DISCLOSURE WATCH

About Disclosure Watch

Disclosure Watch is an independent project that aggregates and summarizes publicly available U.S. government information about Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs). Our goal is simple: make it easy for anyone to follow what the government is actually releasing, without having to dig through dense PDFs, navigate multiple agency websites, or parse legislative text.

Where the data comes from

Everything on this site comes from public, official sources. Our document feed is refreshed automatically from government APIs every six hours.

Government sources (automated)

  • National Archives — Record Group 615 — The official UAP Records Collection where federal agencies transfer declassified materials. We pull new records via the National Archives Catalog API.
  • Congress.gov API — We monitor for UAP-related bills, amendments, hearing schedules, and committee actions across both chambers.
  • AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) — The Pentagon's official UAP investigation office. We track their case resolutions, imagery releases, annual reports, and congressional testimony.

Government sources (curated)

News and media

  • NewsNation — Ongoing video and investigative coverage of UAP developments.
  • The Debrief — In-depth investigative reporting on UAP science and government transparency.
  • DefenseScoop — Pentagon and defense community reporting on AARO and military encounters.
  • Liberation Times — Independent journalism on UAP transparency and government accountability.

Related resources

  • The Black Vault — Comprehensive independent archive of declassified UAP/UFO documents
  • Enigma Labs — A sighting database and research platform
  • NUFORC — The National UFO Reporting Center
  • MUFON — Mutual UFO Network

How we rate importance

Every document and milestone on Disclosure Watch is scored as High, Medium, or Low importance. These ratings are based on a weighted assessment of several factors: the directness of the source (firsthand testimony scores higher than secondhand reporting), legislative impact (signed legislation scores higher than introduced bills), historical significance (first-of-its-kind events score higher than follow-ups), the breadth of media and Congressional attention received, and recency. Ratings are reviewed periodically as new context emerges. They reflect editorial judgment informed by these criteria — not official government classifications.

What this is not

This is not a sighting tracker, a forum for personal experiences, or a conspiracy site. We don't speculate — we summarize what the government has officially released and let you draw your own conclusions.

Want to contribute?

Know about a document, hearing, or event we haven't covered? Submit a tip and we'll review it. This is a community project and contributions are welcome.