WASHINGTON — In a move described by the President as "highly complex but extremely interesting," the federal government this week directed the release of all classified files related to unidentified aerial phenomena, extraterrestrial life, and alien visitors — achieving what historians are calling the most transparent confirmation in American history that the world's most powerful government has always been just as confused as a guy at a bar who saw something weird once.
The announcement, made via Truth Social in a post directing the "Secretary of War and other relevant Departments and Agencies" to begin "identifying and releasing" the files, prompted immediate celebration among UFO enthusiasts, conspiracy theorists, and career government archivists who have spent decades filing and cross-referencing documents that amount, in essence, to an elaborate official record of institutional shrugging.
"The American people deserve to know the truth," said one senior intelligence official, adding that the truth, after decades of classification, turns out to be "still pending." The official clarified that pending means what it has always meant: no one knows, but the files confirming this lack of knowledge are now available to the public in an organized binder format.
The release comes after former President Barack Obama last week made remarks on a podcast confirming the existence of certain "objects" the government "doesn't quite know what they are," which UFO researchers celebrated as the most significant admission in recorded history by someone who is also fully eligible for Medicare.
A 2024 congressional report from the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office found "no evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology," which critics noted is a finding, not an answer, and also the kind of thing you'd say if you did find something and needed to sound very calm about it. The report declined to specify what exactly it had found no evidence of, leaving open the possibility that there is no evidence because the evidence has been filed under a different classification level.
The government's declassification process is expected to yield thousands of documents, memos, radar logs, and internal communications — all of which, sources familiar with the matter confirm, will describe objects that were unidentified at the time of observation, remain unidentified now, and are expected to remain unidentified for the foreseeable future, at which point additional funding may be requested to continue the not-knowing.
"We are committed to maximum transparency," said a spokesperson for the relevant Departments and Agencies, reading from a prepared statement that had itself been partially redacted before the briefing. The spokesperson confirmed that the unredacted portions of the statement "fully represent the government's current level of understanding," and when asked what the redacted portions contained, said they contained the parts where the understanding runs out, which for formatting reasons had to be removed.
In a statement that the President's office described as "extremely candid," the White House confirmed that the President himself "doesn't know if aliens are real," having reached the same conclusion as the classified files, but without the benefit of the $14 billion in defense intelligence spending that produced the classified files. This raised questions about the marginal value-add of classification itself, which a White House spokesperson declined to answer on the grounds that the answer is also pending.
Congressional leaders responded to the announcement with a range of emotions. Several representatives expressed relief that the files were being released. Others expressed concern that the files might reveal something destabilizing. A third group expressed concern that the files might reveal nothing destabilizing, which would be in its own way destabilizing. A fourth group asked what UAP stood for and had to be briefed on the acronym before they could issue statements about it.
Citizens who had spent decades building elaborate theories about government cover-ups reacted to the news with a mix of vindication and disappointment. "We were right that they were hiding something," said one longtime UFO researcher who declined to give his name and asked that his location not be disclosed. "We just assumed they were hiding answers. It turns out they were mostly hiding the question marks, which is arguably worse." He then excused himself to update several websites.
The files' release is expected to take several months, as officials must first review the documents for information that would compromise ongoing investigations into what the documents contain. Once reviewed, documents will be made available through a searchable online portal, provided that access to the portal does not itself require clearance, which several departments are still determining.
At press time, the first batch of released files had been downloaded 4.7 million times in the first hour. An early read confirmed that the documents contain radar data, pilot testimonials, and internal memos, all of which circle back, with remarkable bureaucratic consistency, to the same four-word conclusion: "origin and nature unknown." Historians note this is the most expensive "unknown" in recorded history, having cost the United States approximately $1.4 trillion in defense intelligence spending since 1947, which works out to roughly $20 billion per shrug.