AARO director Sean Kirkpatrick provided an update on the Pentagon's UFO-hunting work at a public NASA meeting.| DefenseScoop
“To be consistent with the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), NASA will be calling UAP ‘Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena’ instead of ‘Unidentified Aerial Phenomena,’” Katherine Rohloff, press secretary for the space agency’s Science Mission Directorate, told DefenseScoop.| DefenseScoop
The UAP Disclosure Act of 2023 to accelerate the disclosure of all U.S. government records associated with reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena and potential lifeforms that demonstrate non-human intelligence.| DefenseScoop
DOD plans to “respond directly to the authors of the letter,” a spokesperson told DefenseScoop.| DefenseScoop
The legislation calls for details on reported health issues connected to UAP sightings, ‘transmedium objects,’ those that hover near military nuclear sites—and more.| Nextgov.com
The Pentagon's UAP office has officially reached full operational capability, and House Oversight and Accountability Committee members are preparing for closed-door discussions with the Pentagon's new AARO director on Dec. 6.| DefenseScoop
The Pentagon's UFO office is now investigating more than 650 cases of unidentified anomalous phenomena.| DefenseScoop
House lawmakers vowed Wednesday to place more pressure on the Pentagon for answers to existing and emerging questions about its growing cache of secretive unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) records after three former U.S. defense officials shared stunning accounts of potential government-concealed encounters with what they think could be craft and technologies of “non-human origin.| DefenseScoop
Senior Pentagon officials spotlighted a new office seeking to document, analyze and resolve government reports of UFO-like phenomena.| DefenseScoop
Republican lawmakers pledged to intensify their efforts to ensure transparency and enhance public awareness about how the Defense Department is handling reports and evidence of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) that might threaten U.S. national security.| DefenseScoop
Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks recently moved to personally oversee the Pentagon’s unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) investigation team formally known as the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, DefenseScoop has exclusively learned. And a new website will soon be launched where incidents can be reported.| DefenseScoop