THE COMPLEX: The Pentagon Just Published the 1949 Green Fireball Files. Our 2026 Coverage Says They Are Returning.
Six declassified documents. Every one from a nuclear weapons facility. Released during a 2026 green fireball cluster.
SUBJECT: PURSUE / RELEASE 02 / WAR.GOV/UFO // SIX DOCUMENTS, ONE INSTITUTIONAL PATTERN // 1948-2025 NUCLEAR WEAPONS COMPLEX CONTINUITY
DATE: MAY 26, 2026
CROSS-REF: THE MIRROR | THE WINDOW | THE ROSTER | THE SKY IS FALLING | THE SILENT EDIT | THE SUPPRESSION GRADIENT | THE OPERATOR
DATA CONFIDENCE: VERIFIED (WAR.GOV/UFO PRIMARY SOURCE; 116-PAGE SANDIA DOCUMENT, MAY 22, 2026; CROSS-REFERENCED AGAINST PROJECT1947.COM CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT; NICAP NEW MEXICO SIGHTINGS CATALOG; ROBERT HASTINGS UFOS AND NUKES) + ANALYSIS (SENTINEL CROSS-REFERENCE)
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THE RELEASE
On May 22, 2026, the Department of War published the second tranche of declassified UAP records at war.gov/UFO. We mirrored the entire archive within hours and announced it the same morning in THE MIRROR.
Fifty-eight videos. Six PDF documents. Seven NASA astronaut mission audio recordings. The mainstream coverage led with the Lake Huron F-16 shootdown and the late-2025 intelligence officer narrative about orange orbs chasing fighter jets.
The videos got the press. The six PDFs did not. They should have.
Every single one came from a nuclear weapons complex facility.
THE PATTERN
The six documents in Release 02 cover seventy-seven years. They span the founding of the nuclear weapons program through a present-day Intelligence Community officer’s account. They include both US and Soviet facilities.
The complete inventory:
CIA-UAP-D001 (1973): A Central Intelligence Agency HUMINT report on the Sary Shagan Weapons Testing Range, the USSR’s anti-ballistic missile testing range and analogue to White Sands. Source observed a bright green concentric circular object at Site 7 in late summer 1973. Bundled with intelligence on System-75 and System-300 Aldan ABM warheads. Stamped “Approved for Release 2026.”
DOE-UAP-D001 (PANTEX, undated): Two photo pages from a six-page “Pantex Unidentified Object Incident Report.” PANTEX is the US nuclear weapons assembly facility in Amarillo, Texas. Pages 5 and 6 contain a ground surveillance radar tower image and Sandia National Labs enhanced photos of the object. Pages 1 through 4, which contain the textual incident description, were withheld under b(3) statutory exemption for UCNI (Unclassified Controlled Nuclear Information).
DOE-UAP-D002 (James Tuck, late 1970s): Correspondence from James L. Tuck, Manhattan Project veteran of the British delegation to Los Alamos, founder of LANL’s Project Sherwood (the controlled fusion research program), to the US Army Engineering School at Fort Belvoir. Tuck requested “the recipe that was used for the simulated atomic bomb demonstrations” because he was investigating the “large atmospheric vortices which are produced as reported in the book ‘Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects’ by Dr. Edward U. Condon.”
DOE-UAP-D003 (Pajarito Astronomers, May 20, 1986): A newsletter from the Pajarito Astronomers, the amateur astronomy club at Los Alamos National Laboratory. The May 29, 1986 meeting was held at the Ranch Room at Fuller Lodge in the Los Alamos townsite. The guest speaker was Dr. John Warren of LANL’s AT-6 (Accelerator Technology Division-6), presenting on “Why Should a Scientist be Concerned about UFO’s?” The Pentagon’s own description of the document, in the Release 02 manifest, states that “the referenced event was not officially hosted by Los Alamos. The laboratory has no record of the subject matter discussed at the meeting.” The newsletter itself is on Pajarito Astronomers letterhead listing LANL mail stop codes for its officers.
DOW-UAP-D017 (Sandia, 1948-1950): A 116-page institutional compilation. The largest document in the release. Its filename references NARA Project Blue Book archive page 374, the start of the conference records range. The Pentagon’s own description says the file contains 209 sightings of “green orbs,” “discs,” and “fireballs” reported near the military base, along with the results of contemporary investigations into residual copper powder found in some areas where sightings occurred. It contains the foundational Office of Special Investigations 17th District record of UAP activity in the New Mexico nuclear weapons region from 1948 through 1950, including the complete trip report from a February 1949 meeting at Los Alamos. We will come back to this one.
ODNI-UAP-D001 (USPER, late 2025): A first-person narrative by an unnamed senior US Intelligence Community officer. Authored fresh in Microsoft Word on May 21, 2026. The day before public release. The only document in the set where the underlying record is itself May 21 content rather than a scanned historical record.
The geographic spine: Sandia. Pantex. Los Alamos. The Soviet weapons testing range at Sary Shagan. A modern Intelligence Community officer reporting from a mountain test range that is most plausibly White Sands Missile Range.
This is not a release. This is a curriculum.
THE MEETING
The largest of the six documents contains material that has been visible, in pieces, in the public record for almost thirty years. The conference transcript itself has been on project1947.com since the late 1990s. Wikipedia’s green fireballs entry cites it directly. Robert Hastings, born at Sandia Base in 1950, has been working the FBI and Air Force files on this period for forty years.
What is new is the Pentagon’s institutional stamp on a single packaged 116-page version. And the institutional stamp matters, because the conference attendee list reads like a roll call of the people who built the bomb.
The meeting was held at 1300 hours on 16 February 1949 in Conference Room P-162 at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory.
For Los Alamos: Norris Bradbury, Director of Los Alamos National Laboratory. Marshall Holloway. John Manley, LANL Associate Director. Edward Teller, father of the hydrogen bomb. Frederick Reines, who would later share the 1995 Nobel Prize in Physics for the experimental detection of the neutrino. Mr. Hoyt.
For the Atomic Energy Commission, Santa Fe Operations Office: Elmo Morgan and Sidney Newburger. Newburger opened the conference.
For the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project: Commander Richard Mandelkorn, who wrote the trip report.
For the FBI: Mr. Maxwell.
For the Fourth Army: Major William A. Godsoe and Major Winn.
For the USAF: Captain Neef.
For the University of New Mexico: Dr. Lincoln La Paz, the Director of the Institute of Meteoritics.
La Paz characterized the green fireballs by their distinguishing properties. Yellow-green color at approximately 6,200 angstroms. Essentially horizontal path. Constant angular velocity. Approximately two-second duration. No sound. Random path inconsistent with normal meteorite fall. The thirty-plus incidents recorded between December 1948 and February 1949 were “confined to the Los Alamos, Las Vegas, and West Texas triangle.”
Teller took over the discussion. A material object travelling at approximately eight miles per second at eight to ten miles altitude would have a mass on the order of twenty grams, the weight of a wristwatch. The shock wave from an object of that size at that velocity would produce an audible sonic boom out to ten kilometers. No sound has been observed. Therefore, Teller concluded, “they are not material objects passing through the air. We should look to electronics and optics for an explanation rather than in the field of hydrodynamics.”
Bradbury demurred. Said the electronic explanation raised more problems than it solved.
The official conclusion of the meeting, as written by Mandelkorn and stamped onto the Sandia Base institutional record, was not “natural meteors.” That framing came seven years later, in Edward Ruppelt’s 1956 memoir on Project Blue Book, and has dominated the public history ever since. Wikipedia notes it is wrong. Project1947 has hosted the conference transcript online for nearly thirty years. The meeting was held under Project “Grudge”, the predecessor to Project Blue Book.
In THE ROSTER we documented twelve layers of institutional response that anomalous-object investigations consistently trigger. Layer 11 is counterintelligence narrative management: an authoritative voice quietly replaces the original finding with a more palatable one, and the replacement narrative then propagates through every downstream reference for decades. Ruppelt’s “natural meteors” framing did exactly that to the 1949 record. The Pentagon’s Release 02, by republishing the original Mandelkorn trip report, makes the Layer 11 maneuver visible for the first time in the institutional record.
The actual Mandelkorn conclusion: “It is my belief that these phenomena, particularly if there are any further incidents, are deserving of serious consideration until their source and meaning have been satisfactorily explained. Although Mr. Teller’s discussion tends to disprove the hypothesis that guided missiles or informer vehicles are responsible, there is cause for concern of the continued occurrence of unexplainable phenomena of this nature in the vicinity of sensitive installations.”
A footnote: a blue fireball was visible from Sandia at 0530 on 17 February 1949. A yellow-orange cigar-shaped light at 1759, visible until 1806 on 17 February 1949. The morning AND evening AFTER the meeting concluded. A seven-minute observation. The phenomena did not pause for the meeting to end.
THE SENTINEL ASSESSMENT: The meeting transcript has been public for nearly thirty years. The institutional record around it has been visible to FOIA researchers for longer. What is new is the Pentagon putting its publication stamp on the full Mandelkorn trip report and pairing it with five other documents that establish the same pattern reaching to the present. The act of curation IS the editorial signal. Edward Teller, father of the hydrogen bomb, concluded in February 1949 that the green fireballs over the US nuclear weapons complex were not material objects. The Pentagon has just officially published that conclusion. It took seventy-seven years.
THE CONTINUITY
The thirty-year-old transcript was the easy part. The other five documents are the spine.
1973. Sary Shagan, USSR. Soviet anti-ballistic missile testing range. A defector reports a bright green concentric circular phenomenon at Site 7 in late summer 1973. The CIA stamps it CONFIDENTIAL and packages it with technical intelligence on Soviet ABM warhead specifications and rumored laser weapons research. The pattern is bilateral.
Late 1970s. Los Alamos. James Tuck, who designed the explosive lens that triggered the Fat Man plutonium implosion bomb, is in retirement at Los Alamos investigating ball lightning. He writes to the US Army Engineering School at Fort Belvoir asking for the “recipe” used to produce simulated atomic explosions, because the Condon Report had discussed atmospheric vortices as a candidate explanation for UFO observations and he wants to test the hypothesis experimentally. A second letter in the same bundle, dated November 28, discusses the McCampbell UFOLOGY book (1976) and writes that Einstein’s later-career work on unified field theory “was on scent like a bloodhound.” Tuck died in December 1980.
1986. Los Alamos. The Pajarito Astronomers, the LANL amateur astronomy club, holds its May meeting at the Ranch Room at Fuller Lodge. Dr. John Warren, of the lab’s Accelerator Technology Division, presents on why scientists should be concerned about UFOs. The newsletter that announces it carries the LANL mail stop codes that confirm the location is the lab townsite. Robert Oppenheimer himself, in correspondence with Eleanor Roosevelt held at the Library of Congress, described “a tense morning at Los Alamos, atop New Mexico’s remote Pajarito Plateau, when scientists busily creating the world’s first atomic bombs poured out of their laboratories to gaze at a ‘bright object in the sky.’” The Pajarito Plateau is the geographic feature on which Los Alamos sits. The astronomy club’s name carries that continuity.
Modern era. PANTEX. A radar tower image and Sandia-enhanced photos of an unidentified object at the US nuclear weapons assembly facility. The actual narrative is suppressed. The imagery is not.
Late 2025. A mountain test range. A senior US Intelligence Community officer flies a helicopter mission to investigate “loud thuds heard in the mountains” coinciding with UAP sightings over previous nights. They find a cave entrance “with no visible end in sight.” They observe a “super-hot” object on FLIR that “rose from the ground, approached within ten feet of the helicopter, dropped below us, and then sped away.” They hover at 700 feet AGL and witness “countless orange orbs swarming in all directions.” Then a T-formation of four or five orbs above the rotor disk. Then fighter jets entering visual range at 23,000 feet AGL, with the same type of orbs appearing directly above them, “matching the jets’ speed and flight path.” The crew lands “virtually speechless.”
The most plausible geography for that incident, given the combination of weapons testing range, mountains, helicopter operations, and proximity to the documented nuclear weapons facility cluster, is White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. The Tularosa Basin. The same geography the Mandelkorn report named seventy-six years earlier.
Robert Hastings has documented hundreds of post-1960s incidents at US nuclear weapons facilities from FBI, CIA, and AFOSI files. He has been doing it for forty years. He was born at Sandia Base in May 1950, sixteen months after the Mandelkorn meeting. His thesis, that there is a documentable pattern of UAP activity at nuclear weapons sites going back to the dawn of the nuclear age, has stood entirely on outside-the-gates archival research and veteran interviews.
The Pentagon’s Release 02 is the institutional version of that thesis. Same evidence base. Different publisher of record.
THE RETURN
In THE SKY IS FALLING we documented an anomalous Q1 2026 fireball cluster. The size distribution shift, the sonic boom rate, the high-declination enhancement, the Anthelion source clustering, the residential structure impacts. Eleven fireball events in twenty days across four continents.
When we published, NASA’s “fireball season” framing was inadequate to explain what the American Meteor Society was documenting. The AMS published its own formal statistical analysis on March 25, 2026, rejecting the seasonal explanation. NASA published “It’s Fireball Season“ the next day.
The signal was strongest in a specific event class: green fireballs.
March 19, 2026. A vivid green fireball visible from San Diego to Willits to Carson City, Nevada. 306 reports to the AMS. A second event the same day over California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington drew 122 reports. Two additional fireballs over Germany the same day.
March 23, 2026. A bright green fireball over Oregon and Northern California, captured on dashcam at 6 a.m.
Same window. A bright green meteor over Sydney, Australia. The fourth continent.
March 17, 2026. The Red Oak, Texas event. The “fireball” zigzagged, changed direction, gained altitude. The AMS and NASA refused to classify it as a meteor. It is not in the AMS verified events catalog.
The 1949 La Paz characterization of green fireballs was: yellow-green color, horizontal path, constant velocity, no sound, random path. The 2026 cluster does not all match that profile. The Houston and Lake Erie events were big bolides with sonic booms, the opposite of the 1949 La Paz “no sound” signature. But some events do match. Red Oak especially. And the green fireball events specifically, by color alone, sit in the same category La Paz was trying to define seventy-seven years ago.
In THE SILENT EDIT we documented that NASA’s CNEOS database, the only global fireball dataset, populated by classified military sensors, was silently edited within 24 hours of Avi Loeb’s interstellar meteor analysis. A single velocity vector sign was flipped. The edit mathematically grounded an interstellar candidate back to a solar system origin. There was no announcement. Loeb caught it through the Wayback Machine.
If the 2026 fireball cluster includes non-meteoric phenomena analogous to 1949, the database needed to verify that has been compromised.
THE TRIANGLE
The Mandelkorn report named the geography. “Los Alamos, Las Vegas, and West Texas triangle.”
Los Alamos is the bomb design lab. The Las Vegas point of the triangle is the geography around what would soon become the Nevada Test Site, the location of every continental US nuclear weapons test from 1951 to 1992. West Texas is PANTEX, where every US nuclear weapon is assembled.
The March 19, 2026 green fireball was visible east to Carson City, Nevada. It overflew the Sierra Nevada, the Great Basin, and the high desert that, two hundred miles south, contains the Nevada Test Site, the Nevada Test and Training Range (the former Nellis Air Force Range), and the Tonopah Test Range operated by Sandia National Laboratories.
The geographic overlap is not perfect. The 1949 events were tightly concentrated in New Mexico and the surrounding region. The 2026 green fireballs are more dispersed: California, Nevada, Oregon, Germany, Australia. But the closest the 2026 cluster has come to the historical 1949 zone is Nevada specifically. And the USPER late-2025 narrative anchors the present-day end of the continuity directly in the New Mexico nuclear weapons complex geography.
The triangle did not vanish. It expanded.
THE PRESENT
The USPER document is the load-bearing piece. It is the only document in Release 02 authored fresh in Microsoft Word for the release itself. It places a senior US Intelligence Community officer’s first-person testimony on the same institutional footing as the 1949 Mandelkorn trip report. It does so by framing the officer as a USPER, US PERson, the technical Intelligence Community legal category that affords constitutional protection in IC collection. The author has the same legal status as a witness in a federal courtroom.
The narrative does not contain green fireballs. It contains orange orbs.
But the color regime is the same family La Paz tried to define in 1949: yellow, orange, green. The behavior pattern is what the 1949 record could not explain. The geography is the same nuclear weapons complex. The institutional packaging is the same kind of trip report.
Across seventy-seven years, the only thing that has changed is who is willing to put it on the record.
THE SENTINEL ASSESSMENT: The Pentagon did not release secret history. It released its own version of a thesis that outside researchers have been documenting from FOIA fragments for four decades. What is new is the institutional act and the curriculum it constructs: from the 1949 Los Alamos meeting where the founders of the US nuclear weapons program concluded green fireballs were not material objects, to a present-tense intelligence officer’s account of orange orbs swarming above a mountain test range. Seventy-seven years of continuity, in one release, during a year when the American Meteor Society has formally documented an anomalous fireball cluster including green fireballs. The pattern Edward Teller could not explain in 1949 is, by every available metric, recurring in 2026. This time, it is on the official record.
THE ROSTER built the twelve-layer suppression gradient as an instrument: a framework that can be pointed retroactively at any anomalous-object investigation to score the institutional response. The 1948-2025 green fireball case fits the framework cleanly. Intelligence classification under Project Grudge. Force deployment from four military commands at a single meeting. Counterintelligence narrative management via Ruppelt’s 1956 memoir. Database manipulation via the 2026 CNEOS edit. Publication blackout across the 77-year gap between the Mandelkorn trip report and its institutional re-release. Disclosure ecosystem silence broken only by Robert Hastings working alone from outside the gates. The methodology exists to be tested. We are testing it.
The pattern was never gone.
Teller saw it. Hastings counted it. The Pentagon just confirmed it.
Keep looking up.
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Previous briefings: THE MIRROR | THE WINDOW | THE ROSTER | THE SKY IS FALLING | THE SILENT EDIT | THE OPERATOR | THE FLOOR | THE VERDICT | THE NARROW BAND | THE ATTRITION (Series)












Kudos!!I love starting the morning with your insight and analysis of these drops. It's amazing what info has really been given to us if you take the time with it and explain it through a lens like yours.