News listTrump meets Artemis II astronauts and promises: UFO and alien information will be declassified soon, with a large amount of undisclosed data to be revealed
動區 BlockTempo2026-04-30 03:51:36

Trump meets Artemis II astronauts and promises: UFO and alien information will be declassified soon, with a large amount of undisclosed data to be revealed

ORIGINAL川普接見 Artemis II 太空人承諾:UFO 外星人很快解密,將曝光大量未公開資料
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On April 30, while meeting with the Artemis II astronauts at the White House, Trump publicly promised to release as many UFO-related files as possible in the "near future," including a large amount of "things that have never been made public." This is his third statement on UFO declassification this year, and the countdown for the first batch of files has already begun. (Previous coverage: Trump: The first batch of UFO files will be released "very, very soon," uncovering a lot of interesting content) (Background: Trump to declassify alien files! Demands the Department of Defense release government files on extraterrestrial life and UFOs) Astronauts preparing to head to the moon collided with a President preparing to open another cosmic door. On April 30, the NASA Artemis II mission crew visited the Oval Office after completing their lunar orbit training. Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen gathered together. It was on this occasion that Trump was pressed by reporters on the progress of UFO declassification and gave his most explicit timeline commitment to date. Trump stated in the Oval Office: "I think we will be releasing everything that we can in the near future. People want to know about UFOs and everything related to them, and we will make a lot of information available. I think some of it will be very, very interesting to the public." This is not the first time Trump has spoken publicly about UFO declassification, but the signal strength has clearly escalated. Looking back at the timeline: In February of this year, citing "great public interest," Trump issued an executive order requiring the Pentagon and relevant intelligence agencies to initiate the declassification process, with the goal of releasing all government files involving Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs), Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP), and the potential existence of extraterrestrial life. The White House posted on X at the time, instructing the "Secretary of War and other relevant agencies" to identify and release relevant files. On April 17, Trump further revealed that government personnel had unearthed "quite a few interesting files" during the review process, stating that the first batch of files would be released to the public "very, very soon" via a centralized digital platform. This April 30 statement, made during a public appearance with moon mission astronauts, doubled down on the commitment—promising not just the first batch, but "as much as possible, including many things that have never been released." Despite Trump's repeated statements, the U.S. government has yet to officially release any new batches of declassified UFO/UAP files. Core unresolved cases long tracked by researchers and UAP advocacy groups include: the full assessment report of the Pentagon's AATIP (Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program), raw footage and analysis data of U.S. military pilot sightings over the years, and internal intelligence agency assessments regarding the non-Earth origin hypothesis. It is worth noting that the frequency of Trump's declassification promises has clearly accelerated, and each time he has spoken on symbolic occasions—from executive orders to television interviews, and now the Oval Office while meeting space exploration heroes. This narrative rhythm has led some researchers to have high expectations for the definition of "near future." According to Trump's April 17 remarks, the first batch of files will be released through a "centralized digital platform" rather than being scattered across various agency websites. This implies that the government is planning a unified portal for the public to systematically access declassified data. For the UAP research community, if this platform becomes a reality, it would be the most significant transparency breakthrough since The New York Times exposed Pentagon UAP footage in 2017. Trump's decision to drop this promise while meeting astronauts about to head to the moon allowed this dual cosmic narrative—humanity venturing into outer space while the government opens dusty files—to converge in the same Oval Office.
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Published:2026-04-30 03:51:36
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Trump meets Artemis II astronauts and promises: UFO and alien information will be declassified soon, with a large amount of undisclosed data to be revealed | Feel.Trading