Declassified: The Pentagon's Secret Foray into Wormholes and Stargates

A declassified DIA document confirms the Pentagon funded research into 'Traversable Wormholes, Stargates, and Negative Energy.' Part of the secretive AATIP UFO program, the paper shows the government was seriously investigating theoretical tech far beyond our current capabilities.

For decades, the concepts of warp drives, stargates, and traversable wormholes have been the cherished domain of science fiction, most notably in the universe of Star Trek. Yet, in a quiet disclosure that blurred the lines between fiction and national security, declassified documents revealed that the United States government was taking these very ideas seriously. The agency behind the inquiry wasn't a futuristic Starfleet Command, but the very real Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA).

What the DIA Declassified

Through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, a Defense Intelligence Reference Document (DIRD) surfaced with a title straight from a science fiction writer's pitch meeting: "Traversable Wormholes, Stargates, and Negative Energy." Authored in 2010 by physicist Eric W. Davis, Ph.D., the paper was commissioned under a much-discussed but little-understood Pentagon initiative: the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, or AATIP.

A Peek Inside AATIP

AATIP was the secretive, $22 million program tasked with investigating what the military now calls Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs), but what most of us still call UFOs. The fact that a theoretical physics paper on wormholes was funded under its umbrella is telling. It suggests the program's scope wasn't just limited to tracking mysterious objects in our skies; it also included exploring the radical, paradigm-shifting technologies that might explain them.

The Theoretical Frontier

It's crucial to understand that Dr. Davis's paper was not a blueprint for building a stargate in the Nevada desert. Rather, it was a comprehensive survey of the theoretical physics involved. The paper delves into the mind-bending requirements for creating a stable, traversable wormhole—a shortcut through spacetime. It explores the necessity of concepts like negative energy density and so-called "exotic matter," substances with properties not found in any known material on Earth. The goal was not to engineer a device, but to understand the physical possibility, however remote.

The Physicist on the Case

Dr. Eric W. Davis was no stranger to government contracts for "out-there" physics. Prior to his work for the DIA, he authored a 2004 study for the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory titled "Teleportation Physics Study." His work shows a consistent pattern: the Department of Defense has a long-standing, quiet interest in assessing the feasibility of technologies that could fundamentally alter defense and transportation.

From Fiction to Threat Assessment

So why would the Pentagon spend taxpayer money on what seems like a science fiction indulgence? The answer lies in the core mission of intelligence: to leave no stone unturned. For an agency like the DIA, the primary concern is strategic surprise. The greatest threat is not one you can anticipate, but one you can't even conceive of. By funding theoretical research into concepts like wormholes, the DIA ensures it understands the absolute limits of known physics. It's an attempt to anticipate the technologies of not just the next decade, but the next century, ensuring that if such a breakthrough were ever possible, the United States would not be the last to know.

Sources

Loading more posts...