NEED TO KNOW
- Trump told a Turning Point crowd UFO file releases begin "very, very soon"
- The February directive tasked Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth with review
- The Pentagon's AARO has long denied evidence of extraterrestrial tech
PHOENIX, AZ (TDR) β President Donald Trump told a Turning Point USA rally Friday that the first government releases of UFO files are imminent, saying he saved the announcement for a crowd that is "a little bit out there."
π¨πΊπΈ BREAKING: Trump says UFO files are coming and "very interesting documents" have already been found!
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) April 17, 2026
He directed Secretary Hegseth to begin the release process and says it's "well underway."
No timeline.
Just "very, very soon."
If even half of what's been rumored about⦠https://t.co/oM6RgyvV0V pic.twitter.com/HlJ8vRXi8j
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The big picture: The Phoenix tease caps a two-month push that began when Trump directed the Department of War to identify and release records on unidentified aerial phenomena.
- The February 19 Truth Social post cited "tremendous interest" as the trigger
- Former President Obama's podcast remarks that month reopened the topic
Why it matters: UAP disclosure sits at the crossroads of public trust, military classification rules, and a Pentagon establishment that has spent decades saying there is nothing extraordinary to see.
- The Pentagon's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office holds more than 2,000 open cases
- A 2024 DoD historical review found no evidence of alien technology
- Military pilots and whistleblowers say the review process has missed material
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Driving the news: Trump's Phoenix remarks were the first specific timing cue since Hegseth confirmed compliance with the directive in late February.
- Trump said initial releases begin "very, very soon"
- He framed the disclosures as "interesting" but did not commit to a specific date
- The executive directive remains without a published timeline
- Trump, President β "I thought I'd save it for this crowd, because you're a little bit out there"
What they're saying: Reaction splits between disclosure advocates who want raw data and skeptics who expect mundane explanations.
- Donald Trump, President β "This process is well underway, and we found many very interesting documents"
- Pete Hegseth, Defense Secretary β the Pentagon will be "in full compliance with that executive order"
- Ross Coulthart, NewsNation journalist β a social media pledge alone is "insufficient without a binding executive order"
- Sean Kirkpatrick, former AARO director β many reported sightings involved "metallic orbs"
Yes, but: Trump's pattern on high-profile disclosure promises is mixed, and that record shapes how this one lands.
- Prediction markets gave only 28β30% odds of new UFO releases by March 31
- The Epstein files bill became law only after months of resistance
- No firm release schedule exists despite the February directive
Between the lines: The Phoenix rollout venue is the tell, not a slip of tone β UAP disclosure is being framed as a political deliverable for the base, not a national security event.
- The crowd was primed for a populist distrust-of-institutions frame
- Saving the announcement for supporters signals political use, not policy urgency
- A staged drip release lets the administration shape coverage as it goes
What's next:
- Initial declassified documents expected in coming weeks
- AARO's next congressional briefing is pending
- Redactions are certain; raw pilot and sensor data remains the test
When disclosure is announced to a friendly crowd before the documents arrive, is it transparency or stagecraft?
Sources
This report was compiled using information from Newsweek, TIME, DefenseScoop, Axios, and KJZZ.
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