Consider This from NPR - Is there anything new to learn from the ‘alien files’?
Episode Date: May 13, 2026Flying discs, metallic orbs, and a mysterious cylinder tumbling past the Apollo spacecraft. Those are just a few of the unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAP, contained in a batch of government fil...es the Department of Defense released this month. The DoD report, coming on President Trump’s orders, is another step towards the federal government taking the question of UAPs more seriously. But how much of this is really new – and what more can we learn from the files?Astrophysicist Adam Frank of the University of Rochester, who’s involved in the search for intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, weighs in on this new trove of ‘alien files.’For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org. This episode was produced by Gabe Sanchez and Jordan-Marie Smith, with audio engineering by Damian Herring. It was edited by Christopher Intagliata and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's consider this, where every day we go deep on one big news story.
Today, what is in a trove of government files related to unidentified anomalous phenomena?
That is the new term for what we used to call UFOs.
Now, a few decades ago, flying saucers and UFOs were the sort of thing you would see relegated to the tabloids, but in 2023, that changed.
We were primarily seeing dark gray or black cubes inside of a clear sphere.
I'm sorry, dark gray or black cubes?
Yes, inside of a clear sphere.
We're the Apex or the House subcommittee on national security, the border, and foreign affairs called a hearing on UAPs and invited witnesses like former Navy fighter pilot Ryan Graves, who you heard there being questioned by Maryland Democrat Jamie Raskin.
Retired Air Force intelligence officer David Grush made some pretty explosive allegations about crashed alien spacecraft to South Carolina Republican Nancy Mace.
If you believe we have crashed craft stated earlier, do we have the bodies of the pirate?
pilots who piloted this craft?
As I've stated publicly already in my news nation interview, biologics came with some of these
recoveries. Yeah.
Were they, I guess, human or non-human biologics?
Nothuman, and that was the...
Fast forward to this year.
President Trump ordered the Defense Department to start releasing the government's files
on alien and extraterrestrial life.
Anything having to do with UFO or related material.
He teased the release last month at the White House with the White House with the government.
the Artemis two astronauts standing behind him.
I interviewed some pilots, very solid people,
and they said they saw things that you wouldn't believe,
so you're going to be reading about it.
Consider this, that first badge of, quote, alien files?
It's now out, so is there anything new to learn?
From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.
It's Consider This from NPR,
accounts of flying disks, floating and then disappearing metallic orbs,
and a mysterious cylinder tumbling through space near an Apollo spacecraft.
These were just some of the details contained in government reports recently released by the Department of Defense.
Now, some of this information about unidentified anomalous phenomena or UAPs has long been in the public domain in one form or another,
but the DoD report coming on President Trump's orders was another step toward the federal government taking the question of UAP more seriously.
We're going to talk about all of it with Adam Frank, an astrophysicist at the University of Rochester, involved in the search for intelligent life.
Welcome to All Things Considered.
Oh, it's my pleasure.
So let's start here.
In your piece for The Atlantic about these so-called alien files, your first line reads, spaceships.
That's all I'm asking for, just one actual stinking spaceship.
Fair to say you were unimpressed by this?
Yeah, because one of the things that's happened, what I would call the modern era of UFOs, right?
When I was a young scientist back in the 80s, you know, UFOs were just tin hat sort of stuff.
Nobody took them seriously at all.
And then there was that New York Times article in 2017, which said, oh, there is actually a Pentagon program studying this.
And then there's been these hearings, these explosive congressional hearings where you've seen these former intelligence agents saying that we actually have, you know, the United States and other countries are routinely capturing crashed spaceships and that we've got alien biologists.
or non-human, I think the term they use is non-human biologics.
So these are, you know, really extreme claims that people are making.
I expected, given all that, that this disclosure, wow, we're finally going to get the government
disclosing documents.
And it turns out it's just more the same.
Fuzzy blob videos or photos and unverifiable personal testimony.
And there's been a lot of like compelling and serious conversation about that in recent years.
Why do you think it is that it does?
get more attention that it doesn't make more of a mainstream foothold when there are videos from
the Pentagon showing objects that seem to be moving in very strange ways?
Well, I'm actually going to push back a little bit on that. I think, you know, as a scientist,
one of the things we've seen is that there has been an enormous outpouring of sightings and of videos,
but the hard fact is that most of these videos can be explained, you know, and that most of the
claims that are being made about them are unverifiable. And so you've got this mix of genuine interest
in what's happening. What are these sightings about? Are they about peer state adversaries and
their technological capacities? As well as a conflation of this with are we seeing things from
outer space? And as an astrophysicist, I'm of course deeply interested in things from outer space.
But there's always been a deep problem for us as scientists is that the data that we're being shown,
you can't do anything with. So that's really the mix that's going on here.
Look, I really appreciate you being the scully to my molder in this conversation.
I'm so sorry, man.
In addition to that, though, I will say that I was among many people reading this thinking,
like, get a load of these Apollo 11 transcripts to be gently and not so gently reminded
that, in fact, those transcripts had been released to the public for 50 years at this point.
Given that, given the way that President Trump talked about this saying, like, you know,
have fun or essentially that.
Is this a serious exercise by the federal government to you?
It doesn't seem actually very serious.
You know, there's actually, as I was going through the documents, I found, you know,
it was a report about launch failures on, you know, reentry vehicles.
It was like, wait, what is this even doing here?
It's like somebody just typed in space, you know, into the government database and then
just grabbed a bunch of stuff and threw it in there.
That document had nothing to do with UFOs or UAPs.
So this actually does.
doesn't feel very serious. I am all in favor of disclosure, but I'm very skeptical, particularly of the claims made in those congressional hearings. I just see a lot of terrible science happening.
Given all of that, if it were up to you, what would you like to see the government do next? What do you think the responsible way to move forward and kind of engage in these questions would be?
The government has been involved in studying this for seven years. So there's a lot of documents, right? There's going to be.
be a lot of documents. And I just think it's great that, okay, release all those documents.
If there's anything in there that actually leads us somewhere, that's what I'd like to see.
And I want, you know, if we actually have alien bodies, you know, in a refrigerator in some place,
or we have captured alien spaceships, you know scientists have done huge amounts of studies on them.
So at least if you're not going to show me the alien bodies, there must be pages and pages and pages.
of the results of those scientific studies.
So at least show us that.
And at some point, if you can't show us that,
then it's just a story.
These are just stories that have been circulating around forever.
And there's much better places to put our time
in terms of we're interested in the study of life in the universe.
Like if the government really wants to do something,
then it can continue to fund something like NASA's Habitable World Observatory,
which we're building, which will be able to see into the atmospheres
of distant alien worlds and search for alien life there.
You heard it from Adam Frank, Bodies, or it didn't happen.
Adam Frank is an astrophysicist at the University of Rochester.
Thank you so much, even though I'm a little disappointed by the outcome of this conversation.
Thank you so much for walking.
I'm sorry.
I know, I'm like Mr. Bummer.
But, you know, but the thing people, I mean, it's what's beautiful is people have this interest in the night sky.
They should keep that all the mystery, all the wonder is there.
But it's the stars, and it's all the planets we've discovered orbiting those stars.
So there's more than enough mystery and wonder to go around.
Adam Frank, thank you so much.
My pleasure.
This episode was produced by Gabriel Sanchez and Jordan Marie Smith with audio engineering by Damian Herring.
It was edited by Christopher and Taliyata and Courtney Dorning.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow.
