Political pressure is mounting on the Pentagon over UFO transparency after sudden technical activity on a key government site, aliens.gov. The site, linked to Donald Trump’s promise to free classified extraterrestrial files, showed signs of server work after months of silence. However, an SSL error hints it’s early days—security certificates needed for public access aren’t set up yet. Cyber experts say such website sprucing often leads to lengthy internal testing, not immediate public reveals. Still, the timing has sparked fresh excitement among UFO watchers and politicians alike.
Trump’s Executive Order on UFOs Still Hanging Fire
Back in February, Trump signed an order demanding the release of hidden UFO files. But the initiative stalled after tensions with Iran flared. Congressional Republicans are refusing to drop the issue. Florida’s Rep. Anna Paulina Luna slammed the Pentagon after it missed her 14 April deadline to deliver 46 videos of so-called UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena) encounters.
“How convenient,” Luna snapped on social media. “The president has authorised the release, so whoever is trying to be cute at the Pentagon can take a hike.”
Luna revealed the Defence Department only responded after her office chased them—raising questions if the Pentagon is deliberately stalling.
Secret UFO Clips Could Shake Military Circles
The footage Luna requested reportedly includes bizarre spherical, cigar-shaped, and “Tic Tac” objects caught on camera near conflict zones, oceans, and sensitive bases worldwide. Clips show strange formations over Iran and Syria, near US airfields, and even a 2023 shootdown above Lake Huron. Lawmakers argue these videos might expose UFO flight patterns near critical defence sites and help assess if they pose national security risks, especially when seen near restricted or training airspace.
Transparency Calls Grow Louder
The aliens.gov domain first caught watchers’ eyes about a month ago via federal website monitors. Officials say websites like this often drag on for months or years behind the scenes. Meanwhile, Pentagon leaders keep pushing for more openness on decades of classified UAP data, as mysterious aerial sightings persist in military operations around the globe. The latest tech stir keeps hopes high that the dusty vault of UFO secrets may finally crack open.