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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 08:43 UTC
  • UTC08:43
  • EDT04:43
  • GMT09:43
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← The MonexusOpinion

Pentagon Releases Second UFO File Tranche as Air Force Confirms F-16 Shootdown

The U.S. Air Force confirmed on 22 May 2026 that an F-16C intercepted and destroyed an unidentified aerial object — the same day the Pentagon released a second tranche of previously classified UFO files to the public.

@alalamfa · Telegram

A U.S. Air Force F-16C shot down an unidentified aerial object on 22 May 2026, military officials confirmed — hours after the Pentagon released a second tranche of historically sensitive UFO files to the public domain. The coincidence of a live intercept and a transparency push has refocused scrutiny on how the U.S. government handles reports of objects that do not conform to known flight envelopes.

The engagement took place over American-adjacent airspace on the afternoon of 22 May. The F-16C — a twin-seat, multirole variant configured for air-to-air work — was cleared to engage after sensor operators assessed the object as non-cooperative. The shootdown itself was captured on multiple formats and circulated widely before official confirmation arrived. A second Pentagon filing, published simultaneously under the same transparency directive, detailed historical encounters spanning the 1970s through the early 2000s — material that had previously circulated in fragmentary form through FOIA litigation and enthusiast networks.

What the files contain and what they still withhold

The second release covers encounters reported by naval aviators, Air Force fighter pilots, and ground-based radar operators. Several incidents involve multiple sensor modalities — radar return, infrared pod footage, and pilot visual sighting — converging on the same object. The documents include operator narratives in which the flight characteristics are described as inconsistent with any aircraft type in the U.S. inventory or in adversary hands as assessed at the time. Objects that reversed course without visible propulsion signature, that outpaced standard interceptors at altitude, and that appeared simultaneously to multiple platforms across hundreds of square miles of airspace receive particular attention in the file headers.

The 22 May shootdown adds a live chapter to a paper trail that, until now, existed primarily as retrospective documentation. The Air Force's readiness to confirm the engagement — rather than issue a flat non-comment — marks a shift from the posture that prevailed through most of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, when UFO reports were routinely dismissed or buried. The object destroyed on 22 May is not yet identified to public specification. Whether it replicates any entry in the historical file is an open question the Pentagon has not resolved publicly.

A pattern of recent shootdowns, not a one-off

The 22 May incident is not isolated. Over the past eighteen months, U.S. military aircraft have intercepted and, on several confirmed occasions, destroyed objects operating in restricted airspace near military installations, over ocean approaches, and inside domestic flight corridors. Each engagement has prompted questions about the sensor threshold for authorisation — at what point does ambiguous data justify the use of force against an object whose origin is unknown. The rules of engagement have evolved under pressure from operational commanders who argue that uncertainty is not the same as benign intent.

The broader context matters here. The military's concern is not principally the extraterrestrial hypothesis — a framing the Pentagon has consistently sought to avoid — but the more tractable problem of Unexplained Aerial Phenomena that may represent adversary capability gaps, sensor anomalies, or previously unclassified natural phenomena. The classified version of these files is understood to contain a significantly larger volume of material; the public tranche represents what lawyers and oversight officials have determined can be released without compromising sources and methods.

What remains unclear

Several questions are not answered by the files or the official confirmation of the 22 May shootdown. The object's origin — state actor, commercial entity, or otherwise — is not specified in the available documentation. The altitude, speed, and radar cross-section recorded by the intercepting F-16's sensors have not been released publicly. Whether the object matched any entry in the historical file, which would have allowed immediate classification, is unclear from the sources reviewed. The Pentagon's public affairs office confirmed the engagement occurred and referred further technical detail to the relevant combatant command; as of publication, no detailed incident report has been published.

The release schedule — a second tranche arriving on the same day as a confirmed shootdown — raises the question of whether the timing is coincidental or engineered. Transparency advocates have argued for years that UFO disclosures are managed for political rather than national security effect. The sources do not confirm either interpretation.

The stakes of continued opacity

The institutional logic for withholding UFO-adjacent material has weakened as the operational risk of unidentified objects has grown. Pilots who report encounters still face informal career stigma; sensor data that might resolve an incident is routinely classified not because it reveals a capability but because it was collected by a sensitive system. The gap between what the public file shows and what the classified record contains remains substantial — and the 22 May shootdown, by all available evidence, narrowed it by only a few hours of news cycle.

If the Pentagon's transparency push is genuine rather than reactive, the next tranche — and the incident report from the 22 May engagement — will test that claim. So far, the official record confirms an intercept. It does not yet confirm what was intercepted, by whom, and why it warranted the use of an Air Force fighter. Those answers, if they arrive, will define whether this episode marks a genuine shift in how the U.S. government accounts for objects that do not fit existing categories — or simply another file dump that raises more questions than it closes.

This publication compared its own framing of the shootdown against wire reports and found a material difference: most outlets treated the file release and the intercept as separate events; the evidence suggests both were in public circulation on the same afternoon, raising questions about whether the transparency schedule was accelerated by the operational need to pre-empt leaked footage.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://twitter.com/disclosetv/status/2057809315478
  • https://t.me/disclosetv/18438
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire