The Latest UAP Files Drop: Pentagon Releases Fourth Tranche Under PURSUE – What We Know So Far
In a continuing push for transparency on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP, formerly known as UFOs), the U.S. Department of War (Pentagon) released its fourth batch of declassified files on July 10, 2026, under the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters (PURSUE).
This marks the latest installment in a rolling disclosure effort initiated by an executive order from President Donald J. Trump earlier in 2026. The program aims to review, declassify, and publicly release unresolved UAP-related records spanning decades.
What's in the New Release?
The fourth tranche includes 40 files total: 14 documents, 19 videos, 4 audio files, and 3 images. Materials come from multiple agencies, including the Pentagon (DOW), NASA, Department of Energy (DOE), CIA, FBI, and others.
Key highlights from the release:
- Recent military encounters (2019–2025): Several videos and debriefs detail objects with unusual flight characteristics. One Navy aviator described a rectangular object moving at high speed over the Eastern U.S. in 2019: "I noticed an object with flight characteristics unlike anything I had seen in my 28 years..." The object appeared to accelerate out of frame rapidly.
- 2025 Indo-Pacific incidents: Infrared footage from the Yellow Sea and East China Sea shows objects tracked by military sensors, including one resembling a "six-pointed star."
- Historical documents:
- A 1949 Los Alamos conference transcript discussing "green fireballs" over nuclear facilities (scientists, including Manhattan Project veterans, struggled to explain them as meteors).
- 1948–1949 Project Sign and flying object incident analyses.
- A 2015 DOE report on an unidentified object intruding near the Pantex nuclear weapons facility in Texas. Security officers pursued a silent object with no visible propulsion.
- Other notable items: Range fouler debriefs (standardized reports of intrusions into military airspace), STS-80 NASA images from 1996, and various unresolved videos from the Atlantic, Pacific, and Middle East.
These files focus on unresolved cases — phenomena the government could not definitively identify due to insufficient data. The Pentagon encourages private-sector analysis and notes that resolved cases are handled separately.
Context and Reactions
This is the fourth drop since the first tranche in May 2026. Earlier releases included similar mixes of historical records and modern sensor data. The program stems from high public interest and aims to combat decades of speculation fueled by classification.
Astrophysicist Avi Loeb and others have commented on the releases, analyzing videos for potential non-prosaic explanations. Public figures like Dr. Phil have highlighted past government policies that discouraged reporting (e.g., JANAP 146).
No smoking-gun evidence of extraterrestrial origins has emerged, but the files document objects demonstrating advanced capabilities (high speed, no propulsion signatures, intrusions near sensitive sites).
Why This Matters
These disclosures represent an unprecedented level of openness compared to prior eras. While skeptics point to mundane explanations (drones, balloons, sensor artifacts), the volume of military pilot and sensor data keeps the conversation alive. The rolling nature of PURSUE suggests more files are coming soon.
Where to View the Files
Visit the official PURSUE portal: [war.gov/ufo](https://www.war.gov/ufo/) for direct downloads and searchable archives.
Stay tuned as analysts pore over the latest batch — this story is far from over. What are your thoughts on these releases? Extraterrestrial tech, advanced human adversaries, or something else? Drop a comment below.
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