Trump Pushes Pentagon to Open UFO Sites as Lawmaker Hints at 'Craft and Bodies'
Trump supports congressional access to UFO locations as officials suggest non-human technology may exist

The UFO mystery is back in the spotlight as President Donald Trump is reportedly supporting congressional access to secret Pentagon sites. Representative Tim Burchett has revealed that the White House is assisting in requests to visit locations where unusual materials, objects, and possibly craft or bodies are reported to exist.
The move has reignited interest in UFO disclosure, raising questions about what the government may have been keeping from the public for decades. For many, the issue is no longer confined to speculation but has become a matter of transparency, accountability and national security.
How Trump Is Involved in UFO Disclosure
According to Burchett, one of the key requests he has made involves arranging visits to Pentagon-controlled sites believed to hold unusual objects. The White House has reportedly instructed the Department of Defense to make these visits happen.
While Burchett emphasised that he has not personally verified the existence of alien craft, he said the files and locations provided suggest the government possesses materials and records linked to unidentified aerial phenomena. Trump's involvement, even indirectly, signals a growing political interest in UFO transparency, which has long been dismissed or ridiculed in public discourse.
Burchett and his colleagues, including Anaplina Luna and Nancy Mace, have received briefings from military and intelligence sources. Some of the videos shown to them depict objects moving at speeds that defy known physics.
While many of the videos are unclear or explainable by conventional means, others remain unexplained and classified. A whistleblower, Matthew Brown, has assisted in identifying relevant files and locations, including an archive linked to legacy UFO programs. According to Burchett, obtaining definitive evidence, such as high-resolution images or physical artefacts, remains the primary challenge.
Challenges With Access and Whistleblowers
The process of accessing information on UFOs is notoriously complex. Burchett described a convoluted system where agencies often fail to report properly to Congress, and information is heavily compartmentalised.
Whistleblowers face obstacles, including fear of losing security clearance, though there is no historical precedent of prosecution for disclosure to Congress. The lawmaker has dedicated resources from his office to navigate the intelligence community, employing experts to identify and request documents. Despite these hurdles, Burchett insists that the public has a right to know about any non-human intelligence or advanced technology the government may possess.
For Burchett, UFO transparency is not about little green men but about understanding advanced technologies and ensuring government accountability. Officials argue that concealment may be driven by national security concerns or to protect classified programmes from foreign adversaries. The representative explained that while some secrecy is understandable, the blanket withholding of information undermines public trust and leaves citizens in the dark about developments that could have far-reaching implications.
Some previously unknown military capabilities, like the B-2 bomber and SR-71, were once hidden in a similar fashion, only to later emerge as technologies that shaped modern aviation. Burchett emphasised that humans created government and therefore deserve access to truth about reality, especially when taxpayer dollars fund these programmes.
He noted that while some videos suggest prosaic explanations, such as misidentified aircraft or natural phenomena, others point to technology that defies conventional understanding, moving in ways that challenge current physics. If fully understood or made public, such technology could not only enhance national security but also transform energy, propulsion, and scientific research, potentially revolutionising life on Earth.
He added that disclosure is as much about transparency and accountability as it is about the potential benefits to humanity, arguing that society has a right to know whether there are phenomena or technologies beyond our current comprehension.
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