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Roswell: The Army Announced a Flying Disc, Then Unsaid It in 24 Hours
The U.S. military issued a press release saying it had captured a 'flying disc' near Roswell, then retracted it within a day. The Air Force's own 1990s reports admit there was a cover-up, just not the one true believers want.
GIMBAL and GOFAST: The Pentagon Stamped Its Own UFO Footage 'Authentic'
In an inverted world, the most damning evidence is not leaked by a whistleblower, it is confirmed real by the Department of Defense. In April 2020 the Pentagon officially released three Navy videos of objects it still calls unidentified.
A Federal Smuggling Plane Filmed Something Dive Into the Sea, Keep Going, and Split in Two
On a night in 2013 a Customs and Border Protection aircraft over Puerto Rico tracked a fast, glowing object on thermal as it crossed land, plunged into the Atlantic, kept moving underwater, and divided into two heat signatures. The Pentagon now says it was sky lanterns.

They Took the Government to Federal Court Over a UFO — and Lost Because Uncle Sam Swore He Owns Nothing That Could Burn You
Three Texans were seared by a diamond-shaped craft escorted by a swarm of military helicopters in 1980, then sued the United States for $20 million. The case died in federal court not because their injuries were doubted, but because the government said none of the aircraft were its own.
The Cops Hid a Microphone to Catch Them Lying. The Tape Is Why People Still Believe.
Two Mississippi shipyard workers said something pulled them aboard a craft by the river. The sheriff left them alone in a room with a secret recorder running — the one test designed to break a hoax — and what it caught is the strongest single piece of evidence in the case.
The FAA Briefed the CIA on a UFO the Size of an Aircraft Carrier. Then the Meeting 'Never Happened.'
A Japan Airlines cargo 747 was shadowed for 400 miles over Alaska in 1986 while the object painted on three radar systems at once. The FAA division chief who archived the data says officials confiscated it and told the room the briefing never occurred.
A Cassette, a Geiger Counter, and No Conventional Answer: The Halt Tape in Full
Lt Col Charles Halt walked into Rendlesham Forest with a recorder and a radiation meter and logged the whole event onto tape. The transcript, the memo, and the 0.1-milliroentgen reading are all public.

Britain's Roswell: The Cover-Up's Biggest Hole Was Narrated Onto a Cassette
Over three nights in December 1980, USAF personnel at a nuclear-armed NATO base in Suffolk chased lights through a forest. The deputy base commander's own real-time tape and his declassified memo are still on the public record.

The Navy Called Its Own Top Pilots Crazy for 16 Years — Then Released the Tape
In 2004 a Navy fighter pilot chased a wingless white 'Tic Tac' that outflew physics off the California coast — backed by radar, infrared video, and multiple witnesses. The Pentagon spent sixteen years stonewalling before admitting the footage was real and unexplained.

The Night a NATO Air Force Chased the Object, Then Held a Press Conference and Showed the Radar
During the Belgian UFO wave, two F-16s locked onto a target that allegedly jumped from a near-hover to roughly 1,800 km/h and dove from 10,000 feet to the deck in seconds. The Air Force's number-three officer presented the data to the public.

Lock On, Lose Your Missiles: The 1976 Tehran Intercept Where Two Phantoms' Weapons Died on Command
Two F-4 Phantoms closed on an unknown object over Iran and, at the moment of weapons lock, lost their missile control and radios — then got everything back the instant they pulled away. The pattern, not the lights, is the real anomaly.

The Best UFO Evidence Isn't a Blurry Photo. It's a Four-Page Intelligence Report a U.S. Analyst Called 'Outstanding.'
On a September night in 1976, two Iranian F-4 Phantoms scrambled on a brilliant object over Tehran and came home with disabled weapons and dead radios. The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency wrote it up — and an analyst rated it a textbook case worthy of serious study.

The Governor Who Mocked the Lights He Saw, Then Confessed Ten Years Later
Thousands of Arizonans watched a silent V-shaped formation cross the sky in March 1997. The governor staged an alien-costume joke about it, then admitted a decade later that he had seen the craft himself.
