Pentagon UAP Portal Hits Over 1 Billion Visits as Next File Release Nears.

 The U.S. Defense Department’s new public website dedicated to unexplained aerial phenomena has exploded in popularity, surpassing one billion visitors just days after going live. Officials confirmed the massive traffic milestone on May 18, 2026, showing strong worldwide interest in government-held UAP records.

Launched on May 8, the portal at war.gov/UFO hosts the first batch of declassified files under the PURSUE system. Release 01 includes roughly 160 previously unresolved cases with military reports, photos, videos, and documents stretching back to the 1940s. These describe strange lights, high-speed objects, and unusual craft seen by pilots and service members. Many cases stay unexplained because of incomplete data, and the public is invited to review and help analyze them.

The release follows a February 2026 order from President Donald Trump directing greater openness on UAP, possible extraterrestrial topics, and related government files. Defense leaders call it a major transparency push, differing from decades of tight secrecy. A second set of documents is already being prepared for quick public access.

Congressional voices continue pressing for fuller disclosure, including more video evidence. While the released materials do not confirm non-human intelligence, the surge in attention highlights growing public demand for answers about advanced technology that may exceed known human capabilities. Skeptics point to possible ordinary explanations in many files, but advocates view the ongoing releases as important progress toward real openness.

Independent analysts are already digging into the data, creating maps and tools to make the files easier to explore. The high traffic and continued interest suggest this topic touches deep curiosity about what governments may have known for years.




FLIR Expert Flags Multiple Anomalous UAPs in Historic Department of War Video Release

A veteran depot-level FLIR technician with 20 years of experience has closely examined infrared videos from the U.S. Department of War’s major May 8, 2026 document dump, identifying several objects that defy conventional explanations like drones, balloons, or birds.

Dave Falch analyzed about a dozen of the roughly 27 video files released. Highlights include orbs performing sharp 90-degree turns at high speed over cities and water, one vanishing into the ocean similar to the well-known Aguadilla incident, and a striking “chandelier” or 8-pointed star-like object leaving a thermal trail.

Falch noted objects with unique heat signatures that do not match aircraft engines, change direction abruptly near wind farms, or appear as multiple orbs at high zoom. While some clips showed explainable elements like foil balloons or sun glare, several stood out as true anomalies based on his hands-on expertise with thermal imaging systems.

This release, part of an ongoing transparency push, makes files publicly available including videos and historical reports. Independent analysts and the public now have direct access to raw military sensor data previously held back.

Skeptics in mainstream coverage often downplay such footage, yet expert review and patterns across decades of sightings continue to challenge official narratives, fueling calls for fuller disclosure on potential non-human intelligence. Open-minded examination of the infrared behaviors suggests technologies beyond known human capabilities.



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