Daily UAP/UFO news · gov drops · sightings · witness accounts
Investigative journalists Jeremy Corbell and George Knapp released military footage of multiple UAPs in triangle formation over the Persian Gulf, officially cataloged as 'orbs' by the intelligence community.
Key claims
Summary generated by AI · may contain errors
A Navy F/A-18 pilot tracked an unidentified dark gray metallic cube-shaped object daily for two years starting in 2014 off Virginia Beach, testified under oath in 2023, and the Pentagon released the file in 2026 with no official identification.
US Navy pilots tracked unidentified objects on radar for 2 years with infrared confirmation, and publicly released footage shows unexplained movements and accelerations that remain officially unresolved.
A Navy F/A-18 pilot reportedly tracked an unidentified object daily for two years, testified under oath in 2023, and the Pentagon released the file in 2026; the object remains officially unidentified.
Multiple federal law enforcement agents independently witnessed and documented orange orbs repeatedly launching smaller red orbs over the western United States on multiple occasions.
United Airlines pilots reported an unidentified object crossing the final approach to San Francisco International Airport at approximately twice the speed of an airplane, with radar contact.
The Department of War (formerly DoD) has released the first tranche of UAP-related videos and documents to a public repository, including historical documents, recent pilot reports, and new video evidence.
A Metabunk analyst applies geolocation and satellite imagery analysis to an INDOPACOM 2024 UAP report, suggesting the sighting may be explainable by offshore wind farm infrastructure.
A Metabunk analysis examines INDOPACOM 2024 footage of an irregular balloon-shaped object with radial projections, suggesting mundane explanations for the reported UAP sighting.
A Metabunk analysis of a 2020 Department of Defense infrared video from the Middle East showing a five-second UAP clip submitted to AARO; the analysis suggests the video quality is poor and insufficient for definitive conclusions.