UNCLASSIFIED // PUBLIC RELEASETRACKING SINCE 08 MAY 2026 · ROLLING RELEASE
P U R S U ETrump Administration · Presidential Unsealings & Reporting System for UAP Encounters
The independent tracker of every UFO file the Trump administration declassifies through PURSUE. Release 01 (May 8, 2026) added 161 files; Release 02 (May 22, 2026) added 64 more. 222 files now indexed and scored. We continue indexing, scoring, and verifying each one within hours of release.
DROP 01
May 8, 2026 · 161 files · FBI, DoD, NASA, State Department
LIVE · Indexed
WAR.GOV CSV REVISION DETECTED 5/11
War.gov restructured the PURSUE CSV on May 11: 161 rows became 158 rows. Verified by direct URL-set comparison: zero PDFs added, zero PDFs removed, zero videos added, zero videos removed. The 161->158 row delta is fully explained by 9 PDFs gaining additional cross-reference rows and 1 PDF having its storage slug renamed. We index all 130 unique PDFs and 28 videos. Full diff & data tables → · Audit notes & corrections →
🛰️PURSUE RELEASE 02 — VERIFIED CSV IN HAND · PIPELINE INGEST RUNNING
The Department of War published Release 02 on May 22, 2026. Verified canonical CSV (222 rows, SHA-256 6be2c64e7605...) fetched directly from war.gov: 158 rows from Release 01 + 64 new rows from Release 02. The 64 new file pages are currently being ingested through the scoring and transcription pipeline; the existing 161 Release 01 file pages remain as-is during the rollout. Status detail →
222Files indexed
119Documents
28Videos
14Images
108Redacted
41minFootage
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On May 8, 2026, the Trump administration launched the Presidential Unsealings and Reporting System for UAP Encounters (PURSUE), a multi-agency program to declassify and publicly release the U.S. government's accumulated records on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena. The first batch contained 161 files spanning 80 years - from FBI investigative records of the 1947 Roswell incident, to NASA Apollo mission photography, to U.S. military encounter footage from the Mediterranean, Greece, the Indo-Pacific, and the Arabian Gulf as recently as 2026.
Files are released on a rolling basis at war.gov/UFO. The official government interface is a flat list. This site is the searchable, indexed, scored mirror. Every file from every drop is here within hours of release, with full-text search across PDFs, transcripts on every video, agency and category filters, and a transparent evidentiary-weight score on each encounter.
We do not claim aliens exist. We do not claim they don't. The files don't answer that question. What they do answer is what trained military and government personnel have observed and the U.S. government has documented but cannot explain - and that is a story worth telling honestly. Read our full verdict on what these files prove and don't prove →
What's in Drop 01 (May 8, 2026)?
FBI · 57 FILES
Bureau case file 62-HQ-83894 covering 1947-1968, including Roswell field office reporting, Oak Ridge incidents, the FBI photographic library, and four decades of citizen sighting reports.
DEPT OF WAR · 82 FILES
Military encounter reports and AARO mission packets from 2020-2026: Mediterranean triangle objects, Greek airspace right-angle maneuvers, Arabian Gulf orbs, Indo-Pacific football-shaped craft, Syrian luminous bodies.
NASA · 15 FILES
Apollo 12, 16, and 17 mission imagery, the Schmitt-Grimaldi lunar flash report from December 1972, plus Gemini-era astronaut audio of unidentified objects in low Earth orbit.
STATE DEPT · 7 FILES
Diplomatic cables from six overseas posts spanning 1985-2025 (Papua New Guinea, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Georgia, Mexico, Tajikistan), including the 1994 Tajikistan PanAm crew sighting at flight level 410.
28 video files (with full transcripts) · 119 PDFs (full-text searchable) · 14 images · 108 partially redacted
🎯 AI-RANKED · TOP 5 MOST ANOMALOUS
If you only read 5 files, read these.
Highest-scoring files on our open Anomalousness Index. Not "probability of aliens" — that number is unknowable. These are the encounters where the evidence is strongest that the U.S. government cannot explain what was observed.
Each file is scored 0-100 on what we call the Anomalousness Index. This is not a "probability of alien origin" - no honest analyst can produce that number, and any site claiming to is selling you something.
The score reflects evidentiary weight that the encounter remains unexplained after conventional analysis, weighted by:
Corroboration. Multi-witness, multi-instrument > single source.
Kinematic / form anomaly. Maneuvers or geometries inconsistent with known platforms move the score up.
Mundane-explanation availability. If a balloon, drone, sensor artifact, or atmospheric effect plausibly fits, the score moves down.
Official disposition. Files AARO has resolved as conventional are scored low; files left open after review are scored higher.
Scores are this site's editorial judgment based on publicly reported descriptions. They are not a Department of War or AARO assessment, and they are not a claim about extraterrestrial origin. They are a fast-read evidentiary heuristic - useful for triage, not for conclusions.
🤖 AI Use - Full Disclosure
We use AI for three things, all human-supervised:
Rubric application. Claude (Anthropic) reads each file's publicly reported description and selects which rubric value matches each of the six components. The rubric and weights are human-designed and live as open JSON at /data/scoring-rubric.json.
Video transcription. OpenAI Whisper generates the .vtt subtitle tracks and full transcripts you see on every video page.
PDF text extraction. pdfplumber (open-source) pulls searchable text out of every PDF for the on-site search index.
PURSUE is the Presidential Unsealings and Reporting System for UAP Encounters. It's the official acronym for the Trump administration's UAP disclosure program, established to declassify and publicly release the U.S. government's accumulated records on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena across agencies including the FBI, Department of War, NASA, and Department of State.
When did the Trump administration release the UFO files?
Drop 01 went live on May 8, 2026, with 161 files at war.gov/UFO. The Department of War has stated additional files will be released on a rolling basis. This site indexes every drop within hours of release. Subscribe to RSS or use the email signup above for next-drop alerts.
Do these files prove aliens exist?
No. None of the 161 files contains a body, a craft, biological material, or any artifact whose origin can only be extraterrestrial. They also do not prove aliens don't exist. They prove that trained military and government personnel have observed objects with flight characteristics that no known aircraft can replicate, and that the U.S. government has been collecting such reports continuously for at least 80 years. Read our full honest verdict →
What's the difference between UFO and UAP?
UFO (Unidentified Flying Object) is the historical, public-facing term used since the 1940s. UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, formerly Unidentified Aerial Phenomena until 2022) is the current official U.S. government term, adopted to cover underwater and transmedium objects, not just aerial ones. The Pentagon, AARO, and ODNI use UAP in formal documents. War.gov calls the program PURSUE but kept the public URL at /UFO/ because that's what most people search for.
What is the Anomalousness Index?
A 0-100 score reflecting evidentiary weight that an encounter remains unexplained after conventional analysis. It is calculated from six weighted components: sensor quality, witness credibility, corroboration, kinematic anomaly, mundane-explanation availability, and official disposition. The full rubric and weights are open JSON at /data/scoring-rubric.json - you can recompute every score yourself. It is not a probability of extraterrestrial origin. Anyone publishing a "% chance aliens" number is selling something.
Are the files free to download and republish?
Yes. All files are works of the U.S. Government and are in the public domain under 17 U.S.C. § 105. You may cite, embed, screenshot, redistribute, and commercialize freely. Attribution to the source agency (FBI, DoD, NASA, State Dept) is courteous; attribution to this index is appreciated but not required.
How can I verify a file matches what's on war.gov?
Every file has a SHA-256 hash on its detail page and in the verification manifest. Re-download the file from war.gov, hash it locally (PowerShell: Get-FileHash file.pdf -Algorithm SHA256), and compare. They should match exactly. This is how journalists fact-check our archive.
Where do the videos come from?
The 28 video files in Drop 01 are hosted on DVIDS (Defense Visual Information Distribution Service - the U.S. military's public media platform). We retrieve them via DVIDS' public API and mirror to our CDN for direct playback. Each video includes the closed captions provided by DVIDS, and we link back to the official DVIDS page on every video detail page.
Will more files be released?
Yes. The Department of War has stated PURSUE is a rolling-release program, with additional drops planned. This site polls the official war.gov UAP CSV every 30 minutes during U.S. weekday business hours and hourly off-hours via an automated GitHub Action. New drops trigger an indexing run within hours of release. Subscribe via the form at the top of the homepage, or follow our RSS feed.
Why does this site say 161 files when war.gov says 158?
Both numbers describe CSV row counts, not file counts. The May 8 PURSUE CSV had 161 rows. The current war.gov PURSUE CSV (as of May 11) has 158 rows. The underlying file inventory is identical between the two dates: verified by URL-set comparison, zero PDFs added, zero PDFs removed, zero videos added, zero videos removed. The 161→158 row delta is fully explained by 9 PDFs that previously had 1 CSV row each gaining additional cross-reference rows, plus 1 PDF having its storage slug changed (Title unchanged). We index all 130 unique PDFs and all 28 videos. Full diff & data tables →
Who runs this site?
An independent operator, not affiliated with the Department of War, the FBI, NASA, the State Department, or any U.S. government entity. The site is reader-supported via affiliate links and tasteful sponsorships - never paywalled, never with autoplay ads or interstitials. Press inquiries: see the press kit.
Glossary
PURSUE
Presidential Unsealings and Reporting System for UAP Encounters - the Trump-administration disclosure program.
UAP
Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena - current official U.S. government term, replacing UFO. Includes underwater and transmedium objects.
UFO
Unidentified Flying Object - the historical and public-facing term for the same phenomena.
AARO
All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office - DoD office tasked with synchronizing UAP detection, identification, and reporting since 2022.
DVIDS
Defense Visual Information Distribution Service - the U.S. military's public media platform; hosts the PURSUE video archive.
MISREP
Mission Report - the standardized form U.S. military services use to record operational events, including UAP sightings.
FMV
Full-Motion Video - sensor footage from military aircraft and reconnaissance platforms; the source of most UAP video evidence.
62-HQ-83894
FBI headquarters case file aggregating UAP-related investigations from June 1947 through July 1968 - the historical core of the disclosure batch.