Last night, the U.S. Department of Defense launched a new website: war.gov/UFO.
162 files in total, including 14 images, 28 videos, and 120 documents, spanning from 1947 to 2025. After the site went live, netizens discussed many of the pictures.
108 files have varying degrees of redaction, but the U.S. Department of Defense emphasized in the announcement that the redactions are solely to "protect witness identities and military facility locations." Each file carries the same status label: unresolved. Meaning the government investigated but couldn't figure it out.
The entire website adopts a deliberately aged visual language. Black-and-white filters, minimalist fonts from the Apollo era, scanned images of undeciphered files interspersed with NASA moon photos. Mouseover triggers slight noise like a Geiger counter. The moment you open the page, you'd think you'd entered a 1970s government leak movie.
This project is called PURSUE, an acronym for Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters. A forced abbreviation retrofitted to spell "pursue," using the first letters of each relevant agency. The official statement says: "These documents have long been hidden by classification systems, fueling legitimate speculation. It's time for the American people to see for themselves." FBI Director Kash Patel added: "A level of transparency no previous administration has achieved." Trump's own wording on Truth Social was more casual: "Have Fun and Enjoy!"
But the disclosure itself is far from the most interesting part of this event. The most interesting part is the timing. Why now? The Blockbeats editorial team has some speculations and thoughts.
Paving the Way for the 2026 Midterm Elections
This point is mentioned least by the media, but it's actually the most important.
November 3, 2026, is the midterm election. All 435 House seats are up for re-election, and 35 Senate seats. Historically, the lower the incumbent president's approval rating, the greater the loss for their party in the midterms.
A May 3 Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll showed: "With six months to the November midterm elections, Republicans face a deteriorating political environment, widespread dissatisfaction among Americans with Trump's leadership on the Iran war and other key issues, with Democratic voter motivation significantly higher than Republican."
Viewed in this context, the May 8 release is key not for the release itself, but for the phrasing "on a rolling basis." The U.S. Department of Defense repeatedly emphasized in the announcement: "Will continue to release new materials based on ongoing disclosures and discoveries."
This is a hint at controlling the rhythm.
If you were a communications strategist for the Trump team, releasing all material at once would be the dumbest move. The smartest move is to release UFO files in a "serialized" rhythm: Season 1 in May, Season 2 in June coinciding with a Spielberg movie release, hype the topic all summer, then release the most explosive content in September-October, the final stretch before the midterm vote.
Octagon AI's market analysis directly pointed out: "The 2026 U.S. midterm elections are a major potential influencing factor for UFO file releases. Such disclosures might occur when polls show Trump's party facing significant seat losses in both chambers, or when his approval ratings are low, to redirect public attention."
The 162 files are just the beginning. What will determine if this disclosure is a "political tool" is not what was released on May 8, but whether more is released on schedule in September, October, November.
Trump's Second-Term "Transparency" Narrative
One of the core communication narratives of Trump's second term is "I am more transparent than all previous presidents." This statement needs constant new evidence to support it.
The iteration rhythm roughly goes like this: In December 2025, the DOJ released the Epstein files, independent site, rolling updates. On May 8, 2026, the DoD released UFO files, independent site, rolling updates, identical product format. Less than five months between the two releases.
What's next? The candidate list is easy to guess. The JFK files still have classified parts. MLK files. Some 9/11 Commission appendices. Each can fit the same product template: independent domain, rolling updates, welcome "private sector analysis." aliens.gov has already been registered, the same thing might be happening for jfk.gov or similar domains.
This is Disclosure as a Service. It's not a one-off action, but a reusable government product format.
This format is politically very efficient. Each release simultaneously achieves three things: satisfies the MAGA base's expectation for "transparency"; provides a distraction for a specific time window; supplies raw material for downstream content industries like Hollywood, Polymarket, Solana meme coins.
The smartest part is that the government sheds the interpretation authority. Doesn't say aliens exist, doesn't say they don't. No conclusions, just presenting material. This means the government's burden of truth is minimized, but the political credit earned isn't discounted.
The Iran War Needs "Good News" to Divert Attention
This point doesn't require much reasoning, as many within MAGA have publicly said so, including Joe Rogan.
On May 7, in episode 2247 of The Joe Rogan Experience, Rogan asked visiting Republican Congressman Tim Burchett: "What doesn't quite add up is, why release it now, unless you're willing to think from the most cynical angle: The Iran war is not going well, the American public is very angry, many feel we shouldn't have gotten involved in the first place. We need some good news."
Joe Rogan is the core podcast host who helped Trump pull manosphere voters to the red camp in 2024. Him directly stating this on his own show means within the MAGA media ecosystem, this interpretation is already an open secret.
Data-wise, it's clearly not friendly to Trump either. CNN's May 5 Poll of Polls showed Trump's composite approval rating at 35%, nearing the low point of Bush's second term. CNN's approval rating on economic issues dropped to 31%, over 70% disapproval on cost-of-living issues. 61% of Americans labeled the Iran war a "mistake." Gas prices surged past $4.5 per gallon.
This number might be more politically damaging than daily casualty figures in the Middle East, because it directly enters every American household's budget.
This war's official codename was even changed by the public. Trump's operation codename was "Operation Epic Fury," changed by Twitter users to "Operation Epstein Fury." The fact this rename went viral itself shows the public already links this war with "distraction."
Even harsher is Data for Progress's March poll: 52% of Americans believe Trump launched the Iran war at least partly to distract from Epstein. Even 25% of Republican voters agree. 81% of Democrats and 66% of voters under 45 consider it fact. This is a cross-party, cross-age consensus; the American public no longer believes the president's motive for starting a war is national security.
If the Iran war itself is suspected of being to cover up Epstein, then using UFOs now to cover up the Iran war is a hedge on a hedge. The Trump administration now faces not a single out-of-control issue, but a chain of out-of-control issues referencing each other. Every new diversion simultaneously reinforces the meta-narrative of "they're distracting again."
UFOs Are Covering Up the Epstein Files
On December 19, 2025, the DOJ, under new law, released the first batch of Epstein files. The release format included: independent site, rolling updates, no official interpretation provided, welcome "private sector analysis."
The May 8 war.gov/UFO product format is almost identical. Independent site, rolling updates, no official interpretation provided, welcome "private sector analysis."
The DoD's statement reads: "The materials archived here are unresolved cases, meaning the government cannot make a definitive determination regarding the nature of the phenomena observed... The Department of Defense welcomes analysis, information, and expertise from the private sector."
Americans heard this exact script just in December. Making "file disclosure" into a replicable government product—independent domain, low latency, unified visual style, leaving blanks for public narratives to fill—is clearly a communication innovation of Trump's second term.
But the Epstein files aren't dead. Massie, the Kentucky Republican congressman known for opposing Trump, wrote in February: "They deployed the ultimate weapon of mass distraction, but the Epstein files won't go away... not even for aliens." This "weapon of mass distraction" is a pun in English, replacing "mass destruction" with "mass distraction."
The most notable reaction on May 8 was the defection from within MAGA. Marjorie Taylor Greene, known as one of Trump's staunchest representatives, tweeted: "I literally don't care about the UFO files. I literally don't. I am so over the 'look at the shiny object' propaganda while they wage foreign wars, let rapists and pedophiles go free, and destroy the value of the dollar." In another tweet she was more direct: "The most transparent administration still hasn't released all the Epstein files, hasn't arrested anyone, but today threw you some UFO files to get you so excited you forget you're paying $4.5 a gallon for gas for another foreign war they said they wouldn't fight."
Alex Jones is another iconic defector. This long-time conspiracy theorist, who should have been the biggest cheerleader for "government releasing alien files," stamped this release as a "nothingburger." Jones further stated: "This shows the methodology and mindset of the same people as in the Epstein files case, until the public forces Congress to release 3 million documents."
This detail is important. Jones isn't attacking Trump for not releasing truth; he's accusing Trump of copying the Epstein playbook. Meaning: This "rolling release, deliberately hollow, welcome public analysis" product template was already seen through once with the Epstein files, and using it a second time won't fool anyone.
Another data point from Al Jazeera citing analyst Ben-Ephraim: Google search volume for "Epstein files" plummeted after the Iran war started. This means the "bury a small event with a big event" strategy is indeed effective data-wise, at least temporarily removing an issue from Google Trends' hot list. The problem is, search volume receding doesn't mean the issue disappears. The handling of the Epstein files has become a structural liability for Trump's second term; every time it's suppressed, the next反弹 will only be stronger.
The White House Is Cashing In on Polymarket Market Expectations
On Polymarket, the market "Will Trump disclose UFO files before 2027?" currently shows 100% YES. Cumulative trading volume: $845,000.
Broadening the view, all UFO category markets on Polymarket have a cumulative trading volume of $41.9 million, with 104 active markets. Among them, the "Will the U.S. confirm alien existence by [date]?" series alone saw $35 million in cumulative volume.
Worth mentioning is the December 2025 Polymarket "whale event." A $16 million market, "Will Trump disclose UFO files in 2025?," was swept up by a whale at the last moment at near $1 price, with the result set to YES via UMA governance token vote. There was no file release at the time, only a 10-minute blurry video from AARO. The community exploded, calling it "proof-of-whales." CryptoSlate's report labeled it a "serious credibility crisis" for Polymarket.
The aftermath lingers to this day. And the White House could hardly be unaware of related markets on Polymarket. The Blockbeats editorial team has observed account profiles and finds it hard not to suspect insider trading.
On May 8, with the official declassification and release of UFO files, the Polymarket market "Will Trump disclose UFO files before 2027?" settled as YES. This market had cumulative volume of $845,000; among accounts betting YES, the single highest-earning account made over ten thousand dollars.
But another market's situation isn't so simple.
The trading event "Will the U.S. confirm alien existence by ___?" has cumulative trading volume exceeding $35 million. From April 1 until just before the file release, this market saw an influx of newly registered accounts. Many of these accounts exhibited highly consistent behavior: only buying "YES" in this market, no trading records in any other markets, account registration and position opening times almost coinciding.
Statistics show at least 13 such new accounts bought over $1000 in the "confirmed this year" option, with combined potential returns exceeding $10 million. Looking at each account individually, it could be explained as "well-informed new users." If subsequent related file releases or official statements match this market's settlement conditions, this $10 million could be cashed out.
All of Hollywood Is Betting on UFO Themes in 2026
On June 12, Spielberg's UFO film "Disclosure Day" premieres globally in IMAX.
The film's tagline is "All Will Be Disclosed," directly borrowing the core discourse of the UFO community's "Disclosure movement." Universal Pictures production, John Williams score (his 30th collaboration with Spielberg), Emily Blunt stars as a Kansas City weather anchor, Josh O'Connor plays a whistleblower, Colin Firth plays the villainous corporate CEO. Screenplay by David Koepp, who previously worked with Spielberg on "Jurassic Park" and "War of the Worlds."
Trump's May 8 UFO file release comes exactly 35 days before this film's release.
This timing escaped no one's notice. The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "The Pentagon's promise of a 'rolling release of new material' couldn't be better timed for Universal's upcoming Spielberg film." The Wrap dedicated a paragraph: "The happiest person is Spielberg. His film releases in June and got completely free nationwide publicity."
And all of Hollywood in 2026 is betting on UFO themes: Apple Original Films is making a UAP film directed by Joseph Kosinski, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, with David Grusch (the 2023 congressional UFO whistleblower) as consultant; Hulu is reviving X-Files; 20th Century is also making a Roswell-related film.
Producer Bryce Zabel told THR: "The UFO/UAP reality question is the zeitgeist of our time. Obama and Trump are two completely opposite presidents, but both took this possibility seriously."
Translated: Hollywood already treats UFOs as a cross-party, cross-cycle stable IP. This is more important than any single film; it means the industry judges this theme can sustain them at least until the 2028 election.











