Verified reporting: On July 10, 2026, the Department of War released the fourth tranche of UAP records under PURSUE, its Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters. The official WAR.GOV/UFO page says the first tranche was released May 8, 2026, and directs readers to the fourth release dated July 10.
So yes, America now has scheduled UFO dumps. We used to get reruns and weather reports. Now we get government jellyfish, green fireballs, and sensor ghosts with paperwork.
The most attention-grabbing item in today’s coverage is a reported video of a six-pointed object over the Yellow Sea, tracked for 18 seconds by U.S. Indo-Pacific Command equipment. The New York Post reports that the object initially looked like a crack in the sensor, but was deliberately tracked by military equipment. The National Desk also reports that the fourth batch includes newly released files involving “green fireballs,” Space Shuttle imagery, and other historical UAP material.
What matters: This is not “aliens confirmed.” Nobody credible has shown that. AARO’s own public materials still frame UAP as objects or phenomena not immediately identifiable, investigated through a scientific and data-driven approach.
But it is also not nothing.
The believer view is obvious: repeated releases, military sensor footage, and unresolved cases suggest something real is being dragged out of the classified basement one filing cabinet at a time. The skeptic view is equally fair: unresolved does not mean extraterrestrial, and “we don’t know yet” is not a passport stamp from Zeta Reticuli, or Uranus.
FMPU perspective: The real story is the machinery.
The UFO is no longer just a sighting. It is now a content ecosystem: government portal, Reddit thread, X outrage pellet, YouTube thumbnail, congressional talking point, and late-night radio snack tray. AARO posts. WAR.GOV dumps. Reddit digests. Cable news flattens. Influencers garnish. The Magic Pop machine chews the mystery into shareable paste.
That may be the 2026 disclosure model: not one grand announcement, but rolling bureaucratic surrealism.
No mothership.
No trumpet blast.
Just another batch of files and a nation refreshing the page like raccoons around a glowing trash can.
The saucer has not landed.
The archive has.

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