The Pentagon has opened a new website to provide the general public with all possible declassified information on UFOs. The new website was unveiled on August 30 and will also offer videos and photos, as well as answer the most common questions about UFOs. “We are committed to transparency,” the Pentagon said.
The director of the All Domains Anomaly Resolution office, Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick said the website will be used to inform the public about ARRO’s findings, as well as provide a way for the public to report sightings of UFOs or, as they are now called, Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP). .
While the site is still under construction, it contains a section where the office will “accept reports from current or U.S. Government employees, service members, or contractors with direct knowledge of U.S. Government programs or activities related to UAP that date from 1945″. These reports will assist the office in completing a historical record of such events as required by the United States Congress.
The site will serve as a one-stop shop for publicly available information, and AARO will regularly update the website with the latest findings.The site also describes the office’s mission, which it says is to “minimize technical and intelligence surprise by synchronizing the identification, attribution and mitigation of unidentified anomalous phenomena in the vicinity of national security” scientific, intelligence and operational areas.
In addition, the site provides a three-part definition of UAP, which it says are airborne objects that cannot be immediately identified; objects or devices that travel between different domains such as air, space or water; and underwater objects that are not immediately identifiable or can be related to the first two definitions.
This focus on objects in space and water is part of the reason why the term “UFO” has fallen out of fashion and been replaced by the more comprehensive term “UAP”.
The office will study “enigmatic recovered technologies, leveraging cross-sector partnerships and the latest developments in theoretical and applied physics and engineering.”
In July 2023, a veteran of the US Air Force and the intelligence community said that the US government is covering up the existence of a multi-decade long anti-missile and reverse-engineering program.
No definitive proof of these claims has come to light, but some members of the US Congress have vowed to follow up.