US Department of War Releases UFO Videos

US Department of War Releases UFO Videos
US Department of War Releases UFO Videos https://linktr.ee/carlvibe UFO Videos link: https://www.dvidshub.net/search/?q=uap&view=grid&sort=publishdate For decades, rumors of hidden government UFO programs, classified military footage, and secret investigations have circulated through American culture, dating all the way back to the aftermath of the 1947 Roswell incident and early Air Force programs like Project Blue Book. In recent years, public pressure intensified following the release of Navy encounters such as the “Tic Tac,” “Gimbal,” and “GoFast” videos, along with congressional hearings involving figures like Luis Elizondo, David Grusch, and Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna, all pushing for greater transparency surrounding unidentified anomalous phenomena. Now, in what many are calling one of the largest official UFO disclosures in modern history, the U.S. Department of War and multiple intelligence agencies have released the first major batch of declassified UFO files, photos, military reports, astronaut testimony, infrared footage, and cockpit videos through the government’s new UAP archive. The released material allegedly shows strange luminous craft, metallic objects maneuvering in ways pilots could not explain, infrared anomalies recorded over oceans and military training ranges, triangular formations seen during Apollo missions, and multiple encounters documented by military personnel across decades of investigations. Some footage appears to show glowing objects accelerating without visible propulsion, while other reports describe football shaped craft, eight pointed infrared anomalies, and unidentified objects operating near restricted airspace around the world. Whether these videos represent advanced technology, sensor anomalies, foreign systems, or something far stranger remains fiercely debated, but this release marks a historic moment in the long and controversial history of UFO disclosure. In this video, I break down the newly released footage, analyze the most controversial clips, and examine the historical chain of events that led to the government finally opening these files to the public. [U.S. Department of War