The Pentagon allows new offices to investigate UFOs (credit: Getty)

The question of whether aliens have come to visit Earth is under official American investigation.

The new office, called the All Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), “to detect, identify and attribute objects of interest and, if necessary, mitigate relevant threats to operations and national security . Created. Security.”

AARO will be the central hub for collecting, investigating, and managing UFO sightings around the world.

It covers the entire US Department of Defense, including the Army, Navy, and Air Force.

So if an incident like the one in 2019 occurs, that is, if the USS Omaha is surrounded by 14 UFOs flying at 160 mph, AARO will be involved in the investigation.

Video footage provided by the US Department of Defense on April 28, 2020 is unclassified video taken by Navy pilots in circulation over many years, showing their interaction with “unidentified aerial phenomena.” (Credit: Getty)

According to a Pentagon statement, they will pay close attention to “abnormal, unidentified space, aircraft, underwater objects, and in-between.”

If you don’t know what a “transmedia” object is, it’s a ship that can move seamlessly between land, air and sea.

AARO will be led by a new director, Dr. Sean M. Kirk Patrick, who most recently served as Chief Scientist at the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Space and Missile Information Center.

Global interest in UFOs has grown in recent years, with the formation of AARO beginning last year after the Pentagon released a report detailing more than 140 recorded UFO sightings.

Unfortunately, they concluded that none of them had evidence of alien activity.

UFOs hover over alien visitors.  3D rendering.

Have aliens already visited Earth? It’s not nice. (Credit: Getty)

And perhaps the Pentagon is a little nervous about other countries where the US government is developing more advanced aerospace technology, not concerns about approved foreign visitors.