Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 22
Pentagon Releases Apollo 12 1969 Audio on 'Streaks of Light' in 2nd UAP File Batch
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 22

Pentagon Releases Apollo 12 1969 Audio on 'Streaks of Light' in 2nd UAP File Batch

11 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 22
  • Apollo 12 debrief audio from Dec. 31, 1969, was newly declassified, capturing astronauts describing flashes and "streaks of light" seen while trying to sleep in deep space.
  • The crew said the streaks appeared in roughly the same position—about 30 degrees to horizontal—and discussed whether they were random, directional, or linked to one eye, with cosmic rays or heavy particles raised as a possible cause.
  • The recording was part of the Pentagon's second PURSUE release, a rolling disclosure program ordered by President Trump to publish unresolved UAP records; the first tranche came out on May 8.
  • The latest batch also included Cold War files on green fireballs near military and nuclear sites, Pantex imagery of an unidentified object, and an intelligence officer's account of orange orbs, underscoring that the archive covers cases still without definitive explanations.
Amid claims of recovered alien craft, why is the Pentagon's evidence limited to inconclusive videos and old files?
If not aliens, what foreign power possesses the 'warp-speed' technology shown in the Pentagon’s own UAP videos?
With experts decrying the lack of context, are these data dumps true transparency or a tactic to fuel public confusion?