The Great Silence: Why No Major Power Wants to Reveal Everything It Knows About UAPs, EBEs, and Non-Human Technology
Editor's Note
Governments around the world have acknowledged investigating Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs). However, as of June 2026, no publicly verified evidence has demonstrated the existence of Extraterrestrial Biological Entities (EBEs) or confirmed that any government possesses recovered non-human technology.
This article examines a geopolitical and intelligence-based hypothesis: namely, why governments might be reluctant to disclose sensitive information if such evidence were ever obtained. The discussion focuses on strategic incentives, intelligence practices, and historical precedents rather than asserting the existence of extraterrestrial technology.
For decades, citizens, scientists, journalists, and lawmakers have asked the same question: if governments know something significant about Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs), why not simply disclose it?
The answer, if one exists, may have less to do with extraterrestrials and more to do with power.
The Problem Is Not Extraterrestrials. It Is Strategic Intelligence.
Imagine for a moment that the United States, China, Russia, France, the United Kingdom, or any other major power had accumulated substantial data over decades concerning anomalous aerial phenomena, unknown materials, or even technologies that appear to exceed conventional scientific explanations.
The popular question would be simple:
Why keep it secret?
The question that would concern national security planners is very different:
What would we reveal about ourselves by revealing what we know about them?
In the world of intelligence and military affairs, information rarely exists in isolation. Every piece of intelligence simultaneously reveals something about the capability that obtained it.
If a nation released extraordinarily detailed images of an unidentified object operating in near-Earth space, the world would learn more than just information about the object itself.
It would also learn about:
- The true resolution of surveillance satellites.
- The sensitivity of sensor networks.
- The coverage of tracking systems.
- Data-processing capabilities.
- Artificial intelligence analysis tools.
- Classified detection platforms.
In other words, disclosing information about UAPs could effectively disclose information about the state of the art in military intelligence.
And that carries immense strategic value.
The Intelligence Paradox
During the Cold War, both the United States and the Soviet Union followed an unwritten rule.
Sometimes it was preferable to remain silent about an extraordinary discovery than to reveal how it had been made.
When American intelligence observed Soviet activities through classified satellite systems, officials frequently avoided publicly using certain imagery because doing so would allow Moscow to estimate the capabilities of those systems.
The Soviet Union operated under the same logic.
That logic remains valid today.
Suppose a UAP were simultaneously detected by infrared satellites, air-defense radar networks, undersea sensor arrays, signals intelligence systems, and classified space-based platforms.
Releasing the complete dataset would be equivalent to handing competitors a detailed blueprint of national surveillance architecture.
For strategic adversaries, that information would be invaluable.
What Is Known, What Is Suspected, and What Remains Unproven
Before proceeding further, it is important to distinguish among established facts, informed suspicions, and unverified claims.
What Is Known
- Multiple governments have officially acknowledged investigating UAP reports.
- The U.S. Department of Defense, NASA, and other institutions have published reports discussing anomalous observations that remain unexplained.
- Advanced military sensors occasionally detect objects or signatures that cannot be immediately identified.
- Governments routinely classify information to protect intelligence sources, methods, and national security capabilities.
What Is Suspected
- Some governments may possess more extensive classified datasets than those released publicly.
- Certain anomalous observations could involve advanced technologies not yet fully understood by outside observers.
- Intelligence agencies may continue studying some cases long after public attention has faded.
What Remains Unproven
- The existence of Extraterrestrial Biological Entities (EBEs).
- The recovery of extraterrestrial spacecraft.
- The possession of non-human technology by any government.
- Successful reverse engineering of extraterrestrial systems.
The remainder of this article explores the strategic implications that could arise if any of the unproven possibilities were ever confirmed.
The Zero-Sum Game Between Transparency and National Security
Citizens often assume that transparency is inherently beneficial.
Intelligence agencies tend to view the issue differently.
Every disclosure carries a cost.
In a hypothetical scenario involving recovered non-human technology, governments would face a nearly impossible choice: be transparent with their citizens or preserve strategic advantages against their rivals.
History suggests that when these objectives conflict, states usually choose the latter.
Not necessarily because of a vast conspiracy.
But because institutional incentives naturally push decision-makers in that direction.
The Reverse Engineering Dilemma
There is a second, less discussed reason.
Suppose a nation recovered materials or devices whose underlying technology significantly exceeded current human capabilities.
Even if scientists did not fully understand how the technology worked, merely possessing it could represent a potential strategic advantage.
Disclosing its existence would effectively inform competitors:
"We have access to something that could transform energy production, propulsion, advanced materials, or computation."
The international response would be immediate.
Competitors would expand research programs.
Espionage efforts would intensify.
Defense budgets would grow.
A global technological race could emerge, resembling the nuclear competition of the twentieth century.
From a national security perspective, silence might appear entirely rational.
The Manhattan Project Precedent
History offers a revealing example.
Between 1942 and 1945, more than 100,000 people participated in the development of the atomic bomb.
Yet the project remained remarkably secret.
The objective was not merely to conceal the weapon itself.
It was to conceal the extent of scientific progress that had already been achieved.
When the United States used atomic weapons against Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the world learned two things simultaneously:
First, nuclear weapons were possible.
Second, the United States had achieved that breakthrough before anyone else.
The strategic surprise was enormous.
Now imagine a technology potentially hundreds or thousands of years beyond current science.
The pressure to maintain secrecy would likely be even greater.
China and the Logic of Silence
Public discussions often focus almost exclusively on the United States.
However, China would likely face precisely the same incentives.
If Beijing possessed extraordinary information regarding anomalous phenomena, revealing it could expose classified military capabilities, advanced space systems, surveillance infrastructure, and strategic research programs.
From a geopolitical perspective, silence would be entirely consistent with national interests.
The same would apply to Russia, India, or any major technological power.
The Alliance Problem
There is also an international dimension.
Intelligence agencies routinely cooperate with one another.
Many nations participate in multinational military and space surveillance networks.
If one government decided to release sensitive information gathered through collaborative efforts, it could jeopardize relationships built over decades.
As a result, even governments inclined toward greater openness may be constrained by international agreements and security commitments.
The Scientific Challenge
There is another explanation—one that is less conspiratorial and perhaps more likely.
What if governments possess extensive data but do not fully understand what they are observing?
In science, admitting uncertainty is often acceptable.
In national security, it is considerably more complicated.
Imagine a government publicly announcing:
"We have observed objects that appear to challenge our current understanding, but we do not know what they are."
The consequences could be unpredictable.
Financial markets might react.
Adversaries might interpret the statement as evidence of vulnerability.
Media speculation could rapidly outpace available facts.
For that reason, institutions often prefer to wait until they possess greater confidence in their conclusions.
The Economic Risk
Disclosure could also carry significant economic consequences.
If credible evidence emerged suggesting the existence of technologies capable of revolutionizing energy generation, transportation, manufacturing, or communications, entire industries could experience substantial disruption.
Governments are acutely aware of how uncertainty can affect economic stability.
Any disclosure process, if it occurred, would likely be gradual, controlled, and carefully managed.
The Cultural Dimension
There is also a profoundly human aspect.
Confirmation of non-human intelligence would have philosophical implications comparable to the intellectual revolutions associated with Copernicus, Darwin, and modern physics.
The consequences would extend far beyond science.
They would affect religion, politics, education, cultural identity, and humanity's perception of itself.
Governments are rarely eager to accelerate transformations of this magnitude.
The Real Secret
Perhaps the most important question is not whether UAPs, EBEs, or non-human technologies exist.
The more interesting question is what government behavior reveals about the nature of power in the twenty-first century.
Because even if undeniable evidence of non-human intelligence emerged tomorrow, governments would still confront the same fundamental equation:
Every revelation about the phenomenon reveals something about the observer.
And in a world increasingly defined by artificial intelligence, space surveillance, cyber operations, quantum technologies, and great-power competition, that information may be as valuable as the phenomenon itself.
Perhaps that is why the silence persists.
Not necessarily because governments are hiding extraterrestrials.
But because, on the geopolitical chessboard, revealing what you know inevitably reveals who you are, what you can see, and how far your capabilities truly extend.
And that may be the most closely guarded secret of all.
Disclosure Statement
This article discusses hypothetical scenarios involving UAPs, EBEs, and non-human technology as a framework for analyzing intelligence practices, secrecy, and geopolitical competition. The author makes no claim that extraterrestrial biological entities or recovered non-human technologies have been publicly verified. Readers should distinguish between documented government investigations of UAPs and speculative claims that remain unconfirmed.
The central argument of this article is not that governments possess extraterrestrial technology, but that the protection of intelligence sources, surveillance capabilities, and strategic advantages would create powerful incentives for secrecy if such discoveries were ever made.
Glossary
UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena)
The modern term adopted by governments and scientific organizations to describe aerial, maritime, or transmedium phenomena that cannot be immediately identified.
UFO (Unidentified Flying Object)
The older term traditionally used to describe unidentified objects observed in the sky.
EBE (Extraterrestrial Biological Entity)
A term frequently appearing in UFO literature and popular culture referring to a hypothetical non-human biological organism of extraterrestrial origin. No publicly verified evidence confirms the existence of EBEs.
Reverse Engineering
The process of analyzing an existing technology to understand how it functions and potentially reproduce it.
National Technical Means (NTM)
Satellite systems, radar networks, signals intelligence platforms, and other technologies used by governments to gather intelligence.
Signals Intelligence (SIGINT)
The collection and analysis of electronic communications and electromagnetic emissions.
Measurement and Signature Intelligence (MASINT)
Intelligence derived from technical signatures such as infrared emissions, radar returns, acoustic patterns, and other physical phenomena.
Five Eyes
An intelligence-sharing alliance among the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Strategic Deterrence
The use of military, technological, or informational capabilities to discourage adversaries from taking hostile actions.
Compartmentalization
A security practice whereby sensitive information is restricted to individuals with a specific need to know.
References
Government and Official Sources
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration (2023). NASA Independent Study Report on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena.
- United States Department of Defense (2024). Annual Report on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena.
- Office of the Director of National Intelligence (2022–2024). Annual UAP Reports to Congress.
- United States Congress. Congressional Hearings on UAPs (2022–2025).
Intelligence and National Security Literature
- Psychology of Intelligence Analysis. Center for the Study of Intelligence.
- The Craft of Intelligence.
- Spycraft.
- The Secret World.
- Skunk Works.
Nuclear Secrecy and Strategic Technology
- Manhattan Project archives and declassified records.
- The Making of the Atomic Bomb.
- Dark Sun.
Space Surveillance and Intelligence
- Spacepower Ascendant.
- The Future of War.
- RAND Corporation reports on emerging technologies and strategic competition.
- Center for Strategic and International Studies publications on space security and technological competition.
Scientific and Academic Sources
- Harvard University. Galileo Project publications.
- Avi Loeb. Research papers and public lectures on anomalous objects and interstellar visitors.
- Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies technical analyses and reports.
Geopolitical and Technology Competition
- Chip War.
- The New Map.
- The Kill Chain.
- The Hundred-Year Marathon.
- Destined for War.
Suggested Further Reading
For readers interested in the intersection of UAPs, intelligence operations, strategic technology, and great-power competition, the following works provide particularly valuable context:
- The Making of the Atomic Bomb
- Psychology of Intelligence Analysis
- Chip War
- The Secret World
- The Kill Chain



