The Truth About UFOs.

The Truth About UFOs.

Strap in. It's about to get crazy.

The Paper Trail: 1,300+ Files They Can’t Explain

Something crazy has been going on for the past five years, and I bet you haven’t heard the real version of it.

The US government has stopped laughing off "UFOs" and started analyzing them. Since 2021, the Department of Defense and US Intelligence have been forced to create a formal way to track what they now call Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP).

And get this: these aren't just stories from your neighbor glancing into the sky while he walks his dog. These reports are coming from advanced military sensors—radar, infrared, and electro-optical systems. We’re talking about verified data, not just eyewitness testimony.

The Numbers Don't Add Up

According to the FY 2024 Consolidated Annual Report, the government is now sitting on a library of over 1,600 cases.

Here’s the part that should bother you: the gap between the reports and the explanations isn't shrinking. It’s growing.

  • In 2021, they looked at 144 cases and could only explain one.
  • By 2024, they added 757 new reports in a single year.
  • By 2024, the government had logged 1,652 reported cases and only confidently solved 292.

Hundreds of these cases are currently dumped into an "Active Archive." Why? Because even with all our military tech, we don't have enough data to explain what they are.

Chart
Figure 1: UAP Reporting vs. Resolution Rate (2021-2024)

"Balloons" vs. The Unknown

When the government can solve a case, it’s usually something boring. Weather balloons, hobby balloons, birds, or drones. That’s the "solved" pile.

Figure 2: AARO's Closed Cases by Identified Object Type from May 1, 2023 - June 1, 2024 Source: Fiscal Year 2024 Consolidated Annual Report on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena

But the unsolved pile is where things get weird. The government’s own data (specifically the AARO Reporting Trends) shows that these unexplained objects aren't "balloon-shaped." They are consistently described as orbs, spheres, or cylinders. They show up on multiple sensors at once, often near restricted military airspace.

Figure 3: UAP Characterization by Reported Morphology from May 1, 2023 - June 1, 2024 Source: Fiscal Year 2024 Consolidated Annual Report on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena

Why This Matters

The Department of Defense isn't investigating this because they’re bored. In their own official reports, they state these objects pose "flight safety risks" and "potential national security risks."

If our military’s most advanced equipment is detecting objects in our airspace that we can’t identify or control, that’s a problem. Whether you believe in aliens or just think it’s a security flaw, the fact remains: the paper trail is real, it’s public, and it’s growing every day.

Dig Into the Vault

Don't take my word for it. Read the declassified records yourself:

🔗 [2021 Report] The Preliminary Assessment (Where the formal tracking began)

🔗 [2022 Report] Annual UAP Analysis (The first major data dump)

🔗 [2023 Report] Consolidated AARO Files (When the "Active Archive" started exploding)

🔗 [2024 Report] The Latest Update (700+ new cases and zero easy answers)