UFOs and aliens return to spotlight after Obama remarks, Trump declassification pledge
2026-02-24 - 10:42
The question of extraterrestrial life has surged back into public consciousness following former President Barack Obama's podcast remarks that aliens "are real" and President Donald Trump's subsequent announcement that he will order federal agencies to declassify and release government files on UFOs, UAPs, and extraterrestrial life. Trump claimed Obama had revealed "classified" information, prompting his declassification directive, while Obama later clarified he saw no evidence of extraterrestrial contact during his presidency. Historical Milestones in UFO Phenomenon Modern UFO interest began June 24, 1947, when pilot Kenneth Arnold reported witnessing strange objects moving rapidly near Mount Rainier, generating the "flying disk" cultural image. Days later, the Roswell Army Air Field initially described recovered debris as a "flying disk" before retracting, claiming a weather balloon had crashed—a incident that became central to government cover-up theories. The 1960s introduced abduction narratives, beginning with Betty and Barney Hill's 1961 account, followed by Travis Walton's 1975 Arizona experience, later adapted into the film Fire in the Sky. Pilot Testimonies and Congressional Hearings Navy pilot sightings off San Diego in November 2004 and frequent East Coast encounters between 2014-2015 elevated the phenomenon's credibility, leading to adoption of the term "Unidentified Aerial Phenomena." During July 2023 congressional testimony, former intelligence official David Grusch claimed the government possessed "intact and partially intact" alien vehicles. Pilot Ryan Graves described UAPs as "dark gray or black cubes inside transparent spheres," while Commander David Fravor recounted observing an oval object hovering off California. Official Investigations and Public Opinion The Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office has reviewed over 1,600 UAP cases as of October 2024, finding no evidence of extraterrestrial origin. A November 2024 report detailed 485 incidents between May 2023-June 2024, with 118 explained as balloons, birds, or drones. The National UFO Reporting Center has processed over 180,000 reports, with California leading US states at more than 17,000 sightings. A November 2025 YouGov poll found 56% of Americans believe aliens "definitely or probably" exist, with 47% believing Earth has been visited.