US Army Confirmed Testing UAP Debris: The Black Vault Documents and the Bigelow Connection

MATERIAL EVIDENCE

US Army Confirmed Testing UAP Debris: The Classified DEVCOM Agreement and What It Means When the Military’s Top Research Lab Agrees to Analyse ‘Unknown Materials’

UAP Oracle · May 2026 · Source: The Black Vault FOIA / DEVCOM documents

The Black Vault obtained documents confirming the US Army’s Combat Capabilities Development Command — its premier research institution — entered a classified agreement to analyse materials presented as potential UAP debris. Results were denied entirely on national security grounds. The agreement connects to the Bigelow Aerospace material chain and runs parallel to the failed KONA BLUE DHS route.

The Army Agreement

The Black Vault has obtained documents confirming that the US Army entered into an agreement to analyse material described as potential UAP debris. The documents confirm that the Army’s Combat Capabilities Development Command (DEVCOM) — the Army’s premier research institution — was involved in analysis of materials that originated from UAP-related claims.

The analysis was conducted under extreme secrecy conditions. Black Vault founder John Greenewald Jr. documented that FOIA requests for the results of this analysis were denied entirely on national security grounds — even the existence of the results was classified.

The Bigelow Connection

The Army agreement connects directly to the Bigelow Aerospace chain documented across multiple sources. Robert Bigelow’s organisations collected material samples claimed to be of UAP origin and sought government analysis through various channels. The KONA BLUE programme attempted to formalise this arrangement through DHS. The Army agreement represents a parallel or subsequent channel through which the same material analysis goal was pursued — outside the failed KONA BLUE route.

Why This Matters

The significance is not primarily in what the analysis found — those results remain classified. The significance is in what the Army’s participation confirms: the US military’s most advanced materials research institution formally agreed to analyse material presented to it as UAP-related debris. The existence of that agreement is itself a disclosure. An institution like DEVCOM does not enter into classified analysis agreements for material that isn’t worth analysing.

ArmyDEVCOMUAP DebrisMaterials AnalysisBigelowBlack VaultFOIA

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