.
06:17Importantly, however, official confirmation that footage is authentic military material does not mean officials identified the object as extraterrestrial.
06:27To this day, the tic-tac incident remains officially unresolved.
06:32And because it involved trained military pilots, radar systems, infrared sensors, and multiple witnesses, the case continues to occupy a
06:42central place in discussions surrounding the UAP disclosure.
06:51Following the tic-tac revelations, additional military videos entered public discussion.
06:57Two of the most widely analyzed clips became known as GIMBAL and GO FAST.
07:04Both were recorded in 2015 by US Navy aircraft using forward-looking infrared targeting systems.
07:12The videos appeared to show objects moving at unusual speeds or orientations, while pilots expressed confusion over what they were
07:21observing.
07:21In the gimbal footage, one pilot can be heard saying there's a whole fleet of them.
07:30That audio became one of the defining soundbites of the modern UAP debate.
07:36Supporters of Disclosure argued the footage demonstrated flying characteristics beyond known aerospace technology.
07:45Skeptics and analysts countered that many of the apparent anomalies could potentially be explained through camera rotation,
07:51parallax effects, targeting system behavior, or limited depth perception within infrared imagery.
07:59The Pentagon confirmed the videos were authentic military recordings, but officials stopped short of offering definitive explanations.
08:08As a result, the videos became a perfect example of the broader UAP issue.
08:13Authentic military footage does not automatically provide definitive answers.
08:19Instead, it often creates more questions.
08:26Among the newly released materials in the 2026 archive, one particular infrared clip quickly dominated online discussion.
08:34The footage, reportedly recorded in 2013 in the Middle East region, showed an object appearing as an eight-pointed star
08:43shape through infrared imaging systems.
08:46The Department of War described the object as an area of contrast resembling an eight-pointed star with arms of
08:54alternating length.
08:56Within hours of publication, the footage spread rapidly across social media platforms.
09:01Some online commentators linked the image to ancient religious symbolism and biblical descriptions of celestial beings.
09:10Others argued the footage represented one of the clearest examples of non-human technology ever released publicly.
09:18However, former AARO director Sean Kirkpatrick offered a far more conventional explanation.
09:25Kirkpatrick suggests the unusual shape was likely caused by infrared diffraction effects produced by heat signatures interacting with the imaging
09:34system.
09:35In practical terms, the object itself may not have possessed a star-like appearance at all.
09:42Instead, the camera system may have generated the visual effect.
09:46This disagreement illustrates a recurring pattern throughout the UAP debate.
09:51The same piece of evidence is often interpreted in fundamentally different ways depending on technical expertise, prior beliefs and levels
10:01of trust in government institutions.
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