The Phoenix Lights Mystery Revisited: New Footage Exposes a Global Cover-Up
When History’s Biggest UFO Sighting Happened… Twice
On March 13, 1997, thousands in Phoenix saw a mile-wide V-shaped UFO glide silently overhead. In 2023, identical lights reappeared—and this time, TikTok caught it all. The Pentagon claims both events were “military flares,” but leaked FAA audio reveals panic: “No aircraft registered… object is non-responsive.”
The 1997 vs. 2023 Sightings: Spot the Difference
Forensic analysts compared both events. The 1997 craft moved at 30 mph; the 2023 version hit Mach 3. “This wasn’t flares—it was tech beyond our understanding,” says ex-NASA engineer James Oberg. Even skeptics admit: The 2023 object performed maneuvers defying physics.
The Air Force’s Missing Files
In 2024, a FOIA request revealed 80% of the 1997 Phoenix Lights files are “lost.” A former Air Force clerk admits: “We shredded them. Orders from above.” But why? Retired Colonel Philip Corso’s diary hints at recovered alien tech tested in Arizona.
Why TikTokers Are the New UFO Hunters
Gen Z isn’t waiting for the government. Using AI apps like SkyWatch, they’re triangulating UFO paths in real-time. One viral video geolocated the 2023 lights to a secret DARPA facility. The response? “No comment.”
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