The Pentagon launches a website to report UFO sightings

By 05/09/2023 Portal

The Pentagon has opened a new Internet portal for pilots, controllers and other related professionals to submit reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP). AARO.mil, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office website, is still under construction. For example, a promised online form for contacting the AARO is labeled “coming soon.” But the version already presented offers eight videos showing the UAPs, plus files for reports and congressional briefings, press releases and links to other resources. "The website will serve as a one-stop shop for all publicly available information related to AARO and UAP," said Air Force Brigadier General Patrick Ryder and press secretary of the Department of Defense, quoted by Universe Today. Related News standard No A Harvard astronomer assumes that UFOs have reached Earth and explains how and when the first time was AC "That there are more civilizations like ours is common sense," defends Avi Loeb The creation of the new website is just one sign that the issue of UAPs, formerly known as UFOs, is gaining attention at the Pentagon. That move was intended to accelerate AARO's development and website launch. "I believe transparency is a critical component of AARO's work, and I am committed to sharing AARO's discoveries with Congress and the public, consistent with our responsibility to protect critical intelligence and national defense capabilities," he told DefenseScoop. Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks, who played a leading role in establishing AARO last year. When the website is fully ready, it will serve as a secure channel for current or former government employees, military personnel, and contractors to register UAP reports. In a news release, the Department of Defense said the secure reporting tool will launch this fall. "A mechanism for the general public to submit reports will be announced in the coming months," the Pentagon said. Civilian pilots were encouraged to report UAP sightings to air traffic controllers. AARO said it would receive reports of UAP-related pilots, known as Pireps, from the Federal Aviation Administration. – Objects in the air that are not immediately identifiable. – Transmedia objects or devices. – Submerged objects or devices that are not immediately identifiable and that show behavioral or performance characteristics that suggest that the objects or devices may be related to objects or devices in the first two categories. AARO says the Department of Defense considers UAPs to be "sources of anomalous detections in one or more domains (i.e., air, sea, space, and/or transmedia) that are not yet attributable to known actors and that demonstrate behavior that is not yet They are easily understood by users, sensors or observers." The website does not explicitly mention possible extraterrestrial origins of the UAPs. One of the reasons government officials and lawmakers are increasingly concerned about UAPs is because they may represent intrusions from countries like Russia or China, according to Universe Today.