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Pentagon’s UFO Files Demand Serious National Security Action

The Pentagon’s recent release of UAP files is a wake-up call for every American who still believes the national security of this country is treated with the seriousness it deserves. On July 10–11, 2026, the Department of Defense published a fourth tranche of declassified materials — a package of 40 files that included 19 videos — adding to a public archive that finally begins to peel back decades of secrecy.

These records did not come from a single agency hiding in a corner; they were drawn from the Pentagon, NASA, the CIA, the FBI, and the Department of Energy, and they include troubling entries such as an intrusion over the Pantex nuclear weapons facility and unexplained sensor tracks over international waters. The variety and scope of the material make this more than a curiosity; this is a comprehensive set of incidents that deserves sober, defensive attention.

Dr. Avi Loeb, a respected scientist leading a UAP science advisory effort, has been blunt: the declassification process will likely come in waves, and the initial shipments of video files are only the beginning of what should be a full accounting. Loeb told viewers on “Saturday Agenda” that these disclosures matter not as theater, but as data that could reveal either adversary technology or phenomena we do not yet understand — and either possibility is a national-security issue.

Loeb has translated his scientific alarm into action, forming a UAP Science Advisory Council and formally requesting dozens of files and metadata from the Pentagon so trained researchers can apply hard science rather than speculation. He calls the work a “detective story” — insisting that the path forward is better instruments, better metadata, and open scientific scrutiny instead of closed-door mystification.

Conservatives should applaud the leadership that forced these files into the light. The Trump administration’s directive to declassify long-hidden records broke the bureaucratic habit of concealment, and that kind of transparency is exactly what protects American lives and assets — not the comfy secrecy favored by previous political classes.

Make no mistake: this is not a petty culture-war sideshow for late-night comics. When military sensors detect objects near nuclear sites or maneuver in manners our pilots cannot explain, Congress and the Department of Defense must treat the problem with muscle and clarity. The files show incidents near nuclear facilities and sensor tracks over the Yellow Sea that cannot be dismissed as mere background noise; our priority must be to determine origin and intent.

That means funding real solutions — better all-domain sensors, independent scientific teams like Dr. Loeb’s Galileo Project, and rigorous congressional oversight that protects sources while demanding answers. If the government is going to release data, it must also equip scientists and the military with the tools to turn footage into fact, not fodder for cynical headlines.

Americans who stand for national strength should demand nothing less than a full accounting and immediate action. Support the scientists who want evidence rather than ideology, back leaders who force truth out of the vaults, and insist that our nation treats unexplained aerial phenomena as the security challenge they plainly are — because when it comes to protecting our families and our republic, we will accept no less.

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