According to the UK’s Daily Mail, U.S. President Donald Trump is reportedly preparing a historic speech that could involve the global truth about UFOs. British author, director, producer, and UFO researcher Mark Christopher Lee said that a “Trump administration adviser” told him Trump has “received authorization from other major world leaders” and has the authority to formally release the information to the public.
Lee said the speech would reveal decades of collected evidence, including recovered materials, forensic analysis results, and military eyewitness reports, showing that some UFO incidents cannot be explained by known human technology. The address would reportedly cover several high-profile cases, including the 2004 USS Nimitz “Tic Tac” incident, the 2015 USS Roosevelt “GoFast” and “Gimbal” encounters, and the 1947 Roswell crash.

Disclosure may include alien materials and non-human biological evidence
Lee told the Daily Mail that Trump may confirm during the speech that forensic analysis of recovered “non-Earth-origin craft” and “non-human biological materials” indicates an extraterrestrial origin. He said this would mark the first time a world leader has formally acknowledged evidence of extraterrestrial existence.
The speech was originally planned for release at the United Nations General Assembly in September, but Lee said that due to “new intelligence developments,” the date has been moved up to July 8—the 79th anniversary of the Roswell incident.
According to Lee, insiders within the Trump administration emphasized that previous governments maintained secrecy primarily due to national security concerns, technological uncertainty, and potential public reaction. Trump, he said, would become the first president to authorize full disclosure “because the American people have a right to transparency, the current geopolitical environment allows it, and Congress—on a bipartisan basis—has created a legal framework for responsible disclosure.”

Military witness testimony continues to draw attention
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In the USS Nimitz incident, former U.S. Navy fighter pilot David Fravor testified under oath to Congress that during a 2004 training flight, he encountered a white, windowless, wingless object about 40 feet long, shaped like a “Tic Tac.” Fravor said the object could change direction instantaneously at extremely high speeds and travel dozens of miles within seconds—performance beyond conventional technological explanations.
In 2015, pilots and radar operators from the USS Roosevelt recorded the “GoFast” and “Gimbal” incidents, which were captured by advanced infrared cameras. Former Navy pilot Ryan Graves testified that the unidentified objects posed potential risks to flight safety and national security. However, Jon Kosloski, director of the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), told Congress in a 2024 hearing that the footage may have resulted from “parallax effects,” creating visual illusions, and did not confirm extraterrestrial technology.

The Roswell incident and recent whistleblower claims
The Roswell incident has been the most famous UFO case since 1947. At the time, the U.S. military initially reported the recovery of a “flying disc” but later said it was a weather balloon. Witnesses have continued to describe unusual materials and structures, making the incident a cornerstone of modern extraterrestrial lore.
Former Air Force intelligence officer and congressional UAP task force adviser David Grusch has claimed that the U.S. government recovered crashed craft and “non-human remains.” He said Trump was briefed during his first term and may be aware of the existence of multiple extraterrestrial species and their interactions with humanity. Grusch stated that if the disclosures are accurate, Trump would become “one of the most important leaders in history” by publicly revealing U.S. knowledge of extraterrestrial life.
So far, the White House, the U.S. military, and NASA have released no public evidence confirming contact with extraterrestrial life or the recovery of alien technology. Media outlets widely note that the lack of verifiable physical evidence remains the central point of contention. Both The Washington Post and Politico report that while Congress and the military continue to push for greater transparency, the public still cannot independently verify these claims.