Bottom Line

The U. S. Navy has officially released three previously unreleased video clips—'FLIR,' 'GOFAST,' and 'GIMBAL'—showing unidentified aircraft encountered during military training exercises in 2004 and 2015, confirming that its pilots observed unexplained aerial phenomena.

Article Summary

The U. S. Navy has released three video clips documenting midair military interactions with unidentified aircraft. These videos were declassified and made available through the Naval Air Systems Command website via the Freedom of Information Act.

The footage, which was captured by F/A-18 Hornet fighter pilots during training exercises in restricted airspace, shows mysterious objects traveling at.

Key Points

  • U. S. Navy videos of alleged UFO sightings were previously available but had not been officially declassified.
  • Live Science is the attributed publisher or source for the linked item.
  • The item currently sits under Government Release with a Mainstream News source label.

Why It Matters

The value for readers is not certainty; it is a clear snapshot of what Live Science is reporting and how that report fits the surrounding UAP discussion.

UAP Radar Analysis

Confirmed

Live Science is the attributed source for the article, and the available metadata supports the basic topic summarized here.

Not Confirmed

The available metadata does not independently establish broader interpretations, explanations, or extraordinary conclusions beyond the attributed source item.

Main Takeaway

UAP Radar adds value by keeping the item tied to Live Science, separating the reported claim from stronger official or corroborated records.

What Needs More Review

A stronger briefing would benefit from direct records, fuller source text, named supporting documents, or follow-up reporting that clarifies the central claim.

Related Topics

NASA / ScienceDeclassified FilesMilitary Sightings

Reader Note

Open the original Live Science link for the complete report and any updates from the publisher.

This item is labeled Mainstream News because it points to public media reporting. UAP Radar separates reporting from official records, research, witness reports, and speculation.