The long-promised release of US PresidentDonald Trump's UFO fileshas reignited one of the strangest debates in Washington — not whether unidentified objects exist, but what exactly they are.

As declassified records begin rolling out, several Republican lawmakers and Trump allies are steering the conversation away from traditional 'aliens' and toward a far more unsettling idea: interdimensional beings.

The theory, once confined to fringe UFO circles and late-night podcasts, is now being openly discussed by elected officials, Pentagon transparency advocates and religious commentators who believe the phenomenon may involve entities that exist outside normal human understanding of space and time.

In February 2026,Trump ordered the Pentagonand intelligence agencies to review and declassify files tied to UFOs and UAPs short for Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena.

The administration framed the move as part of a broader transparency push following years of congressional hearings, leaked military footage and testimony from former intelligence officials.

Trump has repeatedly teased the files in recent months, telling supporters the public would soon see 'very interesting' material that had never been fully disclosed before.

The first wave of records is expected to include pilot encounter reports, internal government documents and possibly previously unseen UAP footage. Officials have also warned many documents could still contain heavy redactions.

What has surprised many observers is the language now being used by some Republicans discussing the files.

Rather than describing the phenomena as extraterrestrial life from another planet, several Trump allies have embraced the term 'interdimensional beings.'

The most prominent voice has beenAnna Paulina Luna, a Republican congresswoman and Air Force veteran involved in declassification efforts.

Source: International Business Times UK