In a move that has ignited a firestorm of speculation across the internet, the White House officially registered the domain aliens.gov (and the singular alien.gov) on March 17–18, 2026. Automated federal domain trackers flagged the registration as a verifiable asset managed under the Executive Office of the President through CISA’s official government system.
The Catalyst: The “Obama-Trump” X-File
The digital infrastructure comes just one month after a bizarre political spat triggered a landmark declassification order.
- The Slip: On February 14, 2026, former President Barack Obama joked on a podcast that aliens are “real but I haven’t seen them.”
- The Directive: Seizing on the comment, President Donald Trump alleged that classified information had been exposed and subsequently signed an executive order on February 19, 2026.
- The Order: The directive instructs the Secretary of Defense and all federal agencies to identify and release all government files related to Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP), UFOs, and extraterrestrial life.
What is Aliens.gov?
As of March 19, 2026, the domain does not yet host a public-facing website. However, experts and insiders have provided several clues as to its purpose:
- The “Data Dump” Hub: Unlike the Pentagon’s existing AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) website, which serves as a reporting tool for military personnel, aliens.gov is expected to be a consumer-facing portal for the public to browse declassified archives.
- Infrastructure Readiness: The domain is hosted on Cloudflare servers, suggesting the government is preparing for a “massive traffic event” similar to a major policy announcement or a digital records dump.
- White House Response: When asked for comment, White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told reporters to “Stay tuned!” accompanied by an alien emoji—the same emoji used by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth when he pledged “full compliance” with the disclosure order.
Prediction Markets & Public Reaction
The registration has sent shockwaves through social media and financial platforms:
- Polymarket Surge: Following the domain’s discovery, prediction market odds for the “US confirming the existence of alien life in 2026” jumped to 16%, with over $17 million in trading volume.
- The “Distraction” Theory: Critics and some political analysts suggest the timing of “Aliens.gov” is a strategic distraction from other high-stakes issues, such as the ongoing conflict with Iran and domestic economic pressures.
| Entity | Role in Disclosure | Current Status |
| White House | Primary Directive | Registered aliens.gov & alien.gov |
| AARO (Pentagon) | Technical Investigation | Managing 2,000+ active UAP cases |
| CISA | Domain Infrastructure | Managed the March 17 registration |
| Pete Hegseth (DOD) | Operational Lead | Reviewing files for “full compliance” |
Historical Context: 80 Years of Secrecy
The launch of a dedicated “Aliens” domain would be the first of its kind in the 80-year history of U.S. government UFO investigations, moving past the dismissive era of Project Blue Book (1950s) and the secretive era of AATIP (2000s) toward a period of open, executive-led transparency.
