aliens.gov: White House Registers Domain — Then Said “Stay Tuned”: as in Interdimensional Frequency
The first public signal was not a formal statement, a press briefing, or a policy document. It was an emoji.
In March 2026, when journalists asked the White House about the sudden registration of aliens.gov and alien.gov, White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly responded with just two words: “Stay tuned!” followed by an alien emoji. The reply was short, deliberate, and immediately spread across major news outlets and social media. It became the only official on-the-record comment about the domains.
That emoji, however, was not random. It echoed an earlier moment on February 19–20, 2026. President Donald Trump issued a directive on February 19 ordering federal agencies to begin declassifying information related to UFOs, UAPs, and extraterrestrial matters. The next day, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth reposted a screenshot of that statement on X and added two emojis: an alien face and a saluting symbol. The post, widely circulated at the time, is still referenced as the first appearance of the alien emoji in an official context tied to the directive.

The timing of that directive had its own context. Just days earlier, on February 14, 2026, former President Barack Obama appeared on Brian Tyler Cohen’s podcast and, during a rapid-fire “lightning round,” was asked if aliens are real. He replied, “They’re real, but I haven’t seen them,” while joking that they’re not being hidden at Area 51. The off-the-cuff remark quickly went viral. Obama later clarified his comments. Trump publicly criticized the original remarks as potentially revealing classified information, and within days, the declassification directive followed.
Around the same time, Lara Trump appeared to let the cat out of the bag. On February 18, 2026 — the day before President Trump’s declassification order — Lara Trump told the Pod Force One podcast (hosted by Miranda Devine) that her father-in-law has a prepared speech on extraterrestrial life. She recounted that when she and Eric Trump asked him about the topic, he played coy, but she had heard he possesses “some speech that he has” ready to deliver “at the right time” regarding “maybe some sort of extraterrestrial life, so to speak.” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked about the claim later that day and responded that a Trump speech on aliens would be “news to me,” though she called the idea “very exciting.”
Together, these moments created a subtle but noticeable pattern. A major policy directive was followed by a symbolic post from the Department of Defense, and then reinforced by a matching tone from the White House when the existence of aliens.gov became public. No formal explanation accompanied any of it, but the consistency in messaging drew attention.
aliens.gov is a newly registered U.S. federal government domain with no prior ownership history. It was first registered on March 17, 2026, alongside a companion domain, alien.gov. Both domains share identical WHOIS records, name servers, and registrant details, and as of April 27, 2026, remain under the control of the U.S. government with no transfers or changes in registrant.
The registrations were first identified by an automated Bluesky account that tracks new .gov domains. The discovery was then reported by 404 Media, followed shortly by DefenseScoop, which obtained the White House email response from Anna Kelly the same day. From that point forward, the story spread rapidly across major outlets.
The domain was registered by the Executive Office of the President, commonly associated with the White House, through the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which manages the .gov domain system. Its timing has drawn attention, as it appeared roughly 25–26 days after President Trump’s declassification directive. This sequence has fueled speculation about the domain’s intended purpose.
Public discussion has centered on the idea that aliens.gov could eventually serve as a platform for releasing declassified materials related to UAP investigations or non-human intelligence.
While the domains are registered and reserved, no active web content has been deployed. Some monitoring has observed minor backend or DNS activity, but nothing publicly accessible has appeared. The official WHOIS records show that the registrant organization is the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which operates under the Department of Homeland Security. Administrative and technical contacts are listed under the .gov domain program with a physical address tied to CISA headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.
This all indicates that a public launch is imminent.
This momentum builds on several converging developments. In late March 2026, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL), Chair of the House Oversight Task Force on Declassification, formally demanded the release of 46 specific classified UAP video files from the Pentagon by April 14. The deadline passed without full compliance — the Pentagon cited a “clerical error” — prompting Luna to threaten subpoenas and direct pressure on Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.
Key lawmakers driving the push include Luna (who has publicly referenced interdimensional beings), Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO), and Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN). Burlison has highlighted the now-famous “UFO briefing that everybody wants” — a classified session describing a successful U.S. military/intelligence operation that deliberately summoned UAP activity, yielding strong multi-sensor data and eyewitness accounts from credible personnel.
President Trump has increasingly been positioned as the potential “Disclosure President.” Following his February 19 directive, he stated in April that the review had uncovered “many very interesting documents” that would be released “very, very soon.”
Yet in this climate of missed congressional deadlines, high-level signaling, and growing pressure from lawmakers openly discussing interdimensional possibilities, aliens.gov increasingly looks like a placeholder for something much larger — potentially the long-awaited public portal for declassified UAP materials that could reshape our understanding of non-human intelligence.
