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Pentagon’s UFO Files: A National Security Wake-Up Call

Dr. Avi Loeb told Newsmax’s Saturday Agenda that the latest tranche of Pentagon UAP files is not just scientific curiosity — it is a pressing national security matter, and Americans should demand answers. He warned the release will probably come in waves and urged policymakers to treat these documents with the seriousness they deserve rather than the usual bureaucratic shrug.

Under the administration’s PURSUE program the Department of War has begun publishing formerly classified UAP records in rolling batches, with the public portal going live in early May and subsequent releases following weeks later. What started as an effort to clear out dusty files has become a national conversation about transparency and what our intelligence apparatus has been hiding.

The third release, published in mid-June, included scores of documents, videos and audio clips — items that range from a 1948 naval memo to modern sensor footage describing luminous orbs and a striking “orange mother orb” that reportedly launched smaller red orbs over multiple nights. AARO’s own assessment, signed by director Jon Kosloski, admits that roughly four in ten cases in this tranche remain without a conventional explanation, which is exactly the kind of ambiguity that should keep every decision-maker on Capitol Hill awake at night.

Loeb has not been playing the part of a sensationalist; he has been assembling a UAP Science Advisory Council and asking the Pentagon for files so scientists can apply real data-driven methods instead of speculation. His point is straightforward and patriotic: if some of these objects are foreign or human-made systems operating over our sensitive assets, that is a direct threat to American families and troops — and the public has a right to know.

Conservatives should be the loudest voices demanding both transparency and strength. We should applaud moves that pull back the curtain, but we must also insist that disclosure is not theater — it must be accompanied by real investment in sensors, intelligence fusion, and clear rules to protect secrets that genuinely matter to our defense. The same bureaucracies that clung to secrecy for decades cannot be trusted to police themselves without oversight from elected officials who put national security first.

This whole episode underscores a simple truth: weakness and secrecy invite danger. President Trump’s directive to surface these materials was overdue, and now Congress and the Pentagon must act to convert curiosity into capability — fund better detection, compel interagency cooperation, and protect whistleblowers who bring uncomfortable facts to light. If adversaries have been testing technologies near our assets, we cannot respond with press releases and talking points; we need real deterrence.

Avi Loeb is doing the work many in the establishment refused to do: translating obscure memos and grainy videos into a public case for science and security. Americans who love freedom should demand both the truth and the muscle to defend it — no more cover-ups, no more academic hand-wringing, just sober examination and decisive action to keep our country safe.

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