Disclosure Director Claims the U.S. Government May Have Learned How To Lure UAPs
For decades, the official public position of the United States government was simple: UFOs either did not exist, were misunderstood natural phenomena, or posed no serious national security concern.
That wall has now completely collapsed. Following years of Pentagon confirmations, Navy videos, congressional hearings, whistleblower testimony, and declassified programs, the conversation surrounding Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, now officially referred to as UAPs, has shifted from ridicule to strategy. And according to growing claims emerging from the disclosure community, some highly classified government programs may no longer simply be observing the phenomenon.
They may be attempting to attract it.
The theory sounds like science fiction at first glance, but it has become one of the most intensely discussed subjects inside the modern UAP disclosure movement: the possibility that the U.S. military and intelligence apparatus discovered certain technological or electromagnetic signatures appear to draw UAPs into specific areas, allowing them to be tracked, studied, and potentially even captured.
The topic surged again this week after renewed discussion surrounding testimony and analysis tied to alleged “legacy retrieval programs,” advanced radar systems, and historic nuclear facility encounters. Supporters of the theory argue that patterns observed over nearly 80 years are too consistent to ignore.
The Nuclear Connection
One of the strongest recurring patterns in documented UAP history is the phenomenon’s apparent fascination with nuclear technology. From the Trinity test site in 1945 to repeated sightings near missile silos, nuclear submarines, aircraft carriers, and atomic research facilities, reports involving UAPs and nuclear assets stretch across generations of military testimony.
Former Air Force officers stationed at nuclear missile facilities have publicly claimed unidentified craft interfered with launch systems during Cold War incidents. Similar reports have surfaced around nuclear-powered carrier groups and strategic weapons sites. Researchers inside the disclosure movement believe this pattern may have eventually led classified programs to a startling realization, UAPs may actively monitor advanced nuclear activity.
According to the theory, military programs allegedly began experimenting with what some insiders describe as “honey pot” operations, deliberately activating specific electromagnetic signatures, radar systems, or nuclear simulations in isolated locations to see whether UAPs would appear. Critics dismiss the claims as speculation layered on top of already controversial UAP narratives. But supporters argue the correlation between nuclear technology and sightings has become too statistically overwhelming to ignore.
The Alleged “Trap” Mechanisms
The most controversial part of the theory involves claims that the government may possess methods capable of disrupting or forcing down UAP craft.
Importantly, there is no verified public evidence proving the United States has successfully captured extraterrestrial vehicles. However, within disclosure circles and among some whistleblowers, a persistent belief exists that advanced electronic warfare systems, not missiles, may be capable of interfering with whatever propulsion systems these objects use.
The speculation centers around directed energy systems, powerful radar arrays, microwave emissions, and exotic electromagnetic effects. The theory suggests that if UAP propulsion relies on manipulating gravity, electromagnetic fields, or spacetime distortions, then sufficiently powerful energy pulses could destabilize those systems temporarily.
Some researchers have even revisited the Roswell incident through this lens, arguing early military radar systems may have accidentally interfered with an unidentified craft during the late 1940s.
Again, none of these claims have been verified publicly by the Pentagon. But what makes the story fascinating is that fragments of the underlying technology absolutely do exist in reality. The U.S. military already operates sophisticated electronic warfare systems, high powered microwave weapons, advanced radar grids, and space based tracking systems capable of monitoring objects entering Earth’s atmosphere. That reality keeps the broader theory alive.
The Tic Tac Incident Changed Everything
Much of the modern discussion surrounding UAP tracking accelerated after the now-famous 2004 USS Nimitz “Tic Tac” encounters. Navy pilots and advanced radar operators observed objects performing maneuvers that appeared impossible by known aerospace standards. The objects reportedly descended tens of thousands of feet almost instantly, accelerated without visible propulsion, and reacted intelligently to military aircraft. What caught the attention of researchers was not just the object itself, but the timing.
The USS Nimitz strike group was reportedly operating some of the most advanced radar and sensor systems ever deployed at sea during those exercises. Some analysts within the disclosure movement believe the electromagnetic environment created by those systems may have unintentionally attracted the objects. Others go further, speculating the encounter may not have been accidental at all. That claim remains entirely unproven, but it reflects the growing divide between the official public narrative and the increasingly explosive allegations emerging from former intelligence personnel and aerospace insiders.
The Consciousness Question
Perhaps the strangest aspect of the entire discussion involves claims that UAPs may respond not only to technology, but to human consciousness itself. This idea has roots in government funded research tied to the now-infamous Skinwalker Ranch investigations and the Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications Program (AAWSAP).
Researchers associated with those programs explored what became known as the “hitchhiker effect” reports that UAP phenomena sometimes appeared to react differently depending on the emotional state, awareness, or intent of observers. Some studies allegedly explored whether meditation, focused attention, or altered psychological states correlated with increased anomalous activity.
To mainstream scientists, these claims remain deeply controversial and unproven. But the fact that portions of the U.S. government reportedly spent taxpayer money investigating such possibilities continues to fuel public fascination and suspicion surrounding what classified programs may actually know.
The Bigger Question Facing Disclosure
The deeper issue now confronting the disclosure movement is no longer simply whether UAPs exist. That debate is effectively over. The Pentagon, NASA, military pilots, intelligence officials, and bipartisan members of Congress have all acknowledged the existence of objects displaying extraordinary characteristics that remain unexplained.
The real question becoming increasingly difficult to ignore is whether governments have quietly progressed far beyond simple observation. If even a fraction of the allegations surrounding retrieval programs, electromagnetic tracking, or active lure operations are true, then the implications are staggering. It would mean governments may have spent decades attempting not only to study the phenomenon, but potentially interact with it directly. And if that is true, the biggest story in human history may no longer be whether we are alone.
It may be how long governments have already known we are not.
Sources
Department of Defense AARO UAP Reports
NASA UAP Independent Study Report
Congressional Hearing on UAPs and David Grusch Testimony






































