White House Coordinating Release of Never-Before-Seen UAP Material — What to Expect and What Will Be Withheld
The War Department (Pentagon) has confirmed the White House is coordinating the release of never-before-seen UAP information to the public. Trump’s Truth Social announcement about declassifying UAP files preceded McCasland’s disappearance by days. Rep. Burlison obtained White House approval to visit classified UAP facilities. The machinery of disclosure is moving — but the structure of what exists suggests the most significant material will not be in the first release.
The Official Confirmation
The War Department confirmed to Liberation Times that the White House is coordinating the release of ‘never-before-seen UAP information.’ This follows Trump’s social media announcement about releasing classified UAP files — an announcement that, per the timeline, preceded Maj. Gen. McCasland’s disappearance by days. Whether those two events are connected is the central open thread of the active cases investigation.
What Rep. Burlison Found
Burlison, operating with White House approval to visit UAP-associated facilities, visited the Pax River hangar. He found infrastructure consistent with the material transfer narrative — but empty. His assessment to Liberation Times: the building’s existence validates the story. The question of whether the craft was moved, and where, is the operative intelligence gap.
The AARO Problem
Any White House UAP disclosure that routes through AARO faces the structural problem identified in this terminal’s analysis: AARO was built inside the counterintelligence architecture designed to protect SAPs. AARO’s predecessor was selected and built by the same office responsible for SAP security. Former AARO director Tim Phillips has confirmed the office has encountered cases of ‘truly astonishing performance capabilities’ — but the institution’s output consistently understates what its own leadership privately acknowledges.
The White House may well have to look beyond AARO to support this next vital step.
— Liberation Times, analysis of Pentagon UAP disclosure process
What Will and Won’t Be Released
Based on the documented architecture: what will be released is material that confirms UAP are real, unidentified, and represent a security concern — material that manages the narrative without disclosing the programme. What will not be released: the crash retrieval programme, the materials held at Pax River and elsewhere, the Golden Domes operational record, the identity of the craft at KONA BLUE’s target facility. The release is managed disclosure, not disclosure.
