Nuclear Security · PURSUE coverage
The Nuclear-UAP Convergence: From Sandia (1948) to Pantex (2025)
June 02, 2026 · AliensGov Info Desk

Recent declassifications under the PURSUE initiative have highlighted a startling 80-year pattern of UAP surveillance at US nuclear sites. The unsealing of the 1948 Sandia Base logs provides a historical bookend to modern telemetry captured at the Pantex Plant in 2025.
Historical Context: Sandia 1948
The May 22 Release 02 included 116 pages of security logs from Sandia Base. These records describe multiple "green fireballs" and metallic discs hovering over sensitive atomic weapon assembly areas. Security teams noted the objects' ability to evade interceptors and display "non-inertial" movement.
Modern Correlation: Pantex 2025
Data from the Department of Energy (DOE) regarding recent incursions at Pantex shows identical behavior:
- Stationary Hovering: Objects remaining fixed over nuclear storage igloos for extended periods.
- Electronic Interference: Disruption of localized radar and communication arrays during the sightings.
- Rapid Acceleration: Objects departing the area at speeds exceeding Mach 10 without sonic booms.
This persistent focus on US nuclear strike capabilities suggests a long-term intelligence-gathering mission by UAP, a pattern now officially recognized by the standardized PURSUE-MD-V2 metadata codes.