Investigative reporter Jeremy Corbell has made a bold claim: it’s time for President Trump to tell the world what the government knows about UAPs and UFOs. The latest release of government UFO files has stirred questions, not answers. Americans deserve straight talk, not more redactions, spin or shadowy denials from career bureaucrats who act like secrets are their private collectibles.
What the new government UFO files really show
The second batch of files released by the government is a mixed bag. There are naval pilot reports, radar tracks, and sensor data that don’t line up with easy explanations. Some incidents look like glitches. Others don’t. That uncertainty is the point. When trained military personnel see something in the sky that they can’t identify, it is a matter of safety and national security — plain and simple. Vague language and blacked-out passages do nothing to calm people. They make Americans wonder what the government is hiding.
Why President Trump should speak up about UAP disclosure
President Trump, according to voices like Corbell, is in a position to force clarity. A presidential directive to declassify more material, set up transparent briefings, or authorize independent investigations would cut through the fog. This is not about feeding late-night theater or pandering to conspiracy fans. It is about leadership. If the commander-in-chief won’t insist on honest answers from the agencies that report to him, who will? And yes, there are real security questions here — aircraft in our airspace, unknown capabilities near military assets — that demand oversight, not cover-ups.
Separate the facts from the fantasies
Let’s be clear: calling for disclosure isn’t the same as endorsing every outlandish claim on social media. Jeremy Corbell is an investigative journalist, not a tabloid host. He digs up documents and pushes for accountability. That’s different from a late-night scream about little green men. Conservatives should be skeptical of sensationalism and of agencies that hide information from the public they serve. We can demand truth and still insist on rigorous standards of evidence. The point is simple — transparency improves security and trust.
In the end, this is a test of leadership. President Trump can either force open the files and show Americans what facts exist — or allow the secrecy culture to keep deciding what we are allowed to know. If the material is harmless, let it out. If it is sensitive, explain why and give Congress the oversight it needs. The public deserves a straight answer. The nation’s safety depends on it. Call for hearings, demand declassification where possible, and don’t accept more bureaucratic smoke and mirrors.

