Friday, February 20, 2026

Why We Probably Won’t Get Full Disclosure — Even If Trump Talked About It

 
Why We Probably Won’t Get Full Disclosure — Even If Trump Talked About It

By Steve Douglass 

A former president hints aliens are real, and a classified file gets mentioned. A former intelligence official goes on television, and now Donald Trump has promised to declassify all things UAP and suddenly the internet lights up with the same question: Is this it? Is disclosure finally happening?

Donald Trump said more things today, and made promises about transparency.  He didn’t exactly confirm anything — but he didn’t completely dismiss it either. For believers, that was enough to spark hope that a sitting president might finally pull back the curtain.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: even if a president wanted to disclose alien contact, the odds are incredibly slim that we’d see a dramatic, world-shifting announcement.

First, the presidency isn’t a master key to every secret vault in Washington. That may sound surprising, but modern governments are built on layers of compartmentalization. Information tied to advanced aerospace research, classified intelligence programs, or experimental defense systems doesn’t just sit in a neat folder waiting for a curious commander-in-chief. It’s buried in bureaucratic structures designed specifically to limit access. Presidents are powerful, yes — but they operate inside a machine that predates them and outlasts them.

Even if something extraordinary existed, what would “disclosure” actually mean?

Over the past few years, the U.S. government has acknowledged unidentified aerial phenomena. That alone was historic. But “unidentified” doesn’t equal “extraterrestrial.” It means exactly what it says: something was observed that hasn’t been explained. That gap between unexplained and alien is massive. It’s not a small step — it’s a canyon.

There’s also the issue no one likes to talk about: national security. If the government encounters technology it doesn’t understand — whether foreign, experimental, or truly unknown — its first instinct isn’t philosophical curiosity. It’s a defense assessment. Could adversaries replicate it? 

Let's not forget about politics.

Imagine any president walking to a podium and announcing confirmed extraterrestrial contact. The shockwaves wouldn’t just be cultural — they’d be economic, geopolitical, and religious. Markets would swing wildly. Allies would demand briefings. Rivals would question motives. Religious institutions would scramble for theological clarity. Even if humanity handled it better than expected, leaders would still have to consider the risk of being wrong or overpromising based on incomplete data.

That’s not a small gamble.

There’s also a deeper, quieter reality at play. Governments are not single personalities. They are ecosystems. Administrations change, but defense agencies, intelligence officials, and classified oversight structures continue. If there were something monumental being concealed for decades, it wouldn’t hinge on one presidency. It would be embedded in a culture of secrecy that spans generations.

Culturally, we may be imagining disclosure all wrong.

We picture it as a cinematic moment: an Oval Office address, a stunned press corps, a global pause. But historically, paradigm shifts don’t arrive with drumrolls. They creep in. Scientific consensus forms slowly. Data gets verified, then re-verified. Language shifts subtly before the public fully registers what changed.

If extraterrestrial life were confirmed tomorrow, odds are it wouldn’t arrive as a thunderclap. It would look like a gradual normalization of strange data, increasing transparency about unknown phenomena, and cautious scientific framing long before anyone uses the word “alien.”

The fascination isn’t going away. If anything, it’s growing. Advances in space exploration, private aerospace ventures, and new sensor technologies are expanding what we can observe. Curiosity is natural. Wonder is human.

But dramatic disclosure? The kind people imagine — one president revealing the ultimate secret?

That may be the most overlooked part of the entire disclosure conversation.

People tend to imagine a scenario where “those who know” form a tight inner circle — a handful of officials sitting around a polished table, fully aware of the whole extraterrestrial picture, simply choosing silence. It’s a compelling image. It also misunderstands how modern secrecy actually works.

In highly classified environments, information isn’t centralized. It’s fractured on purpose.

Compartmentalization exists to prevent exactly that kind of single-point vulnerability. Programs are divided into pieces. Access is granted strictly on a need-to-know basis. Engineers might understand one component of a propulsion anomaly. Intelligence analysts might see raw sensor data. Contractors might handle materials without knowing origin theories. Oversight committees may receive summaries without operational detail. Each person sees a slice, not the entire pie.

In that kind of structure, the idea that there’s one all-knowing gatekeeper becomes less plausible. The system isn’t built around a grand overseer; it’s built around insulation, and here’s where it gets interesting.

If something extraordinary were buried inside a deeply compartmentalized defense program, no single individual today may hold the entire narrative in their head. Institutional memory shifts as personnel retire, administrations change, and classifications evolve. Documents get redacted, renamed, and reorganized. Even within legitimate black projects, the full architecture can become diffuse over decades.

So when people ask, “Why doesn’t someone just come forward?” they assume there’s someone who has the complete, undeniable, panoramic truth. If there’s any serious internal effort happening, it’s probably not a hunt for “how do we tell the public everything?” It’s more likely a careful excavation of what can be released without compromising national security, and that’s a very different mission.

Inside security institutions, the first filter is always risk. Not curiosity. Not public fascination. Risk. What can be confirmed without exposing sensor capabilities? What can be acknowledged without revealing tracking systems, satellite resolution, radar ranges, or response protocols? What language avoids signaling vulnerability to adversaries?

Even something as simple as saying, “We detected this object at this altitude moving at this speed,” could unintentionally reveal how detection systems function. And that’s valuable intelligence — not just for the public, but for rival governments.

So if information is being reviewed for release, the priority wouldn’t be spectacle. It would be insulation.

You’d likely see teams combing through data, asking questions like:
Can we confirm the event happened?
Can we describe it without describing how we saw it?
Can we release imagery without exposing sensor fidelity?
Can we admit uncertainty without signaling weakness?

That kind of vetting process naturally produces documents that feel cautious, clinical, and heavily redacted. It also explains why official reports tend to stop short of dramatic conclusions. The threshold for saying “we don’t know” is already high. The threshold for saying “we know, and it’s non-human” would be astronomically higher.

And there’s another layer here that people often miss.

Even if analysts privately suspect something extraordinary, suspicion isn’t disclosure-ready evidence. Before anything reaches the public, it would have to survive interagency review, legal scrutiny, political impact analysis, and international implications. Every step favors restraint over revelation.

So yes — the dig would be for releasable information, not for explosive truth.

Information that satisfies oversight requirements.
Information that reassures without destabilizing.
Information that maintains a strategic advantage.

That’s a very narrow window, which means what we’re most likely to see going forward isn’t silence — but controlled transparency. Enough to acknowledge mystery. Not enough to disrupt security, and in a system built to protect first and explain second, that balance will almost always tip toward protection.

But what if there isn’t?

What if what exists instead is a mosaic of partial knowledge — scattered across agencies, contractors, and time periods — none of it clean enough, centralized enough, or personally accessible enough for one dramatic act of revelation?

That possibility changes the tone of the conversation entirely.

It shifts the narrative away from a secret cabal guarding a clear answer, and toward something murkier: a bureaucracy so layered and insulated that even insiders may only glimpse fragments. Not a vault with a single key — but a labyrinth with no central map, and if that’s the case, disclosure wouldn’t be blocked by one person’s decision.

It would be blocked by the structure itself.

That’s probably more myth than imminent reality.

What we’re likely to keep seeing isn’t a dramatic unveiling — it’s sanitized, incremental transparency. Lower-level UAP reports. Declassified summaries. Heavily redacted documents where the most interesting lines are blacked out in the name of “sources and methods, and that makes sense when you look at how governments think.

Over the past few years, agencies have acknowledged unidentified aerial phenomena and even created formal review structures to study them. But notice the pattern: the language is careful. The conclusions are restrained. Technical specifics are limited. When documents are released, large sections are obscured. That’s not necessarily proof of aliens — it’s proof of how security culture works.

Disclosure, in the dramatic sense people imagine, runs directly against the DNA of national security institutions.

Security is built on controlling information. On protecting capabilities. On preventing adversaries from learning what you know — or what you don’t know. Even admitting uncertainty can be strategically sensitive. If an object demonstrates unusual maneuverability, the details of how it was tracked could reveal sensor strengths or weaknesses. If data is ambiguous, exposing it could fuel misinformation or exploitation.

From that perspective, full transparency isn’t just unlikely — it’s structurally contradictory.

Governments disclose when disclosure strengthens stability. They withhold when exposure could weaken it, and unidentified phenomena, by definition, sit in that gray zone of uncertainty.

So instead of a sweeping confirmation, what we may continue to see is this slow drip:

Acknowledgment that something was observed.
Careful phrasing that it remains unexplained.
Technical appendices with strategic sections removed.
Committees formed. Reports issued. Interest sustained.

But never the leap from “unidentified” to “extraterrestrial.”

Because once you cross that line, you’re not just sharing information — you’re reshaping global psychology, and institutions designed around risk mitigation don’t move in leaps like that.

If there’s any serious internal effort happening, it’s probably not a hunt for “how do we tell the public everything?” It’s more likely a careful excavation of what can be released without compromising national security, and that’s a very different mission.

Inside security institutions, the first filter is always risk. Not curiosity. Not public fascination. Risk. What can be confirmed without exposing sensor capabilities? What can be acknowledged without revealing tracking systems, satellite resolution, radar ranges, or response protocols? What language avoids signaling vulnerability to adversaries?

Even something as simple as saying, “We detected this object at this altitude moving at this speed,” could unintentionally reveal how detection systems function. And that’s valuable intelligence — not just for the public, but for rival governments.

So if information is being reviewed for release, the priority wouldn’t be spectacle. It would be insulation.

You’d likely see teams combing through data, asking questions like:
Can we confirm the event happened?
Can we describe it without describing how we saw it?
Can we release imagery without exposing sensor fidelity?
Can we admit uncertainty without signaling weakness?

That kind of vetting process naturally produces documents that feel cautious, clinical, and heavily redacted. It also explains why official reports tend to stop short of dramatic conclusions. The threshold for saying “we don’t know” is already high. The threshold for saying “we know, and it’s non-human” would be astronomically higher.

There’s another layer here that people often miss.

Even if analysts privately suspect something extraordinary, suspicion isn’t disclosure-ready evidence. Before anything reaches the public, it would have to survive interagency review, legal scrutiny, political impact analysis, and international implications. Every step favors restraint over revelation.

So yes — the dig would be for releasable information, not for explosive truth.

Information that satisfies oversight requirements.
Information that reassures without destabilizing.
Information that maintains a strategic advantage.

That’s a very narrow window.

Even if all those hurdles fall one-by-one, there are other, more intangible things to consider, the psychological effect of an entire species coming to grips with the fact that we might be sharing this planet with another, unfathomably advanced, non-human intelligence. 

There’s a profound difference between thinking something might be possible… and standing beneath a sky that no longer behaves the way you thought it did.

A close encounter — something clear, near, undeniably strange — doesn’t just become a story you tell. It becomes a dividing line in your life. There is a before, and there is an after.

Before it happens, reality feels structured. Contained. Even mysteries feel manageable because they sit within accepted boundaries. Aircraft behave like aircraft. Stars behave like stars. Physics is stable. The world makes sense.

Afterward, something fundamental shifts.

It’s not necessarily fear. It’s not even necessarily belief in a specific explanation. It’s the collapse of certainty. The realization that your framework for interpreting the sky — the most constant backdrop of human existence — may be incomplete.

That realization is existential.

You feel smaller, but also more aware. The human story no longer feels sealed inside its own bubble. Possibility expands outward in a way that is both awe-inspiring and destabilizing. You begin asking deeper questions — not because you want to, but because you can’t avoid them. What else is possible? What else do we not understand? How much of reality operates beyond our current models?

And yet, outwardly, life continues. You go to work. You pay bills. You have conversations. But internally, something foundational has shifted. The world feels layered in a way it didn’t before.

Now imagine that shift happening everywhere at once.

Not as rumor, not as debate. Not as blurry footage dissected online, but as a global, undeniable event. The entire planet witnessing something that cannot be comfortably explained away.

That wouldn’t just be news.

It would be a psychological turning point for civilization.

Every culture carries assumptions about humanity’s place in the cosmos. Some religious, some scientific, some philosophical. A confirmed close presence — something unmistakably beyond current human capability — wouldn’t simply add information. It would force a rewrite of those assumptions.

Some people would feel wonder on a scale never experienced before. Others would feel vertigo. If our understanding of physics is incomplete, what else is? If we are not the most advanced intelligence in our environment, what does that mean for power, control, and identity?

Markets would react because uncertainty moves markets. Governments would emphasize calm because stability is their mandate. Scientists would move from speculation to urgent investigation. Religious traditions would interpret, adapt, and integrate.

But underneath all of it would be something deeper: a collective loss of certainty.

When one person has a close encounter, their internal architecture shifts. When billions experience that simultaneously, humanity’s shared architecture shifts.

We would adapt — humans always do. But the adjustment wouldn’t be casual. It would be the most existential recalibration in recorded history. Not necessarily chaotic. Not necessarily catastrophic. But foundational.

That’s why disclosure, if it ever comes in undeniable form, would never be “just information.” It would be transformative. For the individual. For societies. For the species.

And once that door opens — whether for one witness or the entire world — it doesn’t fully close again.

Which means what we’re most likely to see going forward isn’t silence — but controlled transparency. Enough to acknowledge mystery. Not enough to disrupt security, and in a system built to protect first and explain second, that balance will almost always tip toward protection.

If anything ever does emerge, it will likely feel less like a blockbuster movie and more like a slow, almost anticlimactic shift in understanding, and by the time it’s undeniable, it may not even feel shocking — just overdue.


But what about "Disclosure Day" 

Imagine Spielberg right now. He’s spent decades meticulously crafting Disclosure Day, building tension, pacing the drama so that the world collectively gasps at the perfect moment. And now reality is staging its own trailer. Every Trump comment about “interesting things in the skies,” every hint of secret files, is like a spoiler alert flashing in neon: “Coming Soon: Aliens… probably.”

Spielberg must be nervously sipping his Diet Coke, thinking, “I worked thirty years for the suspense… and now Trump’s leaking the climax!” The ultimate cinematic twist — humanity discovering we’re not alone — is suddenly playing out in real life. No slow reveal, no dramatic score, just headlines and late-night talk shows riffing on aliens. Even John Williams can’t score that kind of tension.

And you have to imagine the man’s internal monologue: “I asked for awe, suspense, and wonder… not a live-action spoiler alert starring the President of the United States.”

It’s the kind of irony that makes you laugh, because no matter how much you plan for the perfect reveal, sometimes reality shows up early and says, “Hold my classified file.

- Steve Douglass 

Thursday, February 19, 2026

DID TRUMP JUST CONFORM OBAMA'S ALIENS?


DID TRUMP JUST CONFORM OBAMA'S ALIENS? 
By Steve Douglass 

If you were hoping for a dramatic, Independence Day–style presidential announcement, this wasn’t it. What it was, however, felt like a masterclass in Trump-to-press mischief.

It all started when Barack Obama went on a podcast and casually said something along the lines of, “Aliens are real… but I haven’t seen them.” Now, in context, he was clearly riffing on the vastness of the universe — the whole “statistically, we can’t be alone” idea. But on the internet, context has the lifespan of a fruit fly. Within hours, it turned into: “OBAMA CONFIRMS ALIENS.”

Naturally, reporters later asked Donald Trump for his take.

And this is where it got entertaining.

Instead of swatting the question away with a dry, responsible answer like “I have no information on extraterrestrials,” Trump did what he often does best — he escalated. He said Obama made a “big mistake” and suggested he may have revealed classified information.

Did Barack Obama basically “Trump” Donald Trump — and then force him to raise the ante?

Let’s think about it.

Obama goes on a podcast. He’s relaxed. He’s smiling. Someone asks about aliens. Instead of dodging the question like a nervous CIA intern, he casually says, “They’re real… but I haven’t seen them.”

Boom.

No shouting. No caps lock. No dramatic buildup. Just smooth, confident delivery. The internet explodes. Headlines light up. Conspiracy TikTok goes into overtime. For a brief, beautiful moment, Obama is trending for extraterrestrials.

That’s when Trump gets asked about it.

And here’s where it gets interesting.

Trump could have shrugged it off. He could have said, “I don’t know what he’s talking about.” End of story.

But instead? He escalates.

He says Obama made a “big mistake.” He suggests Obama revealed classified information.

Now we’re not just talking about aliens being statistically plausible. Now we’re talking secret files. Government secrets. Potential cosmic cover-ups. The stakes just went from “space curiosity” to “Area 51 panic.”

That’s the ante being raised.

Obama tossed out a smooth, viral line. Trump responded by turning it into a potential national security scandal. It’s almost like a poker game:

Obama: “Aliens are real.”
Trump: “That was classified.”

Check. Raise.

But then — plot twist — Trump says he doesn’t know if aliens are real.

Which makes the whole thing feel like political improv at its finest. He amplified the drama without committing to the premise. Maximum buzz, minimum confirmation.

So did Obama “Trump” Trump? In a way, yes. He dropped a viral, cool-headed line that dominated the news cycle. And Trump, true to form, didn’t just respond — he doubled the energy and raised the stakes.

It wasn’t about extraterrestrials.

It was about headline gravity.

And if aliens are watching this unfold from deep space, they’re probably taking notes on how Earth politics works: when in doubt, escalate the plot. 

You can almost hear the collective inhale from the press cabin. Pens pause mid-scribble. Eyebrows rise. Somewhere, a producer is already drafting the chyron: “CLASSIFIED ALIEN FILES?”

But here’s the punchline: when Trump was asked directly whether he believes aliens are real, he said he doesn’t know.

That’s it. That’s the twist.

He floated the idea that Obama spilled government secrets about extraterrestrials… and then immediately declined to confirm that extraterrestrials exist.

It’s the political equivalent of saying, “I’m not saying there’s a UFO in the hangar… but someone might have left the hangar door open,” and then walking away while everyone else argues about what you meant.

The whole exchange had the vibe of Trump spotting a shiny object labeled “Alien Controversy” and deciding to spin it just to see what would happen. It generated headlines, kept him in the story, nudged Obama, and left just enough ambiguity to keep cable news panels debating whether Earth has diplomatic relations with Mars.

Was it a serious national security revelation? No.
Was it a playful jab wrapped in dramatic language? Almost certainly.

If aliens are observing us from orbit, they probably logged it as: “Earth leaders continue to communicate primarily through vibes and headlines.”

In the end, no UFO disclosure happened. No spacecraft landed on the White House lawn. It was less “We are not alone” and more “Let’s see how fast this goes viral.” And judging by the reaction, mission accomplished. 




Friday, February 13, 2026

BREAKING: Is the "Dorito" an electromagnetic attack aircraft? Bill Sweetman thinks so.

 Is the "Dorito" an electromagnetic attack aircraft? Bill Sweetman thinks so. 

By Steve Douglass 

For aviation enthusiasts, the story of a mysterious triangular aircraft nicknamed the “Dorito” has been quietly unfolding for more than a decade. Veteran defense writer Bill Sweetman suggests that this is no ordinary plane. According to him, it could be a highly classified U.S. Air Force electromagnetic attack aircraft — a stealthy platform designed not to drop bombs, but to slip deep into enemy airspace and blind radar systems before other aircraft even arrive.

The saga starts back in 2014. Over Kansas, amateur photographer Jeff Templin spotted a single silent triangular aircraft performing sharp S-turns in the night sky. Its straight trailing edge and angular form were unlike anything conventional, hinting at a next-generation black project. Around the same time, over  Amarillo, Texas, this journalist and captured three unusual aircraft in formation, their boomerang-shaped trailing edges making them immediately distinguishable from B‑2 bombers. 

UK photographer Dean Muskett was there too, photographing the same flight. The dual documentation from two experienced observers gave the sighting credibility and made the Amarillo event especially notable. Analysts at the time suggested there were actually two different black aircraft projects in operation: the Texas trio and the lone Kansas triangle, each with its own shape, flight behavior, and sound signature.

Fast forward to today, and the story gains another layer with recent infrared footage from the YouTube channel Uncanny ExpeditionsThis latest sighting shows a similar triangular aircraft, moving stealthily through the night sky. When Sweetman connects the dots — from the Kansas triangle to the Amarillo formation and now to the Uncanny footage — a clear picture begins to emerge: these are not random anomalies or misidentified B‑2s. They seem to represent a deliberate, ongoing program, possibly aligned with a long-standing USAF concept called Penetrating Stand-In Airborne Electronic Attack. This is a platform built to enter heavily defended airspace and jam or disable enemy radar networks, essentially carving a path for other strike aircraft.

(C) Anders Otteson

The shape of the Dorito itself makes sense for this role. A clean, triangular flying wing maximizes stealth, provides internal space for electronic systems, and keeps radar returns to a minimum. This is not about flashy dogfights or bombs dropping — it’s about subtle, decisive control over the electromagnetic spectrum, quietly shaping the battlefield from the shadows.

Sweetman also draws a parallel with the Navy's A-12 program from the 1960s.  The A-12 Avenger II was a proposed U.S. Navy carrier-based stealth attack jet designed by McDonnell Douglas and General Dynamics in the late 1980s and slated to replace the A-6 Intruder. Known as the "Flying Dorito" for its triangular flying wing shape, the program was cancelled in 1991 due to severe cost overruns, technical challenges, and management issues after spending roughly $5 billion. In January 2014, the long-running litigation concluded with a settlement where the contractors agreed to pay the government $400 million total, a fraction of the $1.35 billion initially sought. Coincidentally, just after the lawsuit is when sightings of triangular aircraft sightings made a dramatic uptick. 

Concept art: A12 Avenger II

It’s worth wondering if the Dorito sightings we’re seeing now might have deeper roots in older black aircraft concepts, potentially going back to projects shelved or classified during the Cold War. One intriguing postulate is that after the Lockheed A-12 program lawsuits and patent disputes were settled, any design concepts or intellectual property that had been tied up might have been unlocked or released internally, giving engineers the green light to move forward with next-generation designs.

If those designs were “frozen” due to legal entanglements, it’s plausible that once the paperwork was cleared, elements of those concepts could have been dusted off, modernized, and incorporated into new triangular aircraft prototypes, like the ones Douglass, Muskett, Ottsen and others have documented.

This would help explain some intriguing aspects of the sightings:

  • The consistency of the triangular planform across multiple sightings and decades, reminiscent of the A-12’s stealth-focused design.

  • The presence of different aircraft variations — a trio over Amarillo and a lone triangle over Kansas — which could reflect different derivatives of a common conceptual family.

  • The long gestation period: black projects often incubate for years before flying publicly, so something seen now could have roots in decades-old ideas.

In short, the Dorito might not just be a brand-new concept; it could be the modern evolution of triangle-based stealth designs first imagined during the A-12 era, finally made possible by modern materials, sensors, and electronic warfare requirements.

It’s speculative, but it fits the pattern: decades of triangular designs, multiple sightings, and the slow, stealthy emergence of a program that’s long been under wraps

Taken together, the pattern is compelling. From the Kansas triangle to the Amarillo formation, and now to the infrared footage from Uncanny Expeditions, the evidence paints a picture of a stealthy, sophisticated aircraft that might not drop bombs but could decisively switch off an enemy’s sensors before a fight even begins. It’s subtle, it’s secretive, and if Sweetman is right, it could be a game-changer in how the U.S. Air Force conducts modern air warfare.



Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Airspace Security and Cartel Drone Threats over El Paso- could it have spurred the TFR?



Airspace Security and Cartel Drone Threats over El Paso airspace. 

On February 10, 2026, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued a significant Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR) over El Paso, Texas, effectively closing the airspace for what was initially scheduled as a 10-day period. The restriction designated the area as "National Defense Airspace" due to "special security reasons," grounding commercial and private flights at El Paso International Airport.

The exact nature of the "special security reasons" for the February 2026 El Paso TFR was not publicly detailed by the FAA before the restriction was lifted. While the airspace has been reopened, the sudden implementation and subsequent quick lifting of such a high-level restriction (National Defense Airspace) suggest a rapidly evolving security situation that was resolved or mitigated

Recent security concerns in the El Paso region may have centered on a massive increase in cartel-operated drone activity, leading to heightened surveillance and a recent Temporary Flight Restrictions over El Paso and parts of New Mexico that are unprecedented in nature. 

While drones are primarily used for surveillance and smuggling, the escalation to weaponized drones and the theoretical threat of MANPADS (Man-Portable Air-Defense Systems) has prompted the U.S. and Mexico to increase radar deployment and coordinate defensive strategies. [Cartels flew drones 60000 times along US border in six-month period.

High Volume Incursions: Cartels flew drones an estimated 60,000 times along the U.S. southern border in a recent six-month period, averaging over 300 incursions daily. [Cartels flew drones 60000 times along US border in six-month period](cite://https://fox5sandiego.com/news/border-report/cartels-flew-drones-60000-times-along-us-border-in-six-month-period/)

Surveillance and Scouting: Drones are routinely used to spy on U.S. Border Patrol movements and to guide human smuggling groups across the border. [Border Patrol Reports That Cartels Are Using Drones to Guide ...](cite://https://www.airsight.com/en/news/border-patrol-cartels-drones-guide-migrants-us)

Weaponization: Criminal organizations have begun using drones to drop explosives on rivals and local populations in Mexico, raising fears of similar "kinetic" uses near the U.S. border. [US, Mexico to step up fight against cartel drones | Border Report](cite://https://www.borderreport.com/hot-topics/us-mexico-to-step-up-fight-against-cartel-drones/)

Countermeasures: The U.S. has begun deploying specialized radar systems specifically designed to track and counter small, low-flying drug-smuggling drones. [USA deploys radars to counter cartel drug drones](cite://https://militarnyi.com/en/news/usa-deploys-radars-to-counter-cartel-drug-drones/)

MANPADS Concerns:** While documented use of MANPADS against U.S. aircraft remains rare, the increasing sophistication of cartel weaponry has placed security agencies on high alert regarding anti-aircraft capabilities. [US, Mexico to step up fight against cartel drones

The airspace over El Paso and the surrounding border region is increasingly contested. Cartels utilize off-the-shelf drone technology to gain a tactical advantage over law enforcement. These drones are difficult to detect with traditional aviation radar because they fly low and have small radar cross-sections. TFRs are often implemented in these areas to protect law enforcement assets (such as helicopters or surveillance planes) from mid-air collisions with unauthorized drones or to secure the area during high-stakes interdictions. [New Mexico's Strategy Against Drug Cartels Using Drones - 

The Drone vs. MANPADS Threat
Drones: Current intelligence focuses on "suicide drones" or drones modified to carry small IEDs. These have been used extensively in Mexican states like Michoacán and Guerrero. [US, Mexico to step up fight against cartel drones |

MANPADS: The possibility of MANPADS (surface-to-air missiles) is considered a "high-impact, low-probability" threat. While cartels have been found with heavy weaponry (including .50 caliber rifles and rocket launchers), the deployment of MANPADS would represent a major escalation in their engagement with sovereign military and law enforcement aircraft.

While the number of drone incursions is well-documented, the specific intent behind every flight is not always clear. Some drones may be used by independent smugglers rather than major cartels. Additionally, reports of "bombs" being dropped near the border are often localized to internal cartel conflicts on the Mexican side of the river, though the proximity to U.S. soil remains a critical safety concern for El Paso residents and aviation. 

-Steve Douglass



Wednesday, February 4, 2026

U.S. Forces Strike ISIS Targets in Syria as Partners Sustain Pressure

 


February 4, 2026

Release Number 20260204-01
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

TAMPA, Fla. — U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) conducted five strikes against multiple ISIS targets across Syria, Jan. 27 – Feb. 2, as partner forces continue to apply military pressure to ensure the enduring defeat of the terrorist network.

CENTCOM forces located and destroyed an ISIS communication site, critical logistics node, and weapons storage facilities with 50 precision munitions delivered by fixed-wing, rotary-wing, and unmanned aircraft.

“Striking these targets demonstrates our continued focus and resolve for preventing an ISIS resurgence in Syria,” said Adm. Brad Cooper, CENTCOM commander. “Operating in coordination with coalition and partner forces to ensure the enduring defeat of ISIS makes America, the region and the world safer.”

U.S. and partner forces launched Operation Hawkeye Strike in response to a Dec. 13 attack on U.S. and Syrian forces in Palmyra. The ISIS ambush resulted in the death of two U.S. service members and an American interpreter.

After nearly two months of targeted operations, more than 50 ISIS terrorists have been killed or captured. CENTCOM forces killed Bilal Hasan al-Jasim during a deliberate strike in northwest Syria on Jan. 16. The terrorist leader was directly connected with the ISIS gunman responsible for the Dec. 13 attack.

USCENTCOM

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

AVWEEK: U.S. Operation In Venezuela Shifts Defense Narrative



AVIATION WEEK:

The U.S. military action to snatch Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro and his wife from inside a heavily guarded compound marked the culmination of decades of honing airborne special operations, with implications beyond the immediate mission.

Days after the nighttime raid, the U.S. boarded ships in the Caribbean Sea and North Atlantic, underscoring the Trump administration’s plan to exert more control over the region.

The U.S. military action to snatch Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro and his wife from inside a heavily guarded compound marked the culmination of decades of honing airborne special operations, with implications beyond the immediate mission.

Days after the nighttime raid, the U.S. boarded ships in the Caribbean Sea and North Atlantic, underscoring the Trump administration’s plan to exert more control over the region.

The initial operation unfolded over less than 5 hr., after U.S. President Donald Trump gave the go-ahead at 10:46 p.m. EST Jan. 2. U.S. Army special operations helicopters, including Sikorsky MH-60 Black Hawks and Boeing MH-47 Chinooks, were backed by more than 150 combat and support aircraft including Lockheed Martin F-22s and F-35s, Boeing F/A-18s, EA-18s, B-1 bombers and a host of uncrewed aircraft. The secretive Lockheed Martin RQ-170 Sentinel appeared to be operating from Puerto Rico, along with many of the fighters and other assets.

All this, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine said, came together “in time and place to layer effects for a single purpose: to get an interdiction force into downtown Caracas while maintaining the element of tactical surprise.”

Caine said the mission, called Operation Absolute Resolve, was approved weeks before but was waiting for a confluence of events to be executed. It built on decades of counterterrorism operations, he added. The U.S. had begun deploying ships and aircraft to the region in the late summer.

After Trump’s go-ahead, assets launched from 20 locations, Caine said. U.S. Army special operations and attack helicopters flew across the Caribbean Sea as low as 100 ft. above the water. Caine said the aircraft “maintained totally” an element of surprise until the helicopters arrived at the compound to capture Maduro at 1:01 a.m. EST.

The helicopters took fire; one was hit and sustained damage but was still able to fly and complete the mission, Caine said. The helicopters responded with “overwhelming force,” he noted. By 3:29 a.m. EST, the raiding party was back over the water to take Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, to the USS Iwo Jima amphibious assault vessel.

Central to the operation was the U.S. Army’s 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne) unit, set up in the wake of the disastrous Iran hostage rescue mission in 1980 known as Operation Eagle Claw. The secretive unit has since taken part in various operations, including the effort to depose Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega that ended in his surrender in January 1990, as well as the ill-fated 1993 mission to catch Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid in which several unit members died. The unit was heavily involved in Afghanistan starting in 2001, culminating in the 2011 raid in Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden.

The implications of the raid on Caracas go far beyond Venezuela. Russia’s war in Ukraine had put into doubt the viability of helicopter operations on the modern battlefield because of the proliferation of man-portable surface-to-air missiles, other air defenses and explosive-laden loitering drones.

However, the U.S. action in Venezuela demonstrates that an effective helicopter raid into contested environments remains possible when combined with effective airpower and air defense suppression.

The U.S. mission also raises questions about Russian and Chinese military equipment critical to Venezuela’s defenses. Only weeks earlier, standing before state TV cameras on Oct. 2 in Caracas, Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino exuded confidence even as U.S. naval, air and special forces massed in the Caribbean region, aimed squarely at his country.

On that autumn day, Venezuelan air defense radars—including some of China’s and Russia’s most advanced systems—had detected stealthy F-35Bs about 46 mi. north of the country’s coastline, he said, noting that they were flying at 35,000 ft. and 400 kt.

“We are watching you,” Padrino added. “And I want you to know that this does not intimidate us.”

The U.S. raid also came less than two months after the Venezuelan Air Force flexed its capabilities. Outsiders had speculated that the service’s aging fleet of U.S.-supplied Lockheed F-16A/Bs and more recently acquired Sukhoi Su-30MK2 fighters could no longer pass an airworthiness evaluation. But Venezuela deployed detachments of both fighters to La Orchila Island, 160 mi. north of Caracas, on Nov. 14. The Su-30MK2s were observed carrying Kh-31A anti-ship missiles over the Caribbean, even as the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group operated there.

But Venezuela’s Air Force, still considered among the most capable in Latin America despite its age, proved no match for the U.S. aerial strike package. Outmatched in almost all respects against F-22s and F-35s, the Venezuelan fighters could have challenged the U.S. intruders in the sky with their Russian air-to-air missiles or threatened the raid’s enabling support ships at sea with Russian or Iranian anti-ship missiles. There is no evidence that Venezuelan fighters scrambled during the event.

On the ground, Venezuela’s largely Chinese- and Russian-supplied equipment also failed to react. In video clips posted on social media, a single, arcing streak of flame from the ground to the air signaled the launch of a man-portable air defense missile—perhaps one of the 5,000 Igla missiles and launchers that Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chávez, ordered from Russia two decades ago. But there was no sign of Venezuela’s surface-to-air missile systems, which include Russian mobile S-300s and Buk-M2s. Caine said that U.S. cyber and space systems helped neutralize Venezuela’s air defense threat. The strike package also included radar-jamming and destroying EA-18Gs.

“Seems those Russian air defenses didn’t quite work so well, did they?” U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth quipped Jan. 5.

The raid marked another setback for Moscow’s reputation as an arms supplier. Last year, Israel meticulously took down Iran’s air defenses, which were built around Russian equipment.

It is possible to make too much out of the results of the raid based on public data. Venezuela acquired China’s vaunted JY-27A counter-stealth radar in 2019 exactly to deter this sort of attack. China’s export rules could degrade the capability released to export customers. In any event, Beijing rolled out the latest domestic version, dubbed the JY-27V, in May 2025. Venezuela’s air defense operators may not be proficient with it—or perhaps they merely decided that discretion is the better part of valor in the face of overwhelming U.S. airpower.

During a press conference at Mar-A-Lago on Jan. 3, Trump said the U.S. military was poised for another, larger round of strikes if needed.

The U.S. followed the operation on Jan. 7 with the seizure of the M/V Bella 1 oil tanker—renamed and re-flagged as a Russian vessel while at sea—in the North Atlantic. That seizure involved at least one Army special operations Boeing MH-6 Little Bird helicopter, according to images provided to Russian news outlet RT. It appears the MH-6 operated from a U.S. Coast Guard cutter that had been shadowing the SHOP,






Saturday, January 3, 2026

BREAKING - In a stunning midnight raid, U.S. forces capture Nicolás Maduro



U.S. Forces Capture Venezuelan President Maduro

President Trump announced that U.S. forces had conducted a large-scale strike in Venezuela, capturing President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Flores, and were transporting them to New York to face drug and weapons charges.

Trump said the United States would govern Venezuela “until such time that we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition.” He provided few details on how the country would be administered, saying only that it would be overseen by “a group,” and added that he was not opposed to deploying “boots on the ground.”

According to people briefed on the operation, American special operations forces captured Maduro with the help of a C.I.A. source within the Venezuelan government who had tracked his location in recent days. Trump said in a Fox News interview that Maduro and Flores were taken aboard the U.S.S. Iwo Jima, a U.S. warship operating in the Caribbean, before being flown to New York.

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the military mission—named “Absolute Resolve”—was launched at the request of the Justice Department. Caine said U.S. warplanes disabled Venezuelan air defenses, allowing helicopters to enter Caracas, and that one aircraft was struck but remained operational. The operation involved 150 aircraft launched across the hemisphere, one of the most detailed accounts the U.S. government has released.

“He continued, ‘Overhead, the forces were safeguarded by aircraft from the United States Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, and Air National Guard. The aerial lineup included F-22s, F-35s, F-18s, EA-18s, E-2s, B-1 bombers, and other support aircraft, along with numerous remotely piloted drones.’”

Trump said the Venezuelan military “knew we were coming” and was swiftly overwhelmed. He said no American service members were killed, although he had earlier suggested there were casualties.

The operation began in the pre-dawn hours around 2 a.m., with multiple explosions reported in Caracas and surrounding areas. Residents saw low-flying aircraft, marking the start of what officials called kinetic operations. By 4:17 a.m., Trump announced on social media that Maduro and his wife had been captured and flown out of the country.

Trump described Maduro as “highly guarded” in a presidential palace “like a fortress,” though he never reached a safe room. U.S. forces were equipped with “massive blowtorches” to cut through steel walls if necessary. “It had what they call a safety space, where it’s solid steel all around,” Trump said. “He didn’t get that space closed. He was trying to get into it, but he got bum-rushed so fast that he didn’t make it. We were prepared.”

“Caine said, ‘We arrived at Maduro’s compound at 1:01 a.m. Eastern Standard Time, or 2:01 a.m. local time in Caracas. The apprehension team moved into the compound with speed, precision, and discipline, securing the area to ensure the safety of the ground force while apprehending the indicted individuals.

“He added, ‘Upon entering the target area, the helicopters came under fire and returned it with overwhelming force in self-defense. One aircraft was hit but remained flyable. As the president noted earlier, all aircraft returned safely, and the damaged aircraft stayed operational for the remainder of the mission.’

Caine told reporters that Maduro and his wife then surrendered and were taken into custody by the Justice Department, with no U.S. personnel casualties.

‘After securing the indicted individuals, the force prepared to depart. Helicopters were called in to extract the team, while fighter jets and remotely piloted aircraft provided overhead coverage and suppressive fire. Multiple self-defense engagements occurred as the force withdrew from Venezuela,’ he added.”

Preparation included practicing maneuvers on a full-scale replica of the building. “They actually built a house identical to the one they went into,” Trump added.

The operation took place in darkness, with Trump claiming that almost all the lights in Caracas were turned off. “This thing was so organized. They went into a dark space with machine guns facing them all over the place,” he said. At least seven explosions were reported, and the entire attack lasted less than 30 minutes.

Trump said a few U.S. personnel were injured during the operation, but he believed no one was killed. “A couple of guys were hit, but they came back and they’re supposed to be in pretty good shape,” he said. He added that no aircraft were lost, though one helicopter was “hit pretty hard.” “We had to do it because it’s a war,” Trump said.

Weather delayed the mission
Trump said the operation had been postponed for several days while waiting for cloud cover to clear. “The weather has to be perfect. We waited four days… and then all of a sudden it opened up and we said, go. It was just amazing,” he said.

Maduro’s current location
Trump said Maduro and Flores were flown by helicopter to a U.S. warship before being transported to New York to face charges. The Justice Department released an indictment accusing the pair of an alleged role in a narco-terrorism conspiracy.

Months of escalating actions
The raid marked a significant escalation from a series of U.S. strikes on vessels accused of transporting drugs in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since early September. At least 35 strikes had been carried out, reportedly killing 115 people. On Dec. 29, Trump said the U.S. struck a facility where drug-laden boats were loaded, with the CIA conducting a drone strike at a docking area allegedly used by Venezuelan drug cartels. This was the first known direct U.S. operation on Venezuelan soil since the strikes began in September..


Friday, January 2, 2026

Air Force wants "Super B-1s" as a lead up the B-21.




The U.S. Air Force is moving forward with another phase of modernization for its B-1B Lancer bomber fleet, building on upgrades completed in 2020 under the Integrated Battle Station program and subsequent weapons and survivability improvements. The goal is to keep the aircraft viable into the 2030s as the B-21 Raider gradually enters service.

First delivered in the 1980s, the B-1B is a supersonic, long-range heavy bomber originally designed for nuclear missions before being repurposed for conventional strike roles following Cold War arms control agreements.

Today, approximately 45 B-1Bs remain in service, down from the original fleet of 100 aircraft. The Air Force plans for the B-21 to replace the Lancer over the next decade, but the transition will be gradual, requiring the B-1B to remain operational in the interim.

Current modernization efforts focus on expanded weapons integration, upgraded communications, improved defensive avionics, and structural life-extension work. These upgrades are intended to preserve the bomber’s relevance in increasingly contested environments while the Air Force transitions to its next-generation bomber force.

At the same time, the Air Force plans to acquire roughly 100 B-21 Raiders—stealth bombers designed to penetrate advanced air defense systems operated by peer adversaries.

This raises a fundamental question: does continued investment in an aging, non-stealth platform make strategic sense as modern air defenses grow more capable, or would resources be better spent accelerating and expanding B-21 procurement?
What the B-1B Upgrade Includes—and Why the Air Force Says It’s Needed

The B-1B modernization effort is intended to reduce capability gaps during the transition period before the B-21 reaches operational scale. A key element of the upgrade is the integration of external heavy-stores pylons, which significantly expand the bomber’s weapons-carrying capacity. This allows the B-1B to employ a wider range of stand-off munitions and potentially future hypersonic weapons, reinforcing its role as a long-range strike platform despite its age.

At the same time, the Air Force has fielded upgraded defensive avionics, integrated advanced data links, and modernized identification systems to improve the B-1B’s ability to operate within joint and coalition networks.

These enhancements have been paired with sustainment efforts, including the return of aircraft from the boneyard, to meet congressionally mandated fleet-size requirements.

Air Force planners argue the upgrades are essential: without them, the B-1B’s effectiveness against increasingly sophisticated enemy air defenses would steadily decline.

The bomber’s substantial payload and long range remain valuable—particularly in the Indo-Pacific and in deterrence missions—where sheer firepower and standoff reach can matter more than stealth alone.

Maintaining the B-1B’s viability not only sustains bomber capacity while the Air Force awaits the B-21 Raider, but also hedges against potential delays or production shortfalls. Full-rate production and operational fielding of the stealth bomber remain years away and are contingent on industrial capacity and budget stability.

In that context, continued investment in the B-1B serves a practical purpose: without it, the Air Force risks a near-term “bathtub effect,” in which bomber force levels decline as aging platforms retire faster than next-generation replacements can be delivered.

Despite the rationale for upgrading the B-1B to manage near-term risk, a strong case can also be made for accelerating and expanding the B-21 Raider force.

The B-21’s stealth architecture, advanced sensor suite, and deep integration with future joint-force networks are purpose-built to penetrate the world’s most sophisticated integrated air defense systems—a capability that is increasingly central to U.S. global strike strategy.

Unlike the B-1B, whose survivability is inherently constrained in high-threat environments, the B-21 is designed for a new era of distributed operations and sustained competition with peer adversaries.

Here’s a refined rewrite that tightens the argument, smooths transitions, and sharpens the strategic conclusion:

Yet current procurement plans still call for only about 100 B-21s—a figure many analysts argue is insufficient to meet the demands of deterring conflict across multiple theaters simultaneously. Defense analysts and retired senior officers have suggested that a force closer to 175–200 aircraft, or even upwards of 225, would better align with projected strategic requirements and provide adequate capacity alongside legacy platforms.

Advocates of a larger B-21 fleet contend that economies of scale and expanded industrial capacity could support higher production rates. Air Force leadership has also indicated as recently as December 2024 that accelerating the B-21 build schedule would be feasible if required.

The principal constraint, however, remains cost. Each B-21 is expected to carry a unit price of roughly $700 million, with total program costs likely exceeding $100 billion. Expanding the fleet would increase overall expenditures—but proponents argue it would still be more cost-effective than allowing a future capability gap to emerge, restarting production lines years later, and fielding additional aircraft with a shorter remaining service life.

Upgrading the B-1B may be the least risky option in the near term—and likely a necessary one given how long it will take to field the B-21 at scale—but it does not resolve the underlying question of long-term force structure.

If the B-21 is truly the bomber designed for the threat environment the United States expects to face, the more difficult and consequential decision will be whether the Air Force is willing to commit to buying significantly more of them sooner rather than later.