“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
DefenseScoop obtained AARO’s latest report to Congress before its release late Wednesday.| DefenseScoop
Lue Elizondo and Chris Mellon returned to the Hill last week for closed-door discussions with several lawmakers.| DefenseScoop
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
Jon Kosloski is taking the helm at the Defense Department's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office.| DefenseScoop
The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office is producing and refining a new deployable surveillance capability — the Gremlin System — to enable personnel to capture real-time data and more rapidly respond to unidentified anomalous phenomena incidents as they occur, the acting chief of the office told DefenseScoop during a press briefing Wednesday.| DefenseScoop