These are not the best they have -- the best they have show clearly that what is being imaged is a balloon, or a bird, or a drone, or another plane. The best they have don't get released in a dump of images of things that are unidentified, because you can see what is being imaged well enough to identify it.
So what about the ones that are close enough to be seen well, and show aliens spaceships, why do those never get released?
A possible reason is, there aren't any. You can get some really nifty structured UFOs/UAP from civilian sources, because civilians can hang a model from a string and take a sharp picture, or can toss one in the air for a photo That's much, much harder to do with a camera or imaging system attached to a fighter plane or reconnaissance balloon or other piece of military gear, plus you can get in more trouble for doing that!
The UFO contradiction is that the better quality images are recognisable and thus never end up in the UFO pile, it's a self selecting subset.
I feel like there is possibly a miscommunication going on based on what I am saying, probably due to me not wording it properly.
When I talk about "better quality images", I am not talking about any material that supposedly show a NHI-built vehicle, I'm talking about any literal image or video
that aren't in (for example) IR monochrome, sometimes with a frame rate of less than 30 FPS, and less than 720p.
The only time I've actually seen a video that, while is relatively low resolution and low frame rate,
isn't in the usually extremely blurry and fuzzy IR monochrome is that one short video of the Middle East UAP from 2022.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/..._Footage_from_the_USG_for_Public_Release.webm
Regardless of what this object even is (I don't know if Mick did a video on this one, but I'll just assume its something unremarkable, mundane, and conventional), the fact that its in color, and pretty clearly shows something resembling a flying metallic sphere is quite notable among the sea of terrible, black-on-white infrared videos.
Despite the amount of resources the US military has access to, the fact that there doesn't appear to be any more material
like the Middle East UAP video is frustrating.
However, yes, if more videos were in color, one would be able to identify any anomalous object way easier, and therefore might not be classified as a UAP in the first place. This is absolutely possible.
(I don't know if this makes any more sense than what I've said previously, or if I've been repeating anything I said. but I needed to write this down before I forget it.)