We’ve found many very interesting documents: Trump says alien files coming very soon

The disclosure is closer than ever before. On April 17, 2026, speaking at a Turning Point USA event in Phoenix, President Donald Trump told the crowd something that UFO (unidentified flying object) watchers have been waiting for decades to hear.

“We’ve found many very interesting documents,” Trump said, adding that the first releases will begin very, very soon.

The All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, is the US government body tasked with investigating UAP sightings, and currently holds over 2,000 reports in its database. (Photo: Getty)

The All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, is the US government body tasked with investigating UAP sightings, and currently holds over 2,000 reports in its database. (Photo: Getty)

The seeds of this moment were planted in February, when Trump took to Truth Social to order the Department of War to begin identifying and declassifying files on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, or UAPs.

UAP is the government’s preferred term for what the rest of us simply call UFOs.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth confirmed on February 25 that the military is ready to comply with the executive order, which is a direct, legally binding presidential command that bypasses Congress entirely and does not require a new law to be passed.

WHO IS LEADING THIS EFFORT?

Leading this effort is the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, a dedicated US government body set up specifically to investigate UAP sightings.

Think of it as the official team assigned to figure out what is flying around in restricted airspace.

AARO currently holds over 2,000 UAP reports in its database. Many have been explained away as drones, weather balloons, or atmospheric quirks.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth confirmed in February 2026 that the US military is ready to comply with Trump’s executive order on UFO declassification. (Photo: Getty)

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth confirmed in February 2026 that the US military is ready to comply with Trump’s executive order on UFO declassification. (Photo: Getty)

Nearly 1,000, however, remain unresolved, not because the government is hiding something, but because the data is genuinely too strange or too thin to interpret.

Some of these cases involve objects performing what appears to be instantaneous acceleration, which means they go from stationary to thousands of kilometres per hour in a heartbeat, without producing a sonic boom.

A sonic boom is the explosive crack of sound that any object makes when it breaks the speed of sound. These objects leave no exhaust, have no visible wings, and seem to operate by a completely different set of physical rules.

WHAT COULD THE UFO FILES ACTUALLY REVEAL?

Officially, AARO has stated it has found no verified proof of alien life or off-world technology so far. Most sightings have mundane explanations.

But scientists like Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb are pushing for the release of high-resolution satellite imagery and underwater sonar data, which is data collected from sound waves bounced off the ocean floor, that has never been made public.

Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb is among the scientists pushing for the release of high-resolution satellite imagery and sonar data related to UAP sightings. (Photo: Getty)

Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb is among the scientists pushing for the release of high-resolution satellite imagery and sonar data related to UAP sightings. (Photo: Getty)

The 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, which is the annual law that sets the budget and rules for the US military, now legally requires these agencies to be fully transparent with Congress about what is operating in American airspace.

Whether the first releases prove anything extraordinary or not, one thing is already clear. The era of total government secrecy on this subject is coming to an end.

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