For over eight decades, the American public has speculated about unidentified aerial phenomena — from the famous 1947 Roswell incident and Project Blue Book to modern Navy pilot encounters captured on infrared sensors. Government files remained locked behind classification stamps, fueling endless theories and eroding public trust.
That changed dramatically on May 8, 2026.Following President Donald Trump’s February 19, 2026 directive, the U.S. Department of War launched the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters (PURSUE) at war.gov/ufo. In a historic first tranche, 158 never-before-seen declassified documents — including pilot reports, FBI telexes, NASA memos, photographs, and high-resolution videos dating back to the 1940s — were made publicly available with no clearance required.
Additional releases are scheduled every few weeks as millions of records undergo review.This is not sanitized summary material. These are raw, original files straight from the archives of the Department of War, FBI, NASA, and the intelligence community.
They span World War II-era “flying disc” sightings in Europe, Cold War incidents, and recent unresolved cases in the Middle East and Persian Gulf.The thesis of this complete 2026 guide is simple yet powerful: anyone can now access, navigate, and download these files safely and efficiently. Whether you are a serious researcher, journalist, or curious citizen, this step-by-step walkthrough removes all barriers so you can explore the evidence yourself. The era of speculation is over. The era of direct access has begun.
The Birth of PURSUE: A New Chapter in Government Transparency
Reaching the archive requires only a web browser and an internet connection. No login, registration, or special software is needed.
Open your browser and visit the official address: https://www.war.gov/ufo/
The homepage displays the presidential directive and official statements from key leaders.
Scroll to the central table labeled “Release 01” — a clean, sortable list of all 158 files.
Columns include: File Name / Title, Agency, Release Date (May 8, 2026), Incident Date, Incident Location, and File Type (PDF, video, or image). The interface is mobile-friendly and loads quickly even on modest connections. Use your browser’s built-in search (Ctrl+F or Cmd+F) to instantly locate files by keyword, year, or agency.
The PURSUE initiative represents the most significant UAP transparency effort in U.S. history. Coordinated by the Department of War with support from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), NASA, FBI, Department of Energy, and the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), the program was created in direct response to President Trump’s call for maximum disclosure.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth stated: “These files, hidden behind classifications, have long fueled justified speculation — and it’s time the American people see it for themselves.” Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and FBI Director Kash Patel echoed this commitment to ongoing, rolling declassification.
Unlike previous limited releases, PURSUE places every document on a single, dedicated public portal with no redactions beyond legitimate security concerns. The first release alone contains 158 files, and the process will continue for months as additional records are reviewed and posted.
