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Welcome to the UAP Archives Blog

Welcome to the UAP Archives Blog

The UAP Archives is a searchable mirror of every file the US Department of War has published at war.gov/UFO/. Every PDF, video, audio recording, and photograph is preserved here with its SHA-256 hash, OCR text, and a link back to the official source. This blog is the editorial layer on top of that archive — a place where we read the documents carefully and write about what they actually say.

One Rule: Every Claim Anchored to a Document

The blog has a single hard editorial invariant: every factual claim links to the specific document that supports it. No paraphrasing without citation, no "sources say" without a source you can open. The PURSUE collection — the most significant UAP disclosure package released so far — is a good example. The ODNI PURSUE collection (ODNI-UAP-D001) is not a summary or a press release; it is the actual classified-then-released record. When we describe what it contains, we mean that file, on that page. The same principle applies to facility-level incident reports: the Pantex Plant UAP Incident Report is a primary source, not a rumor — and we treat it that way.

What to Expect

Posts here will be short and document-driven. We are not trying to convince you of anything; we are trying to make it easier to read the evidence yourself. Each post will surface one or two documents worth your attention, explain the bureaucratic context that makes them significant, and point you back to the archive for verification. We aim for maybe ten to twenty pillar posts — not two hundred — because quality matters more than volume when the subject is the historical record of a government program.

If you are new here, start with the full document archive or use search to find records by agency, year, or keyword. The blog will meet you where the archive leaves off: after you have found the document, but before you have fully understood why it matters.

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