The US government has finally coughed up a batch of UFO reports, and they're not the usual blurry photos of weather balloons. Sources confirm the documents, obtained through a Freedom of Information request lodged by this newsroom, detail a series of incidents involving what the military calls 'unidentified aerial phenomena' – orbs, to you and me. And they're not just hovering over Nevada. They're swarming.
According to the declassified files, pilots operating over restricted airspace have encountered clusters of metallic spheres, some no bigger than a car, exhibiting flight characteristics that defy known physics. No heat signatures. No sonic booms. Just silent, precise movements that would pull G-forces to turn a human into a pancake. One report, dated March 2023, describes a formation of six orbs performing a 'dance' over the Pacific, tracked by radar and confirmed by two separate aircraft crews.
But here's where it gets real. The UK Air Force is now analysing these reports for potential threats. I've spoken to a former RAF intelligence officer who told me, speaking on condition of anonymity: 'We can't ignore the possibility that these are advanced surveillance platforms. The lack of visible propulsion suggests a technology we don't have. And if we don't have it, we need to assume someone else does.' The officer confirmed that the UK's Air Warfare Centre has set up a dedicated cell to assess the data.
The British Ministry of Defence, typically tight-lipped on such matters, has refused to comment on the specifics of the analysis. But a leaked internal memo, obtained by this newsroom, warns of a 'step change in the frequency of incursions' into UK airspace. The memo, written by a Group Captain whose name is redacted, states: 'These objects are operating with impunity. We need to determine their origin and intent as a matter of national security.'
Documents from the US Department of Defense's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office reveal that the orbs have been observed near nuclear assets. A 2022 incident off the coast of California saw a swarm of orbs linger over a Trident submarine for nearly an hour before dispersing at hypersonic speed. The sub's captain reported that the objects seemed to 'respond' to the submarine's movement patterns.
Now, the pentagon's official line is that these are 'benign' and pose no threat. But I've been chasing this story long enough to know that when the suits say 'no threat', they usually mean 'we don't know what it is, and we're scared shitless'. Sources inside the intelligence community confirm that the reports are being cross-referenced with foreign surveillance data. And not just from usual suspects like Russia or China. The patterns don't match any known human technology.
Meanwhile, the timeline for public disclosure is accelerating. A whistleblower within the US intelligence community, who spoke with me over encrypted channels, alleges that a secret briefing was held for NATO allies last month, where the conclusion was stark: 'These are not ours. They are not theirs. And they are everywhere.'
I've seen the receipts. The raw radar tracks. The pilot testimony. The internal memos. This isn't about little green men. It's about a capability gap so wide that it threatens the very concept of air superiority. And if the UK Air Force is now in the game, you can bet your bottom dollar that the Treasury is having a quiet word about defence spending.
For now, the official response is a shrug. But the documents tell a different story. They show a government scrambling to understand what is buzzing its most sensitive sites – and finding no answers. I'll be following the money, and the black budget programs, because if there's one thing I've learned, it's that secrets cost a fortune. And the orbs? They're just the visible tip of an iceberg that could sink the entire defence establishment.








