INVESTIGATINGUFO & UnexplainedThe White House registered alien.gov and aliens.gov as official .gov domains while the Pentagon works on Trump's UAP disclosure order. AARO's UAP caseload now exceeds 2,000 reports.
“The White House registered alien.gov and aliens.gov as official .gov domains while the Pentagon works on Trump's UAP disclosure order. AARO's UAP caseload now exceeds 2,000 reports.”
The White House quietly registered two new official government domains: alien.gov and aliens.gov. These are .gov addresses — they require federal authorization to create. Someone in the White House decided the United States government needs official alien websites.
In February 2026, Trump posted that he would direct federal agencies to "begin the process of identifying and releasing government files related to alien and extraterrestrial life, unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), and unidentified flying objects (UFOs)." The domain registrations followed weeks later.
The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) — the Pentagon's official UAP investigation unit — now has over 2,000 cases in its active caseload. That's 2,000 incidents the military considers unexplained enough to warrant formal investigation.
Government domains aren't registered on a whim. They require authorization, justification, and bureaucratic approval. Someone at the White House filled out the paperwork to register alien.gov and aliens.gov. That means someone in the federal government decided these domains will be needed.
The US government has never registered alien-specific domains before. Not during Roswell. Not during Project Blue Book. Not during the 2017 UAP revelations. Not during the 2023 congressional hearings. The fact that it's happening now suggests something is coming that requires a public-facing government platform.
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