Environmental Security

Uncontacted Indigenous Peoples Face Silent Genocide Amid Global Extraction Frenzy

By National Security Desk | October 27, 2025

Hidden from the world, nearly 200 uncontacted Indigenous groups fight for survival against illegal logging, mining, and drug traffickers—while governments look the other way. This crisis is a direct threat to America’s national security and the global climate.

From Brazil’s Amazon to Indonesia’s remote rainforests, some of the world’s most isolated Indigenous peoples are under siege. These communities, numbering at least 196 groups in 10 countries according to Survival International, face an existential threat from illegal logging, mining operations, drug traffickers, and infrastructural projects propelled by globalist interests that disregard national sovereignty and human dignity. Why Are Governments Turning a Blind Eye to This Crisis? This isn’t merely a humanitarian tragedy—it is a stark example of government failure driven by political convenience and economic greed. Uncontacted Indigenous peoples are politically marginalized; they do not vote or exert influence...

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