Aliens.gov registered by Trump admin, here’s what we know about the mystery

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The Trump administration just registered Aliens.gov, a mysterious federal domain that sparked wild speculation about imminent UFO file disclosures. On March 17, 2026, two new sites appeared in official registry records. Nobody knows what comes next.

🔥 Quick Facts

  • Domains Registered: Both Alien.gov and Aliens.gov confirmed on March 17 by CISA federal records
  • Timing: Registration came just weeks after Trump vowed to release UFO files to the public
  • Status: As of March 19, neither site is live or displays any content yet
  • Official Word: White House responded with cryptic “Stay tuned” message plus alien emoji

What Exactly Did the Government Register?

Two new federal domains emerged this week, caught by tracking bots monitoring .gov registrations. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) registered both Alien.gov and Aliens.gov on March 17 evening. Neither directs to a finished website as of March 19. Visiting either URL produces only an error message for now.

The registrations are hosted on Cloudflare servers, standard infrastructure for federal sites. Federal agencies sometimes reserve domain names months before deployment to prevent bad actors from grabbing them first.

Why the Timing Raises Eyebrows Everywhere

The registration timing makes news hounds suspicious because Trump promised UFO disclosures just last month. In February 2026, the president instructed federal agencies to release files on aliens, unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), and UFOs. That bombshell came after former President Obama said extraterrestrial life exists statistically.

Within weeks, those mysterious domains appeared. The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) created in 2022 already maintains a UAP investigation hub. Is Aliens.gov a new portal? A coordination site? Total mystery right now.

Here’s What We Know About Government UAP Efforts

Government transparency on unexplained phenomena has been gradual. Joe Biden signed legislation in 2023 requiring the National Archives to create a public collection of UAP documents. Some records are now viewable on the National Archives website.

Congress held multiple public hearings on UFOs since 2023. Just last September 2025, four witnesses testified about firsthand UAP experiences. They claimed the federal government may be unlawfully withholding information about these sightings. The Pentagon consistently states it has found no evidence of extraterrestrial beings or technology.

Detail Information
Registration Date March 17, 2026
Registering Agency CISA (Department of Homeland Security)
Current Status Not live, no content as of March 19
Hosting Provider Cloudflare

“Stay tuned!”

Anna Kelly, White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary

What the White House Actually Said About It

Official explanation is sparse, to say the least. White House Press Secretary Anna Kelly offered just three words when asked about Aliens.gov: “Stay tuned!” She included a smiling alien emoji. The Pentagon declined immediate comment when contacted on March 19.

Notably, both domains were registered while the government temporarily stopped accepting new .gov requests due to federal funding lapses. That makes the timing even more unusual. CISA stated it does not audit content on government websites but ensures only verified U.S. government organizations receive trusted domains.

Could This Signal the Start of Major UFO Disclosure?

Internet speculation has exploded online. Some enthusiasts believe Aliens.gov will become a public portal for UFO file releases. Others think it might coordinate multi-agency UAP efforts. Nobody has facts yet. The domains exist but carry zero content or announcements.

Trump has teased UFO releases since taking office. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed in February that the Pentagon is actively working to comply with Trump’s disclosure order. Yet official timelines remain vague. Agencies must balance public interest against potential national security concerns when declassifying intelligence materials.

Sources

  • USA Today – Breaking coverage of Aliens.gov domain registration and White House response
  • DefenseScoop – CISA and Pentagon statements regarding new .gov domains for UFO disclosure
  • Newsweek – Trump administration registration details and UAP initiative timeline

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