Pentagon Creates Software for UFO Reports—Finally
The Pentagon's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) is shopping for a custom case management system to handle UFO reports. Translation: they need better tools to track what people are actually reporting.
This isn't surprising. AARO has been drowning in submissions since Congress pressured the Defense Department to take UAPs seriously. But their existing system—basically inherited chaos—can't handle the volume or keep sensitive reports properly contained.
The new software would centralize sightings, let investigators cross-reference incidents, and control who sees what. Standard practice for any serious investigation. The fact they're just now getting around to it tells you how far behind the curve the Pentagon has been.
AARO has already released one report saying there's no evidence of extraterrestrial spacecraft operating over U.S. airspace. But they've also acknowledged pilots and military personnel have reported things they can't identify. The new system would help separate actual anomalies from sensor glitches and misidentifications.
The office hasn't announced timelines or costs. Expect bureaucratic delays.
KEY POINT: The Pentagon is finally treating UFO reports like actual intelligence data instead of a filing cabinet in someone's basement. Whether that leads anywhere depends on whether they actually staff AARO properly—which they haven't.
Source: DefenseScoop
Status: Developing—no cost or timeline announced.

