AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office)

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  • 08 Dec 2025

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If you’ve ever wondered what happened after Project Blue Book shut down in 1969, here’s your answer.

The U.S. government didn’t stop tracking unusual objects. It just went quiet for a long time. Then, after decades of leaks, sightings, and shifting terminology, the Pentagon finally built a new office to handle the unknown.

That office is AARO, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. It’s the modern version of a very old idea. Which is to study the skies, the seas, and space… for things we can’t explain.

What AARO actually does

AARO sits inside the Department of Defense. It was formed in July 2022 to collect and analyze UAP data from across the military. Its job is to identify what’s real, what’s a threat, and what’s just noise.

That means studying radar traces, satellite readings, pilot videos, and classified sensor data. Basically anything that might show something moving where it shouldn’t. The “all-domain” part isn’t just a fancy name. It means they’re watching air, sea, land, and orbit.

The director, physicist Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, described the mission as “eliminating the stigma of reporting” while keeping analysis grounded in evidence. In plain English, they want pilots to speak up without being laughed out of the room, or reporting at all due to fear of losing their job.

Why AARO exists now

The office was created after a wave of military encounters went public through leaked Navy videos and congressional hearings. The Pentagon was tired of fragmented reporting and wanted a single point of truth.

It’s meant to replace confusion with structure. One database, one reporting chain, one group of analysts. Simple idea. Hard job.

The difference from the past? Transparency.

AARO publishes unclassified summaries and occasional videos through its public site. It’s a small thing, but compared to the secrecy of the 1950s, it’s progress.

What they’ve found so far

Officially, not much that screams “alien.” The early reports say most cases are drones, balloons, or sensor errors. Still, a handful remain unexplained. That’s the part that keeps the conversation alive.

Here’s what stands out:

  • Hundreds of new military reports since 2021.
  • A growing set of unexplained cases that don’t match known technology.
  • A clear policy shift toward destigmatizing pilot reports.

It’s not disclosure, but it’s more open than anything since Blue Book closed its files.

How AARO fits into the bigger story

AARO didn’t appear in a vacuum. It’s part of a long chain of official efforts: Project Sign, Project Grudge, Project Blue Book, and the Robertson Panel all paved the way.

It also works alongside NASA’s new UAP Research Study, which focuses on civilian science instead of military defense. Together, they cover both sides of the mystery… the classified and the public.

And if you want to explore the part that data alone can’t explain, step into High Strangeness. That’s where the bureaucratic story meets the truly weird one.

Explore Further

Join the Conversation

Curious what AARO isn’t telling the public? You’re not alone. Come talk about it in our Discord. Real discussion, no judgment, and a bit of tin foil.

What does AARO stand for?

All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. It studies unidentified objects across air, sea, land, and space.

Is AARO the same as Project Blue Book?

Not exactly. Blue Book focused on public reports and was shut down in 1969. AARO is military only, digital, and connected to Congress for oversight.

Does AARO believe in UFOs?

The office avoids that word entirely. It talks about “unidentified anomalous phenomena.” The language changed, but the mystery didn’t.

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