
A bombshell report has claimed that the UFO conspiracies surrounding Nevada’s Area 51 were fueled by the Pentagon to conceal a classified weapons program.
According to the 2024 US Department of Defense (DOD) review, the government conducted a deliberate disinformation campaign during the Cold War era, going so far as to distribute fake photos of flying saucers to residents.
In the 1980s, a US Air Force colonel allegedly handed out doctored images of UFOs to patrons at a nearby bar, claiming they had been taken in the area.
The photos were quickly pinned on the wall, igniting public speculation that alien technology was being housed and studied at the top-secret base.
The report claimed the grassroots disinformation campaign was an attempt to hide military testing, including stealth fighter jets, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Area 51, officially established in 1955, remained largely under the radar until 1989, when whistleblower Robert Lazar appeared on television.
He claimed he had worked at a hidden facility near Groom Lake, known as ‘S-4,’ reverse-engineering alien spacecraft, further cementing Area 51’s place in UFO lore.
The report also revealed that high-ranking Air Force officials hazed new commanders by briefing them on a fabricated top-secret project called ‘Yankee Blue,’ which involved the supposed study of extraterrestrial craft.
After the phony briefing, recruits were warned they would face jail or execution if they ever disclosed the information.

A bombshell report has claimed that the UFO conspiracies surrounding Nevada’s Area 51 were fueled by the Pentagon to conceal classified weapons program
Details confirming that Area 51 served as a testing ground for America’s cutting-edge weapons were first revealed in a CIA document declassified in 2013.
The report explained that during the Cold War, the remote Nevada base was used to test aircraft like the U-2 spy plane and the A-12 reconnaissance jet under a veil of secrecy.
Despite those facts, Area 51 has since evolved into a hotbed of alien conspiracy theories, with persistent rumors of crashed UFOs and extraterrestrial autopsies hidden behind its barbed-wire fences.
The Wall Street Journal noted that the findings came from a report by the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), a congressional task force within the DOD created to investigate persistent rumors of secret government projects involving alien technology.
Sean Kirkpatrick, the first director of the AARO, was appointed by the government in 2022 to investigate and make sense of the countless UFO theories swirling through public and military channels.
He and his team sifted UFO reports spanning back to 1945, finding several cases where high-ranking military officials misled the public and their own colleagues.
Kirkpatrick told the Wall Street Journal that he met with retired Air Force members who were briefed about Yankee Blue.
The new recruits were given a photo of what looked like a flying saucer that was described as an anti-gravity maneuvering vehicle.
And even decades later, news that Yankee Blue was fake stunned the now-retired servicemen.

A branch of the government sifted sifted UFO reports spanning back to 1945, finding several cases where high-ranking military officials misled the public and their own colleagues. Pictured is a 2004 case, capturing a mysterious object over California
It was not until 2023 did the defense secretary’s office send a memo out across the service ordering the practice to stop immediately.
Kirkpatrick told then President director of national intelligence, Avril Haines, who was stunned.
Haines was said to have pressed the issue, questioning how the hazing could have carried on without being stopped.
The official responded: ‘Ma’am, we know it went on for decades. We are talking about hundreds and hundreds of people. These men signed NDAs. They thought it was real.’
Defense Department spokeswoman Sue Gough confirmed to the Wall Street Journal that AARO had uncovered fabricated materials falsely presented as part of classified programs involving extraterrestrials.
She said lawmakers and intelligence officials had been briefed on the findings.
The disinformation campaign, however, does not seem to stop at Area 51 as servicemen at other US bases report similar stories.
Robert Salas, now 84, was an Air Force captain manning the controls of 10 nuclear missiles in Montana in 1967 who witnessed several UFOs.


Robert Salas, now 84 (right), was an Air Force captain manning the controls of 10 nuclear missiles in Montana in 1967 (left) who witnessed several UFOs.
‘Within the span of six months, there were 30 nuclear missiles or ICBMs that were disabled during UFO encounters,’ Salas told the Daily Mail.
‘They were not damaged – just temporarily taken offline. It was a message, not an attack.’
After the encounters while serving, Salas learned that the strange sightings were appearing around other silos in the US.
While he was told to never speak of the incidents again, Salas was later interviewed by Kirkpatrick’s team.
Salas believes he was told lies amid an intergalactic intervention to stop a nuclear war with alien beings.
‘There is a gigantic cover up, not only by the Air Force, but every other federal agency that has cognizance of this subject,’ he told the Wall Street Journal.
‘We were never briefed on the activities that were going on, the Air Force shut us out of any information.’