President Donald Trump said his administration’s review of UFO-related records has uncovered a number of “interesting” documents, but as of April 18, 2026, no documents had yet been publicly released. Reuters reported that Trump made the remark at a rally in Phoenix on April 17 and said the first batch of files would be released “very, very soon.”
The immediate headline is more of a tease than a disclosure. Trump is signaling that the internal review has turned up material he considers notable, but the public still has not seen the documents themselves, so there is no independent way yet to judge how significant they really are. That gap between promise and proof is the most important thing in the story right now.
This did not come out of nowhere. In February, Trump directed the Pentagon and other agencies to begin identifying and releasing files related to UFOs, UAPs and what he called “alien and extraterrestrial life.” Since then, reporting has shown the review moving forward, but without an actual public release of records so far.
That makes the politics of the moment part of the story too. The remarks came during a rally-style appearance in Phoenix, where Trump moved across a range of crowd-pleasing themes, and UFO transparency was one of them. So this is not just a records story; it is also a public-performance story, with Trump positioning himself as the figure who might finally open files that governments have kept opaque for decades.
There is also a reason the issue keeps resurfacing. Public fascination with UFOs has been fed for years by official military footage, congressional hearings, Pentagon reviews and a long-running belief that governments know more than they admit. Axios noted in February that Trump’s order reignited one of America’s oldest modern mysteries, even though it was still unclear whether any genuine surprise would emerge from the records.
So the article, for now, rests on a simple but important distinction: Trump says the review found “interesting” documents, and he says releases are coming soon. What we do not have yet are the documents themselves. Until they are actually published, the story is about anticipation, claims and political messaging more than confirmed revelation.
