Congress Demands Pentagon Release 46 Classified Military UFO Videos by Mid-April

By 
, April 5, 2026

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna is done waiting. The Florida Republican on Wednesday requested 46 military videos from the Department of War, including 45 previously unreleased clips that insiders say contain some of the most compelling UAP footage the U.S. government has ever collected.

Luna's April 1 letter, addressed to Secretary Pete Hegseth, laid out the national security stakes plainly:

"In and around the sensitive airspaces of US military installations poses a threat to the security of the armed forces and their readiness."

The Department of War is expected to hand over the clips by April 14. What happens after that could reshape the public conversation about what the military knows and how long it has known it.

What's on the List

According to the New York Post, the file titles alone tell a story. Among the requested videos: "Several UAP in vicinity of Columbus OH airport" and "UFOs in formation over Persian Gulf." One clip, titled "Syrian UAP instant acceleration, 2021," was already released on Feb. 3 by independent journalist Jeremy Corbell. That leaves 45 clips the public has never seen.

A source who has viewed the videos offered a characteristically blunt preview:

"You're gonna see some weird f–king s–t."

According to insiders, the footage offers convincing proof that advanced, non-human craft are operating on Earth. None of the videos reportedly show alien creatures, but they do allegedly capture flight characteristics like instantaneous acceleration, described as a marker of advanced science not known to man. A radar operator is among those who have encountered the material firsthand.

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The Intelligence Community's Shadow Game

Perhaps the most revealing detail isn't what's on the videos. It's who's watching them. Two sources told The Post that moles within the intelligence community have eyes on the files. That fact alone should concern anyone who believes elected officials, not unaccountable bureaucrats, should control the flow of classified information to the American public.

This is the pattern that has defined the UAP debate for years. Military personnel capture extraordinary footage. The footage disappears into classified archives. Lawmakers request it. Intelligence gatekeepers slow-walk, redact, or stonewall. The public gets drip-fed just enough to stay curious but never enough to conclude.

Luna's office did not respond to a request for comment, but the letter itself speaks clearly enough. A deadline of April 14 leaves little room for the kind of bureaucratic foot-dragging that has become standard operating procedure on this issue.

Why This Matters Beyond the Spectacle

It's easy to dismiss UAP stories as fringe entertainment. The media has spent decades training the public to do exactly that. But strip away the little-green-men jokes and what remains is a straightforward question of government transparency and national security.

Objects operating in restricted military airspace, demonstrating flight capabilities that no known nation possesses, represent either a foreign adversary breakthrough or something else entirely. Neither answer is comfortable. Both demand that Congress, not career intelligence officials with institutional incentives to keep secrets, control the disclosure process.

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The bipartisan appetite for UAP transparency has grown steadily in recent years, but transparency efforts have consistently run into a wall of institutional resistance. The intelligence community treats classification not as a tool for protecting sources and methods but as a blanket authority to decide what the public deserves to know. That's not security. That's control.

April 14 Will Tell Us Something

The real test isn't what the videos show. It's whether the Department of War meets the deadline. If 46 clips land on Luna's desk by April 14, it signals that the current Pentagon leadership takes congressional oversight seriously. If the deadline passes with excuses, redactions, or partial compliance, it will confirm what many in Congress already suspect: that the permanent bureaucracy believes it answers to no one.

Forty-six videos. A two-week window. The American public has waited long enough for answers that their own government already has.

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson