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The Pentagon's fourth file release contains some of the strangest UAP footage yet, showing bizarre shapes and objects that don't resemble any familiar aircraft, drone or balloon. Whether it's a six-pointed object over the Yellow Sea, a glowing line over the South China Sea, or an eerie maroon form drifting over the Atlantic, these videos leave far more questions than answers and make dismissing every case as ordinary increasingly difficult.
The Pentagon's latest file release reinforces a striking pattern stretching back 77 years: unexplained objects repeatedly appearing near America's most sensitive nuclear sites. From the 1949 Los Alamos green fireballs to the 2015 Pantex incident, the government's own records document events that defied conventional explanations and drew serious national security scrutiny. This isn't built on rumors but on decades of official files that demand far more public attention and investigation.
Based on recent Daily Mail reporting, the Pentagon's latest file drop is likely part of an ongoing soft disclosure campaign preparing the public for a much larger announcement. The steady release of decades of UAP records has simply been familiarizing Americans with the evidence before any presidential address. If reports that Trump has a "written and ready" disclosure speech are accurate, these releases are the groundwork for transparency.
There are plenty of reasons to be skeptical about the Trump administration's dumps of "UFO files." Even those who feel that there could be life beyond Earth lurking in the depths of the cosmos are justified by feeling unimpressed by grainy photos, questionable redacted documents, and "phenomena" that can be explained by photography dynamics or shadows. The vast majority of the contents of these "tranches" can be debunked.