Astrophysicist Eric Davis claims Bush described three spacecraft approaching the base and one landing, allowing a “non-human entity” to interact with U.S. personnel.
BY PC Bureau
November 23, 2025: A new documentary has sparked fresh controversy in the long-running debate over UFO secrecy, claiming that former U.S. President George H.W. Bush was informed about an alleged alien encounter at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico nearly six decades ago. The New York Post reported the claim, though the film offers no physical evidence to support the extraordinary allegation.
The documentary, The Age of Disclosure, features astrophysicist Eric Davis, who recounts private conversations he says he had with Bush in 2003. According to Davis, the former president described a 1964 incident in which three unidentified spacecraft approached Holloman Air Force Base, with one reportedly landing on the tarmac. Davis claims Bush told him that a “non-human entity” emerged from the craft and interacted with U.S. Air Force personnel and civilian CIA officers present at the site.
Davis is not an outsider to classified aerospace research. He served as a scientific adviser for the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a secretive Pentagon-backed initiative launched in 2007 by late Senator Harry Reid. His involvement lends weight within UFO research circles, although his claims remain unverified.
President George HW Bush ‘knew’ of 1964 alien contact with humans in New Mexico: documentary https://t.co/K5JqO7YjJz pic.twitter.com/ot01aZhBqM
— New York Post (@nypost) November 22, 2025
Bush—before becoming the nation’s 41st president—was a naval aviator in World War II and later director of the CIA, giving him access to some of America’s deepest intelligence secrets. Yet according to Davis, even Bush was denied additional details about the alleged encounter. When he pressed for more information, Davis says, Bush was told he lacked the necessary “need-to-know” clearance—an assertion that, if true, hints at an unusually compartmentalized program.
The documentary, released on Amazon Prime on Friday, does not rely solely on Davis’s testimony. It also includes statements from physicist and former AATIP member Hal Puthoff, who suggests that the U.S. government has recovered multiple types of extraterrestrial beings over the years—a claim that has long circulated among UFO researchers but rarely with such direct attribution.
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Another contributor, Stanford University immunologist Gary Nolan, describes analyzing injuries allegedly sustained by military personnel after encounters with unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs). Nolan cites cases involving “horrific” burns, neurological damage, and internal scarring—injuries he says are consistent with close proximity to unknown high-energy technology.
Director Dan Farah says he hopes the documentary helps push the U.S. government toward greater transparency on the subject of extraterrestrial life and unexplained technologies.
“I think this film puts us in a different place,” Farah told the media outlet. “It sets the table for a president to step to the microphone and more comfortably tell all of humanity that we’re not alone in the universe.”
Whether the documentary sparks a new push for official disclosure or is dismissed as another addition to UFO folklore remains to be seen. But with growing public interest, congressional hearings, and multiple military whistleblowers stepping forward, the conversation around UAPs is entering a new and more contentious phase—one where past presidents, intelligence agencies, and unexplained encounters are all under renewed scrutiny.











