Pentagon Rebels Against Trump’s UAP Push Citing Demonic Fears
President Donald Trump directed the Pentagon and other agencies on February 20, 2026, to identify and release long-hidden government files on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), extraterrestrial life, and related mysteries, citing “tremendous public interest.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth publicly pledged full compliance, yet multiple insiders report strong internal resistance. Some Pentagon factions fear the evidence points to interdimensional entities rather than simple spacecraft from distant planets.
Filmmaker Mark Christopher Lee, citing a Washington source, revealed that religious anxieties are stalling full openness. Certain officials and evangelical influencers reportedly view the phenomenon as potentially demonic, raising worries about public panic and biblical end-times interpretations if the truth emerges.
This pushback echoes earlier whistleblower accounts. Former Pentagon UAP program director Luis Elizondo warned in recent interviews that releasing the files would be a “tremendous undertaking” and a “Pandora’s box,” with vast documentation across intelligence, defense, and energy departments far beyond what past studies admitted.
Mainstream outlets like NBC and CNN highlight the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) 2024 report claiming no extraterrestrial proof, but pro-disclosure experts counter that such reviews are narrowly scoped and ignore crash-retrieval programs and non-human biologics alleged by credible insiders like David Grusch.
A major presidential address remains scheduled for July 8, 2026—the 79th Roswell anniversary—though sources say controversial interdimensional or consciousness-related findings may stay classified for now. Critics argue any faith-based filtering of facts risks unconstitutional secrecy and delays real transparency on non-human intelligence (NHI).
With a new insider press conference planned for May 1, pressure mounts for genuine disclosure rather than another limited drip of blurry videos. The standoff highlights a deeper cultural battle over what Americans are ready to learn about our place in the cosmos.
President Donald Trump directed the Pentagon and other agencies on February 20, 2026, to identify and release long-hidden government files on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), extraterrestrial life, and related mysteries, citing “tremendous public interest.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth publicly pledged full compliance, yet multiple insiders report strong internal resistance. Some Pentagon factions fear the evidence points to interdimensional entities rather than simple spacecraft from distant planets.
Filmmaker Mark Christopher Lee, citing a Washington source, revealed that religious anxieties are stalling full openness. Certain officials and evangelical influencers reportedly view the phenomenon as potentially demonic, raising worries about public panic and biblical end-times interpretations if the truth emerges.
This pushback echoes earlier whistleblower accounts. Former Pentagon UAP program director Luis Elizondo warned in recent interviews that releasing the files would be a “tremendous undertaking” and a “Pandora’s box,” with vast documentation across intelligence, defense, and energy departments far beyond what past studies admitted.
Mainstream outlets like NBC and CNN highlight the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) 2024 report claiming no extraterrestrial proof, but pro-disclosure experts counter that such reviews are narrowly scoped and ignore crash-retrieval programs and non-human biologics alleged by credible insiders like David Grusch.
A major presidential address remains scheduled for July 8, 2026—the 79th Roswell anniversary—though sources say controversial interdimensional or consciousness-related findings may stay classified for now. Critics argue any faith-based filtering of facts risks unconstitutional secrecy and delays real transparency on non-human intelligence (NHI).
With a new insider press conference planned for May 1, pressure mounts for genuine disclosure rather than another limited drip of blurry videos. The standoff highlights a deeper cultural battle over what Americans are ready to learn about our place in the cosmos.
Pentagon Rebels Against Trump’s UAP Push Citing Demonic Fears
President Donald Trump directed the Pentagon and other agencies on February 20, 2026, to identify and release long-hidden government files on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), extraterrestrial life, and related mysteries, citing “tremendous public interest.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth publicly pledged full compliance, yet multiple insiders report strong internal resistance. Some Pentagon factions fear the evidence points to interdimensional entities rather than simple spacecraft from distant planets.
Filmmaker Mark Christopher Lee, citing a Washington source, revealed that religious anxieties are stalling full openness. Certain officials and evangelical influencers reportedly view the phenomenon as potentially demonic, raising worries about public panic and biblical end-times interpretations if the truth emerges.
This pushback echoes earlier whistleblower accounts. Former Pentagon UAP program director Luis Elizondo warned in recent interviews that releasing the files would be a “tremendous undertaking” and a “Pandora’s box,” with vast documentation across intelligence, defense, and energy departments far beyond what past studies admitted.
Mainstream outlets like NBC and CNN highlight the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) 2024 report claiming no extraterrestrial proof, but pro-disclosure experts counter that such reviews are narrowly scoped and ignore crash-retrieval programs and non-human biologics alleged by credible insiders like David Grusch.
A major presidential address remains scheduled for July 8, 2026—the 79th Roswell anniversary—though sources say controversial interdimensional or consciousness-related findings may stay classified for now. Critics argue any faith-based filtering of facts risks unconstitutional secrecy and delays real transparency on non-human intelligence (NHI).
With a new insider press conference planned for May 1, pressure mounts for genuine disclosure rather than another limited drip of blurry videos. The standoff highlights a deeper cultural battle over what Americans are ready to learn about our place in the cosmos.
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