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Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO) received a classified briefing from the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) this week, viewing around 30 fresh UAP videos. One clip that stunned the room showed three unidentified objects buzzing a Russian submarine. A single object then shot from roughly 80 mph to Mach speed in an instant, with no visible propulsion, sonic boom, or slowdown. Even skeptical staffers gasped at the performance.
The briefing comes amid a broader push for UAP transparency. In early May 2026, the Trump administration began releasing batches of previously classified files, images, and videos via a new Pentagon portal, though many describe the initial drop as “low-hanging fruit” with more substantial material expected. Lawmakers like Burlison continue pressing for full declassification of high-quality sensor data from military encounters.
Observers note these objects demonstrate “total domain awareness,” appearing globally without regard for national borders. Similar USO (unidentified submerged object) reports involving submarines date back decades across U.S. and Russian navies. While AARO and official channels stress rigorous analysis and often attribute cases to mundane explanations when possible, videos like these keep the door open to non-human intelligence (NHI) possibilities for many watching the disclosure process.
Skeptics call for raw data, sensor fusion, and independent verification, warning against hype. Pro-disclosure voices see mounting evidence of technology far beyond current human or adversarial capabilities. The public awaits clearer releases.
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