NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has put fresh institutional weight behind a familiar UAP question: what government cameras have recorded but not yet explained. In a July 9 Fox News report, Isaacman said NASA has imagery of unknown objects and that, based on the available data, officials still do not know what the objects are.
Isaacman did not describe the imagery as evidence of alien spacecraft. The report said he tied the issue to a broader push for declassification, while also noting NASA's earlier position that no public evidence has established an extraterrestrial origin for UAP. That distinction matters because a file can be unexplained without being extraordinary.
The remarks land during a period of renewed UAP file releases from defense and intelligence channels, including Pentagon material published through PURSUE. Isaacman also reportedly said he had not seen evidence of recovered alien bodies or crashed extraterrestrial craft, keeping the public record focused on imagery, data and unresolved identification rather than a definitive disclosure claim.
For a UFO/UAP archive, the story belongs in the news section rather than the sightings section. It does not document a new public video event. Its value is that a sitting NASA administrator acknowledged unresolved imagery and placed the next step on document access, data quality and what the agency is willing to release.

