-Caveat Lector-

http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Rampart/2271/dreamland.html

The Psychology of Dreamland

How Secrecy is Destroying Public Faith in Government and Science

©1995 by Terry Hanson

Topographic maps of Groom Lake, Nevada, available for a modest fee from the
United States Geological Survey, show little more than scattered mountain
ranges, a dry lake bed, and assorted unimproved roads running this way and
that across the parched, high-desert terrain. The Las Vegas Sectional
Aeronautical Chart, published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration for navigation purposes, offers no indication of landing
strips or military facilities on or near the lake bed.

These maps are official cartographic lies, part of a coordinated strategy
among various federal agencies to deceive people about what the U.S.
government is doing out there in its sprawling, top-secret desert test range
northwest of Nellis Air Force Base. Yet even the most bungling and ill-
equipped spy can get a pretty good look at the clandestine Groom Lake
facilities by examining commercially available satellite photos. In sharp
contrast to U.S. government maps, the photos reveal an elaborate complex of
buildings and what is perhaps the world's longest runway cutting diagonally
across the western edge of the dry lake.

This suggests that the government's efforts at cartographic deception may be
aimed more at the American public than foreign intelligence agencies. If so,
it would not be unprecedented. CIA spy planes such as the U-2 and A-12,
designed at the legendary Lockheed Skunk Works, flew for years over the
Soviet Union, China and other foreign countries whose air-defense agencies
often knew quite well what was going on. It was the American public that was
successfully kept in the dark until these operations were exposed or
declassified.

Though the Cold War is over, the U.S. military, with the generous assistance
of our congressional representatives, continues to work very hard to keep us
ignorant of where many of our tax dollars go. By various estimates, tens of
billions of dollars disappear each year into so-called "black projects" whose
purposes we are not allowed to know. How this happens has been outlined by
Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Tim Weiner in Blank Check: The Pentagon's
Black Budget (New York: Warner Books, 1990).

One of the most widely propagated explanations for where much of this money
is vanishing is that it's being used to develop and fly stealthy, high-speed
aircraft such as the rumored "Aurora" hypersonic spy plane and the TR-3A
"Black Manta." (See, for example, the March 1993 Popular Science.)

Seldom mentioned in such accounts, however, are far more sensational R&D
projects said to employ technology that is quite literally out of this world.
Although these bizarre and troublesome reports clearly are difficult for
mainstream journalists to get their minds around, the evidence that
otherworldly projects are under way in the Nevada desert is at least as good,
and often much better, than the evidence for the much-publicized Aurora.
Aside from the screaming headlines of sensationalist grocery-store tabloids,
though, the subject is carefully avoided by major national newspapers and TV
networks. As every astute editor knows, news, to be taken seriously, must be
plausible—even if it's wrong.

History has demonstrated, however, that the truth has occasionally been
unbelievable. So set aside your heart-felt prejudices and incredulity for the
moment, and come along on an epistemological adventure into the tangled and
shadowy jungle of officially forbidden knowledge. Here, rational analysis can
no longer be considered a reliable guide. This is a realm ruled by the high
priests of the intelligence community who simply do not like us poking our
noses into their business, even though we're footing the bill for it. They
have posted life-threatening signs warning us not to take pictures, much less
set foot on their turf, and they've unleashed their wizards of disinformation
to confound our investigative progress. Any hopes for certainty must be left
behind at the outer boundaries of consensus reality, for we are about to
explore the enigma of Dreamland.

Closing Freedom Ridge

In October of 1993, nearly nine years after the Air Force illegally seized
some 89,000 acres of public land surrounding the high-security Groom Lake
test-flight facility in Nevada, the Air Force asked the Interior Department
to close the last publicly accessible sites from which the base is visible.
Included among them were two often-visited areas—White Sides Mountain and
Freedom Ridge—that the Air Force had missed in its initial land grab due,
apparently, to a surveying error.

As with most of what goes on around Groom Lake, also known as "Area 51" and
"Dreamland," the reasons for the Air Force's sudden need for heightened
secrecy were never made public. When hauled before a congressional committee
to explain its actions in late 1984, an Air Force spokesman would say only
that the Air Force did have the authority to take the land but would not
reveal the source of that authority or its reason for doing so in open
session.

Claims by a maverick, self-described physicist Robert Lazar, first televised
by Las Vegas CBS affiliate KLAS in March 1989, that government flight tests
of alien spacecraft were taking place at a secret facility south of Groom
Lake had attracted swarms of curious observers to the area, including a
number of television crews. Clearly this unwanted attention had proven
irritating to the Air Force which no doubt wishes to keep secret its stealthy
fleet of costly vehicles that have begun to exhibit, in the words of Aviation
Week & Space Technology, "exotic propulsion and aerodynamic schemes not fully
understood at this time."

Possibly the most thorough and well-documented account of the sensational
Robert Lazar affair is offered in Timothy Good's recent book, Alien Contact
(New York: William Morrow and Co., 1993). For dramatic impact, though, it's
hard to beat Lazar's own videotaped testimony about what he claims to have
witnessed at a secret facility near Papoose dry lake known as S-4. UFOs: The
Best Evidence, a series of TV reports produced by George Knapp for KLAS,
contains the original Lazar interviews and a copy can be obtained from the
UFO Audio-Video Clearinghouse (P.O. Box 342, Yucaipa, CA 92399), an
organization that exhibits a distinctly cavalier attitude toward intellectual-
property laws. Knapp later produced an extended, one-on-one interview with
Lazar for KLAS's On the Record, broadcast in December of 1989. (This, too,
can be garnered from the UFO A-V Clearinghouse.)

Stories of alien spacecraft in the hands of the U.S. military are legion and
date back at least to 1947 when Lt. Walter Haut, public information officer
at Roswell Army Air Field, issued a press release stating that the Army had
recovered a crashed flying saucer from the New Mexico desert. The release
made reporters around the world sit up and pay attention. Although the
Pentagon soon made a concerted effort to squelch this story, military
authorities were never quite able to kill it off.

The official cloud of denials and disinformation did manage to force the case
into epistemological limbo until 1978 when first-hand witnesses to the crash
recovery began to surface. Detailed accounts of these now legendary events
comprise the subject of several books including Crash at Corona by Stanton T.
Friedman and Don Berliner (New York: Paragon House, 1992) and UFO Crash at
Roswell by Kevin D. Randle and Donald R. Schmitt (New York: Avon Books,
1991).

Hard-headed skeptics who prefer to believe that such tales are merely
exercises in creative fiction targeted at a gullible public might have their
minds pried open a just crack by viewing videotaped interviews with first-
hand witnesses to the Roswell incident. Recollections of Roswell, Part II, a
videotape available from the non-profit Fund for UFO Research (P.O. Box 277,
Mt. Ranier, MD 20712), contains a compelling body of testimony from 26 of the
over 100 people who have now come forth to tell what they saw or know about
the affair. Why did they wait so long? Some of the witnesses say they were
told at the time by military personnel that they and members of their family
would be killed if they ever talked about what they had seen.

For those who place more faith in official government sources than
eyewitnesses, there are also thousands of pages of UFO-related documents
extracted from various reluctant branches of the U.S. military-intelligence
community with the help of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). These
documents, which indicate a large-scale, ongoing interest in UFOs by military-
intelligence authorities long after the Air Force closed its Project Blue
Book, were first published in 1984 in the book Clear Intent by Lawrence
Fawcett and Barry J. Greenwood (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1984).
The book has since been renamed as The UFO Coverup. Although government
censors deleted much information prior to releasing the requested documents,
a few relevant tidbits managed to sneak through. For example, a 1950 FBI memo
from agent Guy Hottel reported that he had been told by an Air Force
investigator of three flying saucers that had been recovered in the New
Mexico desert, complete with humanoid bodies.

Much of the American public—and nearly all of the American press—seems to
have swallowed the Air Force cover story that what had been recovered was
merely a weather balloon. Advisers to Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin
apparently did not. According to former KLAS-TV news reporter Bryan Gresh,
who visited the Soviet Union with George Knapp in March of 1993, Valeriy
Burdakov, once a scientist at the Moscow Aviation Institute, said he was told
by one of Stalin's top scientific advisers that the Soviet leader had asked
for an assessment of the Roswell UFO situation. Stalin was reportedly
informed by his advisers that the recovered UFO was real and not something
manufactured in the United States.

Recently, however, the General Accounting Office has begun to investigate
certain aspects of the Roswell case at the request of Rep. Steven Schiff (R-
N.M.). Schiff says he's been frustrated in his attempts to get more
information about the recovery operation from the Defense Department.
"Generally, I'm a skeptic about UFOs and alien beings, but there are
indications from the runaround that I got that whatever it was, it wasn't a
balloon. Apparently, it's another government coverup," he told the Washington
Post in January of 1994.

Faced with mounting evidence of a deception, the Air Force in September of
1994 finally admitted it had lied to the public about the Roswell events. In
place of the weather balloon cover story, however, it quickly introduced a
new explanation for the mysterious crash/recovery episode—a secret Project
Mogul balloon launched to detect Soviet nuclear-weapons tests.

The new Air Force account was duely reported by William J. Broad of The New
York Times in a story picked up by many other major daily newspapers around
the nation. In an obvious departure from basic standards of responsible
journalism, Broad defended the Air Force deception, characterizing it as "a
white lie" and dismissed the hundreds of military and civilian witnesses who
contradict the Air Force account as "flying-saucer fans and cover-up
theorists." Yet, a comparison of the new Air Force story with eyewitness
testimony leaves nearly as many unanswered questions as before, as various
critics were quick to demonstrate.


Supporting Testimony

Robert Lazar's fantastic story about his experiences reverse-engineering
alien gravity-propulsion hardware at S-4 is not without important gaps and
inconsistencies, although reporter/producer George Knapp, who has probably
spent more time cross-examining him than anyone, says he thinks Lazar may be
telling the truth about the essential facts. But even if Lazar turns out to
be a sophisticated con artist or government disinformation agent, Knapp, who
has spent years chasing this story, says other sources in the Las Vegas area
confirm that alien technology is being stored and tested near the Groom Lake
area.

"The story about alien technology in Nevada did not begin with Bob Lazar nor
does it end with him," Knapp told a Triad UFO-research conference held July
17, 1994, in the Seattle suburb of Bellevue. "Similar information has been
floating around in Nevada since before Bob Lazar was even born."

"UFO files bulge with testimony from former military men who say they have
seen disks or alien material, or even alien bodies, at various military
facilities around the country," Knapp said. "Residents of Lincoln and Nye
counties report seeing flying disks and other UFOs in and around these
military facilities since the early 1950s."

Knapp went on to recite a long list of mostly named sources, many of whom he
says he had spoken with directly, who claimed knowledge of alien materials
kept in Nevada. Some of these sources work for companies funded by the U.S.
government, so they're not about to go public as Bob Lazar did. Doing so
would mean loss of their incomes, jail time, or worse. Knapp said some of his
sources said they had been threatened after he had talked with them.

Knapp ended this list of testimonials by describing "a highly credible
source" from a "very prominent Nevada family" who has verifiable credentials
demonstrating he has worked on classified programs since the early 1950s.
(Unlike Bob Lazar, a more problematic character whose records and credentials
seem to have nearly disappeared, a fact Lazar attributes to his former
employers in the intelligence world.) Knapp said he stalked this source for
about two years before the source would even talk. But when he finally did,
the source related the following details: (1) alien technology has been
stored and tested at the base since the early 1950s; (2) research on the
technology is carried out by civilian contractors, paid in cash, which
provides an extra buffer to any security breaches; (3) in the beginning, the
people running the program did not know what the disks were made of and had
little success in trying to fly them, at least up until the 1960s; and (4) a
live alien had once been held by the military on the Nevada base. Knapp said
this source "has agreed to provide a videotape deposition to be released
after his death."

Knapp also said this source told him the alien hardware was brought to Nevada
in 1952 or 1953 from a military base in Ohio and was initially stored at a
Nevada facility known as Indian Springs. (Sources who claim knowledge of the
Roswell crash-recovery effort said the recovered material had been flown by
several bomber aircraft to Wright Field near Dayton, Ohio, now known as
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Former Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater has
said he once tried to get access to examine UFO evidence alleged to be kept
at Wright-Patterson but was turned away for lack of appropriate security
clearance.)

One source cited by Knapp claimed the military-intelligence community is
afraid to release such information because it might cause the "disintegration
of our social institutions" and that people might stop paying their taxes.

Whatever you make of such tales it may be hasty to simply write them off.
Even the aerospace trade publication Aviation Week & Space Technology,
acknowledged in its Oct. 1, 1990, issue that some very odd things are being
spotted in the skies over Nevada these days. A few key details apparently
were left out of the Aviation Week story, however. As described in Timothy
Good's Alien Contact, the author of the Aviation Week story reportedly later
told researcher William Hamilton III that the "exotic propulsion" systems
being tested could be some sort of antigravity system. Good also quotes an
FAA radar operator who said that whatever is being tested often hovers in one
place for up to fifteen minutes.

This is the age of the video handicam, not surprisingly, attempts have been
made to capture some of this unusual aerial activity on videotape. Robert
Lazar and others have made night-time videos of glowing objects moving around
in the Nevada sky. A far more compelling sighting was captured in broad
daylight and broadcast on Fox TV's Sightings: The UFO Report. The segment
shows a group of glowing objects hovering and looping rapidly around the sky
in a most unaircraftlike manner. Whatever they are, an F-16 fighter would be
no match for them.

Further evidence for the captured-alien-spaceship story comes from a
controversial document leaked anonymously, in the form of an undeveloped roll
of 35mm film, to movie director Jamie Shandera in December 1984. When
developed and printed, the film was found to contain images of a briefing
document seemingly prepared for then-incoming President Dwight D. Eisenhower
on behalf of President Truman. This document, bearing the date of 18 November
1952, is known among UFO researchers as the "MJ-12," or "Majestic 12,"
document. It describes the recovery of a crashed UFO and alien bodies in New
Mexico and says that a "covert analytical effort" organized by General Nathan
Twining and Dr. Vannevar Bush had been set up to investigate the matter.

Among the twelve members of the Majestic-12 group was noneother than the late
Harvard University astronomer, Dr. Donald Menzel. This was surprising to UFO
researchers because, in the 1950s and '60s, Menzel had been one of the most
outspoken critics of UFO research. He even wrote three anti-UFO books in an
attempt to debunk the subject. The idea that Menzel had maintained a covert
relationship with the U.S. intelligence community, and had even participated
in a top-level UFO research effort, was a piece of the puzzle many UFO
investigators concluded simply could not fit. Or could it?

A CIA panel convened in early 1953 had concluded that the continued reporting
of UFOs by the American media posed a threat to national security for various
reasons. The "Robertson Panel," as it is now known, recommended that the
continued reporting of UFOs should be actively discouraged through a covertly
exercised mass-media program of "training and debunking." One of the methods
discussed at the time was the use of high-profile scientific authorities to
explain away the phenomenon. (For an account of the Robertson Panel and its
affect on public opinion see The UFO Controversy in America by David M.
Jacobs, now a history professor at Temple University. The book was based on
his doctoral dissertation.)

Until the Majestic-12 document appeared, there was no solid evidence to
support the view that Menzel was playing the role of CIA disinformation
agent, even though his explanations for UFO sightings often seemed irrational
and inconsistent with the reported facts. It was only in the course of trying
to poke holes in the MJ-12 document that physicist and UFO researcher Stanton
Friedman discovered Menzel's hidden intelligence career, a fact apparently
unknown even to Menzel's wife. The story of this and other discoveries are
related in Friedman's Final Report on Operation Majestic 12, available from
the Fund for UFO Research.

Even within the UFO-research community, the authenticity of the MJ-12
document is hotly debated. Friedman, who conducted a thorough investigation
of the document with the help of a $16,000 grant from the Fund for UFO
Research, concluded there was no evidence indicating it could not be genuine.
Other investigators are more skeptical. As Friedman explained, though,
whoever prepared the MJ-12 document could only have done so with an insider's
knowledge of some very esoteric historical details—such as Menzel's
clandestine intelligence career, for example, and other minutia about White
House operations in the 1950s. In short, if the MJ-12 briefing document is
disinformation, it is highly "sophisticated" disinformation, almost certainly
prepared by someone within the intelligence community.

If the MJ-12 document is a fraud, it presents still another paradox in a
field already rich with them. Why would the U.S. intelligence community
prepare a fake document designed to convince us that undeniable evidence for
the existence of UFOs is in government hands when the Air Force had spent
many years attempting to convince the public that UFOs are mythological? One
suggested reason would be to suck civilian UFO investigators into accepting
the authenticity of MJ-12 and then obliterate their credibility with the
media and scientific world by exposing the document as a hoax. After all, a
similar thing seems to have occurred back in the 1950s following publication
of a book about a crashed UFO and alien bodies called Behind the Flying
Saucers written by Frank Scully (New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1950). Was
history about to repeat itself?

Perhaps the boys in U.S. counter-intelligence had decided UFO researchers
were getting a little too close for comfort and needed to be cut down a
notch. If so, however, this only provides further evidence that something
very important is being covered up by the intelligence community. Anyway you
look at this issue, something doesn't add up—unless, of course, the document
is genuine.

Spy Versus Spy

What is known about the CIA's involvement with the UFO controversy could by
now fill a substantial book but, for the purposes of this article, a few
choice examples will have to suffice. I've already mentioned the Robertson
Panel's recommendation that media reporting of UFO sightings should be
covertly suppressed, as well as the fascinating case of Donald Menzel's
secret life in the U.S. intelligence community. The Robertson Panel made
other recommendations as well. One of them was that the two major UFO
research groups existing at the time, the Aerial Phenomena Research
Organization (APRO) and Civilian Saucer Intelligence, should be "watched
because of their potentially great influence on mass thinking if widespread
sightings should occur."

The CIA's conclusion that UFO groups needed to be watched apparently was
taken to heart. One of the most influential private UFO research
organizations in the 1960s, the now-defunct National Investigations Committee
on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP), was literally crawling with CIA or former CIA
personnel. In fact, it is hard to escape the impression that NICAP was being
actively managed (or, more appropriately, mismanaged) by the CIA for its own
inscrutable purposes. The history of the NICAP-CIA connection was detailed by
researcher Todd Zechel in the January 1979 issue of Just Cause, the
newsletter of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy (CAUS), one of the organizations
that successfully sued the Agency under the Freedom of Information Act for
release of classified UFO-related documents.

Shortly after NICAP was founded by space-propulsion researcher T. Townsend
Brown in October 1956, at least two CIA covert agents worked their way into
key positions in the organization. Nicholas de Rochefort, an employee of the
CIA's Psychological Warfare Staff became vice-chairman of NICAP in late 1956.
The second was Bernard J.O. Carvalho, who became chairman of the group's
membership subcommittee. According to Zechel, Carvalho, among other things,
had been a cut-out (go between) man for CIA proprietary (privately owned)
companies such as Fairway Corporation, a charter airline used by CIA
executives.

In 1957, Roscoe Hillenkoetter, the CIA's original director (from 1947-50),
joined NICAP's Board of Governors. As stated earlier, the authenticity of the
MJ-12 briefing document is a subject of dispute, but it is nevertheless worth
noting that Hillenkoetter was listed in that document as a member of the
Majestic 12 UFO investigation team, along with Donald Menzel.

Another NICAP board member was Col. Joseph Bryan III who, from 1947-53 had
been the founder and original chief of the CIA's Psychological Warfare Staff.
In addition, former CIA briefing officer Karl Pflock was chairman of NICAP's
Washington, D.C., subcommittee during the late 1960s and early 1970s,
according to Zechel. Pflock, who has researched the Roswell case under a
grant from the non-profit Fund for UFO Research, was author of the theory
that the alleged Roswell UFO crash was really a secret Project Mogul balloon,
an idea the Air Force endorsed in its recent press release. Pflock vigorously
ridicules any suggestion that he has a hidden, CIA-inspired agenda. (See "I
was a Ufologist for the CIA..." UFO Magazine, Vol. 8, No. 6, 1993) There are
other CIA connections, as well, but I will not belabor the point.

NICAP began to run into financial problems following the release of the
University of Colorado UFO "study" which portrayed the potential for UFO
research in a very negative light. (More about this shortly.) Under the
tenure of president John L. Acuff, NICAP's financial difficulties grew
steadily worse, largely because most of the money the organization was
raising wound up in Acuff's pocket. Membership dropped off further after
Acuff sold NICAP's membership list to the Nazi Party. Prior to his NICAP
appointment, Acuff had been head of the Society of Photographic Scientists
and Engineers, whose membership included many Defense Department and CIA
photo analysts.

When NICAP's money finally ran out, Acuff resigned and was replaced by Alan
N. Hall, another retired CIA employee.

Todd Zechel summed it up best: "To come right out and say it was all a
conspiracy would either be leaping to conclusions or stating the obvious--
take your pick. But in the final analysis, the results speak for themselves.
And the results are that if [the CIA] wanted to destroy the leading anti-
secrecy organization of the 1960s, they couldn't have done a better job if
they'd tried...."

Weird Science

Readers who are old enough to remember the 1960s may dimly recall that, in
1966, when the Air Force had exhausted its credibility with the public over
the persistent UFO issue, the Secretary of Defense turned the matter over to
physicist Edward Condon at the University of Colorado. Like Donald Menzel,
Condon was a respected scientist with impressive credentials and a history of
secret military work. He had been director of the National Bureau of
Standards and president of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. At last, it seemed at the time, the UFO issue was to get its long-
overdue day in the court of science.

Soon after this investigation got started, however, Condon began to behave in
a most unscientific manner. Long before the results of his study were made
public, Condon started giving speeches ridiculing UFO witnesses and the
subject in general. Scientists both inside and outside the investigation team
found this behavior very upsetting—as they should have. But what really upset
insiders was the discovery of a memo from project coordinator Robert Low
indicating that the investigation planned to trick the public and scientific
community by focusing on the psychology and sociology of UFO witnesses,
rather than investigating the physical reality of the UFOs themselves.

This was the last straw for team psychologist David Saunders who leaked the
Low memo to the press. This action ultimately resulted in his dismissal by
Condon for "insubordination." Saunders, with reporter Roger Harkins, later
wrote a fascinating expose of the whole twisted affair called UFOs? Yes!
Where the Condon Committee Went Wrong (New York: Signet, 1968).

Many observers of the University of Colorado episode concluded the CIA was
orchestrating the entire peculiar affair to derail any serious scientific
attempt to study UFOs. As Saunders put it in a concluding chapter of UFOs?
Yes!, "The Central Intelligence Agency is around, everywhere." Direct,
completely unambiguous connections between the CIA and the Condon Commission
are difficult to establish, however. The Agency was clearly wary of revealing
its interest in UFOs. As Timothy Good pointed out in Above Top Secret (New
York: William Morrow, 1988), the CIA even took care that any work performed
by its National Photographic Interpretation Center for the Condon Commission
was not identified as being performed by the CIA.

(The latest controversy involving the CIA has to do with Dr. Bruce Maccabee,
an optical physicist with the Naval Surface Weapons Center. Maccabee is well
known in the civilian UFO research community for his technical analyses of
UFO photos and films. It recently came to light that Maccabee secretly had
been lecturing about UFOs at the CIA, a fact that set off alarms of paranoia
in certain quarters. This is probably a tempest in a teapot but it
demonstrates again an ongoing, clandestine interest in the UFO phenomenon by
the intelligence community.)

News That's Unfit to Print

Roger Harkins, then a reporter for the Boulder Daily Camera, had a particular
interest in documenting the CIA's suspected involvement with the Condon
Commission. One day he was asked by the Denver Associated Press (AP) Bureau
to file a story about an upcoming press conference by Jim and Coral Lorenzen
of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO), then an influential
private UFO-research group. Harkins decided to use the opportunity to smoke
out any CIA operatives he thought might be lurking in or around the Denver AP
Bureau by doing a story purposely linking the Agency with UFOs.

APRO's Jim Lorenzen provided Harkins with a seven-point rationale for the
CIA's interest in UFOs. Harkins then wrote his story around this indictment
of the CIA, assuming the Agency would want to suppress the story and that the
AP might just do it. He then filed the story with the AP and returned to the
Daily Camera's office to wait for it to come across on the teletype. He
waited all night and the rest of the next day and, just as he expected, the
story never appeared.

While this doesn't prove CIA involvement, it raises some interesting
questions in light of the Robertson Panel's recommendations. Those who think
the CIA couldn't, or wouldn't, suppress news about matters judged to have
national security implications have something to learn from authors Victor
Marchetti and John Marks. In their book The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence
(itself the subject of a famous CIA censorship effort), the authors made it
clear that planting CIA operatives in deep cover with major American media
organizations has been a long-established tradition at the Agency. More
common, perhaps, are the CIA's efforts to suppress news coverage through
pressure or friendly persuasion.

For most Americans, all they know is what they read in the newspapers or see
on TV, and if they don't read about or see UFO reports, then they effectively
cease to exist. Like government maps, newspapers and television broadcasts
are often mistaken for a faithful description of reality.

James McCampbell, an engineering physicist and author I interviewed in 1979
for a radio documentary broadcast on National Public Radio said he, too, had
concluded UFO news stories were being suppressed. In response to a question
about lack of American press coverage of sensational UFO-related developments
in France, McCampbell responded, "I think that the principle sources of
information in the media are controlled, at least by pressure from the
government, to keep information concerning UFOs out of general circulation. I
reach that conclusion when I compare the hundreds and hundreds of [UFO]
clippings I get from small-town newspapers throughout the United States, none
of which ever get covered in the wire services. The principle newspaper
editors are relying quite heavily on the wire services for information."

Paranoia? Well, consider the fact that some of the most sensational UFO flaps
in recent years were never mentioned by most of the nation's leading
newspapers. According to the U.S. government's own documents, retrieved under
the Freedom of Information Act, UFOs haunted major military bases across the
United States in 1975. Unusual lighted objects were seen by Air Force
personnel over bases in Maine, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, Florida, New
Mexico and elsewhere, only to escape again into the night. The Air Force
explanation for some of these events was that the objects were unidentified
helicopters. Even if you accept this explanation, one would think that a
story about unidentified helicopters flying at will over some our nation's
most sensitive nuclear-weapons facilities would be worth a few column inches
in The New York Times or the Washington Post. Yet, the story never surfaced
until the FOIA documents came out years later. Press coverage hasn't improved
much since 1975. An electronic search for articles about the triangle-shaped
UFO seen nightly by thousands of people over Belgium in 1990 turned up only
one tongue-in-cheek story in The Wall Street Journal. Across the Atlantic,
however, these sightings were being seriously reported in major European
publications such as the July 5, 1990, Paris Match. The sightings were even
officially confirmed by the Belgian Defense Minister who released radar tapes
from an F-16 fighter that had chased and tracked the mysterious object. The
unidentified craft also was videotaped by several ground observers. Yet,
unless you're a loyal devotee of tabloid TV or spent that time in Europe, you
probably don't know these events occurred.

A still more sensational series of UFO sightings took place over and around
Mexico City during and after the total solar eclipse of 1991. This being the
age of the video camcorder, many people recorded these UFOs on tape. Hundreds
of such videotapes, including footage from broadcast TV cameramen in Mexico
City, have been edited into two documentaries, Messengers of Destiny and
Masters of the Stars (available from Genesis III, Box 25962, Munds Park, AZ
86017). This was big news for months in Mexico, but The New York Times, along
with other major U.S. newspapers, apparently decided it was just not news
that was fit to print. An electronic search revealed not a single story about
these events in any of the indexed major U.S. newspapers.

The major TV networks haven't much to crow about, either. For example, on
October 1982, the PBS network broadcast The Case of the UFOs on its popular
NOVA science series. By any standards, it was a masterful piece of anti-UFO
propaganda, completely misrepresenting the most basic facts about the
subject, albeit in a seemingly objective style. Although many UFO researchers
were filmed for the program, nearly all of this footage wound up on the
cutting-room floor. Footage of the few researchers who were allowed to speak
was carefully edited to completely misrepresent their views. Their original
testimony in support of UFO research was presented to suggest that they
thought there was little evidence for the phenomenon.

Even worse, the nation's most famous and experienced UFO researcher who
founded the non-profit Center for UFO Studies, the late astronomer Dr. J.
Allen Hynek, was not allowed to speak on the program in defense of the
subject to which he had devoted much of his life. The heavily slanted program
left viewers with the impression that few scientists believe UFOs exist or
should be studied, an idea that is completely contradicted by polls and
surveys of scientific and engineering opinion.

In 1977, for example, 53 percent of 1,365 members of the American
Astronomical Society who responded to a survey from Stanford University
physicist Peter A. Sturrock, said they thought UFOs "certainly" or "probably"
should be investigated further. Surveys published by Industrial Research
magazine show similar support for UFO research among engineers and
scientists. Dozens of professional scientists are currently involved in UFO
research and hundreds more would certainly join them if federal funds were
available. Of course, you can't get federal money to study something the
government insists does not exist.

It later came to light that content decisions for the NOVA program had been
made on the advice of Kendrick Frazier, editor of The Skeptical Inquirer, the
mouthpiece for the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of
the Paranormal. The organization has waged a kind of holy war on UFO
researchers for years and could hardly be counted on for a balanced view of
the controversy.

However you account for all of this, the evidence shows that the national
media, for whatever reasons, have not been providing accurate coverage of
either the UFO phenomenon itself or those who study it. Again, it may be
jumping to conclusions to attribute this to government policies; perhaps
American journalists have simply decided that mass sightings of UFOs have
less public appeal than, say, traffic accidents, robberies, and
celebrities—to which they devote enormous time and resources. Even so,
suppression of UFO coverage was precisely the goal the CIA set out to achieve
in the early 1950s when media reports began to pose a national-security
problem for the U.S. government. Whether by design or dumb luck, they seem to
have gotten their wish.

Little Gray Men

If the military-intelligence community really has been studying alien
technology out there in the Nevada wasteland, it doesn't take much
imagination to come up with reasons why authorities would want to keep this
information out of circulation. Advanced technical knowledge has inescapable
political consequences, as those attempting to stop nuclear proliferation
know so well. Simply admitting that alien contact has taken place could open
up a virtual Pandora's box.

If authorities were to acknowledge that alien beings are here, then everyone
will quite reasonably conclude that they may have been here all along. The
religious and scientific establishments would suddenly find many of their
fundamental assumptions called into doubt. Human society is built upon belief
in the authority of its principle institutions. Undermine those beliefs and
the entire system starts to crumble, a phenomenon that has often occurred in
world history. When Robert Lazar was asked what would happen if the
technology he claims to have witnessed was released, he replied, "It would
change everything."

For most bureaucracies, the prime directive is self-preservation. Maintaining
the political and economic status quo has always been job one for the
military-intelligence community. If they discovered something they believed
would "change everything," releasing that information all at once could
totally upset the political apple cart. Thus, some observers of the UFO
controversy speculate that we're being slowly conditioned to the idea of
extraterrestrials through films, advertising campaigns and calculated leaks
of pertinent information, all designed to minimize culture shock.

Culture shock might be the least of the government's problems, however. If
aliens are here, the next question is, why are they here? This might not be
an easy question to answer but increasing numbers of UFO researchers have
concluded that thousands of people are being picked up, examined, and used in
strange genetic experiments. Here things really start to get spooky.

It almost doesn't matter whether any of this is true in the physical sense.
The point is that the evidence, whether genuine or fabricated, suggests to
scientists "who are familiar with it" (and that's a critical and often
overlooked qualification) that something very weird and shocking is going on.
Again, we're talking about "beliefs" here. If Americans start believing that
aliens are snatching people out of their homes and cars, and the authorities
can't do anything about it...well, it doesn't exactly enhance the public's
faith in the value of government.

Until fairly recently, even UFO researchers—who become accustomed to hearing
strange stories—were deeply skeptical about evidence that people were being
abducted. Much of this evidence was obtained under hypnosis, a technique that
many researchers felt was plagued with serious methodological pitfalls. They
wanted physical evidence.

One of the pioneers in this field is psychologist Leo Sprinkle, formerly a
professor at the University of Wyoming. Like most intellectual pioneers,
Sprinkle experienced some very tough times with his academic associates who
felt his conclusions were completely ludicrous.

Inconvenient though it may be, alleged abductions have long been a component
of the UFO phenomenon. The issue first burst into public consciousness in
1966 with the publication of The Interrupted Journey (New York: Berkley,
1966) by journalist John G. Fuller. The book told the now well-known story of
Betty and Barney Hill and their encounter with a UFO and its occupants on an
autumn night in New Hampshire. According to information obtained under
hypnosis, the Hills seemed to have been taken aboard the UFO and subjected to
some kind of examination by aliens.

Public interest in the subject was rekindled with the appearance in 1981 of
the best-selling book Missing Time (New York: Ballantine, 1981) by artist
Budd Hopkins. Hopkins took a much closer look into the phenomenon of alleged
alien abductions. He concluded that certain recurring patterns provided
support for the idea that abduction experiences were more than just random
psychological delusions.

A still more thorough exploration of the issue appeared in 1992 with the
publication of Secret Life (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992) by Temple
University history professor David M. Jacobs (author of The UFO Controversy
in America mentioned earlier). Now the issue was finally out of the closet.
Even the ultra-cautious New York Times, whose coverage of the UFO controversy
has been exceptionally sparse, recognized the abduction phenomenon with a
surprisingly open-minded story about Jacobs in its Oct. 28, 1992, edition.

Jacobs does not mince words when drawing conclusions about the abduction
phenomenon. "We've been invaded," he says in the final chapter of Secret
Life. "At present we can do little or nothing to stop it. The aliens have
powers and technology greatly in advance of ours, and that puts us at a
tremendous disadvantage in our ability to affect the phenomenon or gain some
control over it."

Before you dismiss Jacobs and others who share his assessment as crazy, you
might want to talk with John Mack, professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical
School. Mack says he became interested in the abduction phenomenon in January
of 1990 when an associate offered to introduce him to Budd Hopkins. Mack's
initial assessment when told of Hopkins' activities was, "He must be crazy."
After becoming involved with abduction cases himself, though, Mack now says
he regards the phenomenon as having tremendous scientific and cultural
importance. (His book about the phenomenon, Abduction: Human Encounters with
Aliens, was published in April 1994 by Charles Scribner's.)

As with Leo Sprinkle and David Jacobs before him, Mack has faced intense
criticism from some of his academic associates who are not at all happy with
what he has to say. "They've stretched the limits of mid-life crisis," he
joked at the Triad conference in July of 1994. "I'm 63. I thought mid-life
was, you know, 45-50, so they haven't really got a category for me yet."

Mack insists the experiences of abductees are genuine and says he is
continually astounded at the lengths to which educated people go to force-fit
them into some inappropriate conceptual framework. "There are new limits of
stupidity you encounter in this work," he said. "It's amazing to me the
extent to which people will go to avoid something new."

As far as the underlying cause, Mack agrees with many others who have
investigated different aspects of the UFO phenomenon over the past few
decades. "I don't see any explanation for this phenomenon other than that
there is some intelligence that we don't understand at work," he said.

"The resistance to accepting that there's other intelligences at work here is
not a scientific matter, it's a "political matter," he insisted. "It has to
do with who decides, in a particular culture at a particular time, what is
reality."

Mack said that the phenomenon is subtle and seems to be trying to correct our
self-destructive world view—the view held by large corporations who employ
science and technology to carve up the earth for material profit and power.
As Mack puts it, "What [the phenomenon] says is, "We are not masters of the
universe; we are not in control."

For people who encounter it, this is usually a terrifying notion, he
explained. "The terror [that the phenomenon inspires] is the terror of the
realization we are not in control."

Dr. Pierre Guerin, a high-ranking French astrophysicist who was employed by
the French space agency to study the UFO problem, expressed very similar
conclusions in 1979. "...what is quite certain is that the phenomenon is
active here, on our planet, and active here as Master. We can neither stop
the phenomenon nor comprehend it, and we are well aware that its power
totally defies not merely our technological possibilities but probably our
mental possibilities as well."

"Science...believes in [extraterrestrials] only on condition that they remain
at distances of many light-years from Earth," Guerin continued. "Or rather,
it believes that, if they do visit us they will not do it in the fashion in
which they are now doing it, —clandestinely, and with the dice loaded, making
it crystal-clear that they come from a transcendental level right outside of
and beyond the cozy, reassuring little framework into which our scientists
are so anxious to fit this whole new UFO scene with which we find ourselves
confronted."

Dr. Guerin agreed with Mack that this realization inspires terror in
government authorities. "Even the security forces of the various governments
(who, in our opinion, do know what the truth is about the reality of the
UFOs, but have no idea of how to go about tackling the problem) are wary of
making the matter public, because of their fear that by so doing, they might
not only cause a panic that could destabilize the entire globe, but also they
might trigger off a backlash from the intellectual and political elites, who
would refuse to give credence to the security services revelations."

War of the Worlds?

Assuming the U.S. government reached similar conclusions to those expressed
by Mack and Guerin, but much earlier due to its superior intelligence-
gathering resources, the seemingly contradictory behavior the government has
exhibited over the past 45 years begins to make sense. Seen from the
perspective of government, an organization whose entire purpose is control,
the UFO phenomenon presents a counterintelligence threat, not simply an
interesting scientific problem for open discussion in learned journals.

Science generally assumes that the phenomena it is studying do not "mind"
being studied. Such an assumption is unsafe in the world of
counterintelligence, where one must assume that potential opponents are aware
of your every move unless precautions are taken to disguise them. In fact, it
is standard technique to disseminate a cloud of false information, the
purpose of which is to deceive the opposing force. In order to deceive an
enemy, one must also deceive friends—i.e., the public. Thus, an elaborate
game of deception evolves between the opposing forces.

It has often been said that if the U.S. military-intelligence community had
undeniable proof for the existence of extraterrestrial visitors, they could
not possibly keep this information secret, since leaks would inevitably
occur. In fact, leaks do occur in any intelligence-gathering operation but
they don't necessarily compromise the secret because the leaks are typically
buried in a dense cloud of false and contradictory information. An
intelligence expert (or UFO investigator) is thus presented with the
formidable task of determining which among the vast sea of facts are reliable
and relevant.

In Anthony Cave Brown's classic history of British Intelligence efforts in
World War II, Bodyguard of Lies (New York: Harper & Row, 1975) the author
explains the basic method used by the elite corps of English aristocrats who
made up the powerful London Controlling Section (LCS): "Deception was the
province of the LCS, and its special assignment was to plant upon the enemy,
along the channels open to it through the Allied high command, hundreds,
perhaps thousands of splinters of information that, when assembled by the
enemy intelligence services, would form a plausible and acceptable—but
false—picture of Allied military intentions."

The plan worked extremely well, as history testifies. Even the massive D-Day
invasion force managed to reach Normandy without knowledge of German
intelligence. If the entire German intelligence force could not divine the
true intentions of the Allied forces, imagine the difficulty of attempting to
divine the intentions of an alien intelligence with technologies beyond our
conception. Imagine also the difficulties UFO researchers have faced in
attempting to penetrate the security veil of the U.S. intelligence community
which has had hundreds of billions of dollars at its disposal.

Were the members of Majestic 12 the equivalent of the British LCS? If the MJ-
12 document is genuine, it would appear so. Assuming this was the case, their
main problem would have been to gather UFO information clandestinely while
feigning disinterest so as not to alarm the public or tip off the perceived
opponent to its progress. In this light, the strange games played by Project
Blue Book, the mysterious machinations of CIA, the apparent suppression of
relevant news and information about the phenomenon, and the Condon
Commission's peculiar tricks suddenly come into sharper focus: they are all
consistent with a clandestinely planned and executed war of the worlds. Of
course, as German intelligence discovered in World War II, consistency and
truth may be different matters.

Darkness and Paranoia

In The Russians (New York: Times Books, 1983), Hedrick Smith's pre-glasnost
tale of life in the former Soviet Union, the author describes a society in
which the most wild and astounding rumors were given serious credence by the
populace because the official explanations were almost universally regarded
as lies. The price the Soviet government paid for suppression of information
was a population that was ready to believe "anything," so long as it did not
appear to come from an official source.

A similar situation has developed in the United States in regard to UFO
sightings. The constant background of sightings—reported now mainly by
regional newspapers, videotapes, specialized newsletters and books—has been
greeted in recent years only by official silence. Attempts to discover the
government's true attitude toward the phenomenon through the Freedom of
Information Act have been met by resistance and censorship justified on vague
national-security grounds. This absence of official information has fostered
an environment rich in rumors of the most bizarre and creative sort.

It's being said, for example, that the U.S. government has opened direct,
face-to-face negotiations with extraterrestrials, similar to what was
portrayed in Steven Spielberg's film Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Others claim the government has made a kind of Faustian pact with the aliens,
allowing them to use some of our people and farm animals for their genetic
experiments in return for saucer technology. (Robert Lazar claims to have
seen nine well-preserved alien spacecraft at S-4, a surprising number.)

Another story has it that a massive cooperative effort is underway between
the U.S. military-intelligence community and the aliens to construct vast
underground bases where horrific biomedical experiments are underway using
abducted street kids as guinea pigs! Others say the U.S. government is
planning to use its clandestine knowledge of alien technology to stage a fake
extraterrestrial invasion in an attempt to unify the world's people behind a
common but manufactured threat. Some say the whole captured-alien-hardware
story is just a highly elaborate cover for the wholesale looting of the
federal treasury by the corrupt and cynical secret government.

Many of the most bizarre and unsubstantiated rumors originate with self-
appointed "investigators" who seem to appear out of nowhere to suddenly
become superstars of the UFO lecture circuit. One of the more controversial
examples is John Lear, son of the Lear Jet's inventor and an admitted former
CIA employee. Lear claims his inside knowledge of the frightening UFO
situation originates with sources in the U.S. intelligence community. More
established and conservative UFO researchers say they are deeply suspicious
of Lear and claim he is effectively a government disinformation agent out to
undermine the movement's credibility. By making the entire subject sound as
ludicrous as possible, they say, the CIA's psychological warfare people can
ensure that most serious scientists and journalists will never come *near*
the subject, much less publicly admit any serious interest in it.

Whatever the case, paranoia runs very deep indeed. As reporter George Knapp
commented in July 1994, "We all have our share of loonies to deal with but
the [government] coverup angle attracts a special breed—dark, foreboding
conspiracy buffs who see evil tentacles around every corner: Secret treaties
between the government and the aliens—they give us technology; we give them
permission to conduct abductions—as if they need our permission; the
Trilateral Commission; the CFR; the Bilderbergers, the Illuminati; Neo Nazis;
the Rockefellers; One World Government—and UFOs. The gang's all here."

But as someone once observed, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they
really aren't out to get you. And therein lies the dilemma. After all, the
U.S. government clearly does lie about quite a few things and doesn't say
much at all about many others. As long as very odd things continue to happen
and authorities are unable or unwilling to tell us what they know, almost
anything begins to seem possible. Take a persistent and genuinely puzzling
phenomenon, add a half-dozen or so secrecy-obsessed government bureaucracies,
a scientific establishment that is fearful of pressing for an investigation,
throw in hundreds of well-meaning but financially strapped amateur
investigators, a handful of cynical con artists, a few literary opportunists,
some disinformation agents, and half a dozen egotistical scientists who
glibly dismiss events they've never taken time to study, and you've got the
perfect recipe for mass confusion.

Welcome to the troubled frontier of officially sanctioned knowledge. Whether
American society will ever move beyond this frontier depends entirely on
whether we can summon the courage to do so, for we must accept that the
answers to our questions may not be to our liking, nor to the liking of
powerful commercial and government interests.

Science, always a potentially subversive activity, began as an investigation
into the nature of experience conducted by a handful of brave intellectuals,
often in the face of brutally repressive church-state authorities. Things
haven't changed all that much in 350 years. As Herbert Foerstel explains in
Secret Science: Federal Control of American Science and Technology (Westport:
Praeger, 1993), the U.S. government has increasingly come to regard
scientific knowledge as both a threat to social stability and an opportunity
for increased geopolitical control. Foerstel reports that most scientific
research in the U.S. is now federally funded and most of this research is
conducted by the military whose obsession for secrecy is astounding. Over one
trillion classified documents are now in existence, Foerstel reports.

"Scientists have taken their place as an influential force in society, even
as the state has emerged as the chief sponsor and promoter of scientific
research," Foerstel writes. "As a result, scientists have compromised two of
the most cherished aspects of the scientific ethos; the freedom to pursue
knowledge unhampered by interference from authorities, and the freedom to
communicate their ideas without hindrance to the international community of
scientists to which they belong."

More fundamental than the question of scientific freedom, though, is the
question of whether we wish to live in an open society or in a society
controlled by military bureaucrats who determine, without oversight by our
elected officials, what we can and cannot know about what they're up to. It
would not be overstating matters to say that the choice is really between
totalitarianism and democracy, between a society of ignorant serfs and an
open society of informed citizens.

Etched on the main lobby wall of the Central Intelligence Agency in Langley,
Virginia, is this line from the Bible:

"And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free."

Perhaps the truth is that no terrifying mysteries lie within the tightly
guarded boundaries of Dreamland or anywhere else in the scattered network of
secret military facilities that dot our nation. Although there are now many
good reasons to doubt it, the U.S. intelligence community may be just as
mystified by the UFO phenomenon as are civilian researchers. Given the
stakes, though, the most disturbing lesson of this elaborate and long-running
controversy may be that American citizens have lost their right to find out.

--------------------------------------
Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com
Latest Update: Cydonia in 3-D
http://www.anomalous-images.com/Odyssey/Cydonia_3-d.html

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to