NASA for UFO secret documents: We found inexplicable phenomena

US space agency NASA Director Jared Isaacman said the newly declassified files on unidentified anomalies (UAP) reveal a series of unusual evidence that government agencies did not pay sufficient attention to.
The “What is now coming to light is not a fallen spacecraft or alien troops, but real phenomena that we still don't have an explanation for”, Isaacman told Fox News.
Document publication comes after President Donald Trump's administration published two disproportionate file groups on UAP, as part of a broader initiative for greater transparency. Agencies were ordered to search internal databases for decades of reporting on inexplicable air phenomena, following years of public suspicion about government secret and investigation UFOs.
Officials say new document releases from other agencies, including the CIA, could soon follow.
The continued publication of the declassified files is part of the Trump programme “The Presidential Intelligence and Reporting System for USAP” (PURSUE), in which another set of documents was released to the public on Friday.
Isaacman pointed out that such reports should be viewed, not as proof of alien life, but as an opportunity for the public to analyze inexplicable evidence. He says that modern cameras, military sensors and recently published government data give Americans more material to study than ever before.
Today, everyone has a camera on their phone or the front door. Each military aircraft is equipped with a large number of sensors”, Isaacman said.
It's normal for you to record something. Maybe something that flew beyond target at a strange angle. If you had a better angle, you might say it was a balloon or a rocket in a war zone. But because of being shot by a certain angle, it remains an inexplicable phenomenon. ”
According to him, the biggest surprise is not the possibility of aliens, but the fact that federal agencies have paid very little attention to such reports over the decades. It called the new data publication wave launched during the Trump administration, “civic science”.
Government agencies have not taken this seriously enough before, until President Trump issued a message ordering agencies to check their archives and databases and extract the information to the public”, Isaacman said.
I think the president has now forced state institutions to take this matter seriously, examine documents and publish data. Everything is available to the public to analyze. This is civic science now. Look at our files and tell us what you think”.












