On May 3, 2026, Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy pressed investigative journalist Jeremy Corbell about a string of military-grade UAP videos that Corbell says show craft outmaneuvering U.S. forces and exhibiting maneuvers our pilots and sensors cannot explain. Corbell warned these are not camera glitches or weather balloons but videos that military analysts have repeatedly described as demonstrating impossible acceleration and control.
Corbell singled out declassified footage from 2021 over Syria as a striking example of apparent instantaneous acceleration and evasive behavior — footage that is among the very files Congress has demanded be handed over to lawmakers. The House Oversight Task Force under Rep. Anna Paulina Luna formally requested delivery of 46 specific UAP-related video files by April 14, 2026, a list that explicitly names the Syrian clip and other incidents near sensitive military sites. Patriots who love this country have every right to see what their government has on file; secrecy without explanation is unacceptable.
This is not fringe theater. The Department of War’s AARO and Pentagon officials have publicly acknowledged coordination with the White House even as lawmakers say the Department has been slow to produce the records requested. That delay smells like bureaucratic stonewalling and fed-up Americans should not be polite about it — national security demands candor, not cover-ups.
Conservative Americans understand the cost of surprises when it comes to defense; a mystery craft that can out-accelerate or out-turn our jets is not merely a curiosity, it is a potential battlefield advantage for whoever — or whatever — controls it. If these videos show objects behaving beyond known physics, then the chain of command must explain why those files were shelved instead of treated as the urgent threat they could be. Our veterans and aviators deserve a Department that protects them first, not a payroll that protects its own secrecy.
Jeremy Corbell’s bluntness on national television should be a wake-up call: transparency is not a partisan stunt, it is a duty. Congress has acted by naming specific files and setting deadlines; now it must use every oversight tool to force answers, and the executive branch must stop hiding behind bureaucracy and release the material in full to the American people.
For every patriotic American who still believes in the Constitution and the principle that government is accountable to the people, this moment is a test. Demand the records, back the men and women who serve, and refuse to let a permanent class of bureaucrats decide in secret what the nation is allowed to know about threats in our skies and seas.



