What would happen if the Urmah took unilateral control of Earth — what would the Federation do?

Short Answer

Arishah, a communications officer aboard the Urmah flagship Avyon One, has explicitly described two scenarios for an Urmah takeover of Earth. The first is an open intervention: neutralise all military hardware in hours, take over mass media, tell the population the blunt truth, then guide humanity toward a holistic society. The second is a covert operation: remain invisible while surgically removing dark influence and repurposing existing belief systems to guide rather than oppress. The Federation's response would almost certainly be war — Athena states directly that "if they act, they would start a full-scale war against the Federation." This is the primary reason the Urmah have not proceeded, despite having the capability and, by their own account, the ethical justification. Yet the Pfizer plant destruction of 2023 shows the Urmah are willing to take selective direct action when they judge it necessary, and Athena warns that "the patience of the cats is running out."


The Full Picture

Who the Urmah Are — and Why This Is Not a Hypothetical

Understanding why this question matters requires understanding who is asking it. The Urmah are not a minor race making symbolic protests from the margins. They are, by every account in the material, one of the two or three most powerful military forces in the galaxy.

Swaruu 9 describes them as the "dominant feline species" — alpha predators whose military might is feared even by the Alpha Draconians, a race of fifteen-metre fire-breathing space dragons (117). Mari provides the political scale: the Urmah have settlements across "countless constellations and planets," their own United Federation of Felines rivals the Galactic Federation itself in size, and Athena confirms this extends to "hundreds of thousands of solar systems under Urmah control" (403, S-164). They are not a rebel faction. They are an alternative galactic power structure.

Their military culture is not an incidental trait but a defining characteristic. Cubs are taught to fight from a young age. Tigers serve as the military backbone, cheetahs specialise as fighter pilots, and the entire civilisation operates under an honour-warrior ethic that treats fearlessness not as bravado but as a spiritual principle (S-120, S-164). Arishah himself — 3.23 metres tall, 317 kilograms — represents a species whose physical presence alone "makes your heart pound" in Mari's words (S-117).

Critically, they are Federation members — but on their own terms. Mari states they are "the only star race who have been able to forcefully twist the rules of the Galactic Federation in their favour when they joined," extracting a long list of conditions granting them "special liberty to basically do whatever they want" (S-164). The Federation accepted because it had no choice. As Arishah puts it: "They cannot get to us, they cannot manipulate us, and we simply no longer care" (S-117).

What Arishah Says He Would Do

In the second part of his interview with Mari, Arishah is asked directly: "What do you feel would be the optimal way to proceed regarding Earth if you could take over?" His answer outlines two distinct scenarios (S-118):

Scenario One — Open Intervention:

Remove all Federation forces from Earth's vicinity. Neutralise all terrestrial military hardware — "all of Earth's military would be neutralized and taken over in a matter of hours" — with no violence required, only rendering equipment useless through technology. Take over all mass media. Appear openly "with everyone looking at us as how and who we are" and tell the population "the blunt truth." Take temporary control of military and police forces to prevent chaos during the transition. Then guide humanity toward forming a holistic society, solving problems as they arise.

Scenario Two — Covert Guidance:

Take control but "remain mostly invisible to the people" while surgically removing dark influence. Co-opt existing belief systems, using them "to guide and not to oppress or to cause conflict and separation between people." Proceed gradually rather than through a single dramatic intervention.

Arishah acknowledges the fundamental problem with Scenario One himself: "that would be an alien invasion even if it is good intentions." The Urmah understand that imposing liberation from above reproduces the exact power dynamic they claim to oppose — a point the Federation itself uses as justification for non-intervention. This self-awareness distinguishes the Urmah position from simple militarism.

The Pfizer Test Case — What Happened When They Actually Did It

The Urmah have not limited themselves to hypotheticals. In 2023, they destroyed a Pfizer vaccine production facility using a tractor beam — controlled gravity disguised by media as a tornado. Athena reported it in real time: the Urmah "claimed the attack," the building was destroyed with no casualties, adjacent buildings were untouched, and it was a deliberate surgical strike against what they believed was material for a second pandemic phase (377).

This incident reveals several things about what unilateral Urmah action actually looks like in practice:

First, it was impulsive. Athena describes the Urmah as having "not planned far ahead in this case — just saw it and decided to hit it while they can" (377). This is consistent with the feline character described throughout the material — decisive, direct, and willing to act on ethical conviction without bureaucratic deliberation.

Second, the Federation was "very angry against Urmah for bypassing the Prime Directive" and "complained to Taygetans for not reporting event" (377). But the anger produced no consequences. No enforcement action was taken. No retaliation occurred. The Federation protested, and the Urmah ignored the protest — exactly as they have done for the duration of their membership.

Third, the scale was deliberately limited. A single building, not a campaign. The Urmah tested a boundary and found it held: the Federation complains but does not act against selective interventions by a race too powerful to confront.

Why They Haven't Done It — The Cost of Full-Scale Action

If the Urmah can destroy a pharmaceutical plant with impunity, why not proceed with Arishah's Scenario One? The material offers several interlocking answers.

The war threshold. Athena is unambiguous: "If they act, they would start a full-scale war against the Federation" (403). A selective strike on a single building is below the threshold that triggers military response. Neutralising all of Earth's military, removing Federation forces from the solar system, and taking over mass media is not. The distinction is between an irritation the Federation can absorb and an existential challenge it cannot ignore.

The enforcement uncertainty. As explored in earlier answers (Q32, Q34), nobody knows exactly what the Federation's upper levels would do if genuinely challenged. The anonymity of Saturn-level authority means the Urmah cannot calculate the response. Athena acknowledges that "the Urmah are far more prepared than the Federation itself" in a direct military confrontation, and "it is not in the Federation's best interest to engage the Urmah, let alone so close to their home planet of Vega" (403). But "not in their interest" does not mean "would not happen." The uncertainty itself is deterrent.

The liberation paradox. This is the deepest obstacle and the one the Urmah themselves recognise. Arishah explicitly frames Scenario One as "an alien invasion even if it is good intentions" (S-118). The Urmah have articulated throughout the material that the Federation's problem is precisely its top-down control — manufacturing experiences, manipulating perception, resetting civilisations at will. An Urmah takeover, however well-intentioned, would replace one form of imposed control with another. The population's consciousness would remain unchanged. As Yazhi has argued elsewhere, the door to genuine change opens only from inside — from the collective consciousness of the people on the surface (165).

The false flag problem. Arishah acknowledges in a later interview that direct intervention "would look like hostile invasion benefiting Cabal's false alien invasion plans" (S-198). The Cabal has been preparing Earth's population to fear alien contact for decades through media programming. An Urmah takeover — even a benevolent one — would hand the Cabal exactly the scenario they have been conditioning humanity to resist. The liberators would be perceived as invaders by the very population they came to free.

The collateral damage concern. When asked about the consequences of Urmah military action for Earth's population, Athena responds that protecting the Earth population "is the main reason, if not the only reason, why they do not proceed militarily, since the Federation does not intimidate them" (403). The Urmah are not restrained by fear of the Federation. They are restrained by concern for the very people they would be trying to help.

The information deficit. Arishah identifies a subtler constraint: "the main reason no intervention is lack of full understanding of what's going on" — the Federation's deliberate compartmentalisation means nobody fully understands the complete picture. The Urmah "will not intervene unless Federation and Cabal transgress Urmah ethical values and limits," and the Federation is "borderline with that" — having broken "countless interstellar treaties in past 50 years" (S-198). The intervention trigger exists, but the Urmah are waiting for the line to be clearly crossed rather than acting on suspicion.

The Taygeta Factor — Who Would Stand With Them

When asked directly whether Taygeta would stand with the Urmah if they took control of Earth, Athena's answer is immediate and unambiguous: "By law, following the cooperation treaty between Taygeta and Urmah, yes we would stand next to them as well as the rest of the civilizations in the Pleiades" (403).

This is not a minor detail. The cooperation treaty between Queen Alenym and King Ruhr of Avyon, renewed in 2023, binds Taygeta to support Urmah action (S-117). The Alcyone Council — representing all Pleiadian civilisations — would follow. The Engan warrior race, bound by treaty to reappear if war breaks out, would re-enter the theatre (403). This means an Urmah move would not be a unilateral action by a single race but the activation of an entire alliance network across the Pleiades and Lyra constellations.

Against them would stand the Federation's enforcement apparatus — primarily the Centauri-Alfratans, described as "the most subservient" Federation members who provide most enforcement in this solar system (S-249), plus whatever resources the anonymous upper levels could mobilise. The Urmah assess this matchup favourably for themselves. But the scale of the resulting conflict — a Pleiadian-Lyrian bloc versus the central Federation structure — would be unprecedented in recent galactic history.

The Urmah View of the Underlying Problem

What makes the Urmah position distinctive is not their military power but their analysis of why Earth is the way it is. Arishah's assessment cuts deeper than most:

"The Galactic Federation is not interested in liberating Earth because there is nothing to liberate it from other than from themselves. They are running the show, and a show it is" (S-118).

The Urmah reject the standard Federation narrative at every level. They believe Alfrata's liberation was "nothing but pantomime, a reset, a make-belief" — and that Earth's situation is the same pattern repeating (S-118). They believe the Federation "manifests and causes everything that is happening on Earth" by manipulating what people desire and then claiming to protect those manipulated desires (S-118). They believe the Great Expansion narrative itself may be fabricated — "humans in space definitely did not originate on planet Lyra. They have been all over this galaxy forever" (S-117).

This analysis produces a distinctive ethical position. Unlike the Andromedans and Arcturians who refrain from action out of spiritual pacifism and karma avoidance, the Urmah refrain from action despite believing they are ethically justified — because they recognise that the method of liberation matters as much as the fact of it. Arishah's two scenarios represent an attempt to solve a problem that may be structurally unsolvable from the outside: how do you free beings whose consciousness creates their prison?

Their compromise — the current situation — is to remain visibly present in orbit, take selective direct action when they judge it necessary (the Pfizer case), resist Federation pressure through sheer stubbornness, and support disclosure through channels like Mari's. As Athena summarises: "With the Urmah presence here, I do not see it possible for Earth to slip beyond a certain point into the regressive, because the patience of the cats is running out" (403).

The word "patience" carries weight. It implies a threshold that has not yet been reached but is approaching. Athena warns that the Urmah "do not give empty warnings — they inform what they will do, they do not threaten, they just do, and we see what they do, not what they promise. They should take the Urmah very seriously" (403). The Federation, characteristically, has responded to Urmah warnings with silence — "no response at all" (403).

What Would Actually Happen — Four Possible Outcomes

Drawing together everything the speakers have said, the material suggests four possible outcomes if the Urmah crossed the threshold from selective action to full intervention:

1. The Federation backs down. Given the military calculus — the Urmah-Pleiadian-Lyrian alliance versus a Federation whose enforcement relies on subservient member races rather than a standing army — this is plausible. The Federation has no interest in engaging the Urmah near Vega, and its upper levels may calculate that Earth is not worth a galactic war. Earth would then face the challenge Arishah describes: transitioning to a holistic society under alien guidance, with all the paradoxes that entails.

2. Limited war followed by negotiated partition. The Federation cannot afford to lose Earth (which it has invested millennia in controlling) but cannot afford a full-scale war with the Urmah either. A negotiated compromise — reduced Federation control, increased Urmah/Pleiadian oversight, some form of shared governance — might emerge from a brief confrontation.

3. Full-scale galactic conflict. If the anonymous upper levels of the Federation view an Urmah intervention as an unacceptable precedent that would encourage other races to defy central authority, the response could escalate beyond anything either side initially intended. This is the scenario Athena warns against and the primary deterrent the material identifies.

4. Nothing changes on the surface. Even if the Urmah prevailed militarily, the material's own metaphysical framework suggests that removing the external control structure does not automatically change the collective consciousness that sustains it. As Yazhi has argued, "corrupt Federation exists because we obviously made it collectively" (402). An Urmah victory that left human consciousness unchanged would merely create a vacuum that the same patterns would fill — perhaps under different names.

The Urmah appear to understand this. It is why Arishah's Scenario Two — covert guidance through existing systems — exists as an alternative to Scenario One's dramatic intervention. And it is why, despite their capability and their stated willingness, the 300-kilogram armoured cats in orbit continue to watch, wait, and occasionally destroy a pharmaceutical plant when their patience wears thin enough.


Evolution of Understanding Across Speakers

Swaruu 9 (2020): Provides the original Urmah description — emphasises their military culture, Alpha Draco fear of them, and Federation membership, but frames them as allies rather than potential liberators (117).

Athena (2023): The most operationally specific voice. Confirms Taygeta would stand with Urmah by treaty, quantifies their military advantage, warns the Federation "should take the Urmah very seriously," but consistently identifies the risk of full-scale war as the primary deterrent. Acknowledges Urmah patience is running out (403).

Arishah (2023): The only Urmah voice in the material. Provides the two takeover scenarios with startling specificity — including the assessment that all Earth military could be neutralised in hours. Simultaneously recognises the alien invasion paradox in his own proposal. His analysis of the Federation is the bluntest in the entire material: there is nothing to liberate Earth from except the Federation itself (S-117, S-118, S-120).

Mari (2023): Provides structural context for Urmah power — the scale of their Federation, their special terms of membership, the political dynamics that make them uniquely positioned to challenge central authority. Notes the Federation deliberately omits the Urmah from Earth's public narrative because "the Cabal and their Federation controllers hide, cancel, and omit everything they cannot control" (S-117, S-164).


Key Transcript References

| # | Title | Key Relevance |

|---|-------|--------------|

| 117 | Extraterrestrial Races: Urmahs — Feline Race | Original Urmah description: military culture, Alpha Draco fear, Federation membership |

| 377 | Pfizer Factory Tornado | Urmah tractor beam destroyed Pfizer plant — the real test case for selective action |

| 403 | Athena — Compilation of Questions | "Full-scale war" warning, Taygeta treaty commitment, Urmah military readiness, "patience running out" |

| 443 | Chatting with Yazhi — September 2024 | Fleet militarisation, Alcyone-class dreadnoughts arriving, "accept getting militarized or get eaten" |

| S-117 | Arishah Interview Part 1 | Urmah-Federation relationship: disobedient, ethics superior, military might rivals Federation |

| S-118 | Arishah Interview Part 2 | TWO SCENARIOS for Urmah takeover — open intervention and covert guidance; Federation runs Earth |

| S-120 | Urmah Ari Second Interview — Ethics | Fearless warrior philosophy, apex predator mentality, "prison planet run by other prisoners" |

| S-155 | Space Pirates — Federation | Federation uses pirate proxies against independent races, cannot directly confront Urmah |

| S-164 | The Urmah Part 2 | Urmah Federation scale, special membership terms, "only race to twist GF rules in their favour" |

| S-194 | Arishah 3rd Interview Part 2 | Service-to-others critique, strong ego philosophy, Etorthan mind invasion resistance |

| S-198 | Arishah Interview Part 3 | Broken treaties, compartmentalisation suspicions, never trusted Federation |

| S-249 | Conspiracy Theories | Centauri-Alfratans as primary Federation enforcers in this solar system |