http://www.latimes.com/la-mag-april052009-backstory,0,786384.story

The Road to Area 51
After decades of denying the facility's existence, five former insiders 
speak out

by Annie Jacobsen
Los Angeles Times



Area 51. It's the most famous military institution in the world that 
doesn't officially exist. If it did, it would be found about 100 miles 
outside Las Vegas in Nevada's high desert, tucked between an Air Force 
base and an abandoned nuclear testing ground. Then again, maybe not— the 
U.S. government refuses to say. You can't drive anywhere close to it, 
and until recently, the airspace overhead was restricted—all the way to 
outer space. Any mention of Area 51 gets redacted from official 
documents, even those that have been declassified for decades.

It has become the holy grail for conspiracy theorists, with UFOlogists 
positing that the Pentagon reverse engineers flying saucers and keeps 
extraterrestrial beings stored in freezers. Urban legend has it that 
Area 51 is connected by underground tunnels and trains to other secret 
facilities around the country. In 2001, Katie Couric told Today Show 
audiences that 7 percent of Americans doubt the moon landing 
happened—that it was staged in the Nevada desert. Millions of X-Files 
fans believe the truth may be "out there," but more likely it's 
concealed inside Area 51's Strangelove-esque hangars—buildings that, 
though confirmed by Google Earth, the government refuses to acknowledge.

The problem is the myths of Area 51 are hard to dispute if no one can 
speak on the record about what actually happened there. Well, now, for 
the first time, someone is ready to talk—in fact, five men are, and 
their stories rival the most outrageous of rumors. Colonel Hugh "Slip" 
Slater, 87, was commander of the Area 51 base in the 1960s. Edward 
Lovick, 90, featured in "What Plane?" in LA's March issue, spent three 
decades radar testing some of the world's most famous aircraft 
(including the U-2, the A-12 OXCART and the F-117). Kenneth Collins, 80, 
a CIA experimental test pilot, was given the silver star. Thornton 
"T.D." Barnes, 72, was an Area 51 special-projects engineer. And Harry 
Martin, 77, was one of the men in charge of the base's 
half-million-gallon monthly supply of spy-plane fuels. Here are a few of 
their best stories—for the record:

On May 24, 1963, Collins flew out of Area 51's restricted airspace in a 
top-secret spy plane code-named OXCART, built by Lockheed Aircraft 
Corporation. He was flying over Utah when the aircraft pitched, flipped 
and headed toward a crash. He ejected into a field of weeds.

Almost 46 years later, in late fall of 2008, sitting in a coffee shop in 
the San Fernando Valley, Collins remembers that day with the kind of 
clarity the threat of a national security breach evokes: "Three guys 
came driving toward me in a pickup. I saw they had the aircraft canopy 
in the back. They offered to take me to my plane." Until that moment, no 
civilian without a top-secret security clearance had ever laid eyes on 
the airplane Collins was flying. "I told them not to go near the 
aircraft. I said it had a nuclear weapon on-board." The story fit right 
into the Cold War backdrop of the day, as many atomic tests took place 
in Nevada. Spooked, the men drove Collins to the local highway patrol. 
The CIA disguised the accident as involving a generic Air Force plane, 
the F-105, which is how the event is still listed in official records.

As for the guys who picked him up, they were tracked down and told to 
sign national security nondisclosures. As part of Collins' own 
debriefing, the CIA asked the decorated pilot to take truth serum. "They 
wanted to see if there was anything I'd for-gotten about the events 
leading up to the crash." The Sodium Pento-thal experience went without 
a hitch—except for the reaction of his wife, Jane.

"Late Sunday, three CIA agents brought me home. One drove my car; the 
other two carried me inside and laid me down on the couch. I was loopy 
from the drugs. They handed Jane the car keys and left without saying a 
word." The only conclusion she could draw was that her husband had gone 
out and gotten drunk. "Boy, was she mad," says Collins with a chuckle.

At the time of Collins' accident, CIA pilots had been flying spy planes 
in and out of Area 51 for eight years, with the express mission of 
providing the intelligence to prevent nuclear war. Aerial reconnaissance 
was a major part of the CIA's preemptive efforts, while the rest of 
America built bomb shelters and hoped for the best.

"It wasn't always called Area 51," says Lovick, the physicist who 
developed stealth technology. His boss, legendary aircraft designer 
Clarence L. "Kelly" Johnson, called the place Paradise Ranch to entice 
men to leave their families and "rough it" out in the Nevada desert in 
the name of science and the fight against the evil empire. "Test pilot 
Tony LeVier found the place by flying over it," says Lovick. "It was a 
lake bed called Groom Lake, selected for testing because it was flat and 
far from anything. It was kept secret because the CIA tested U-2s there."

When Frances Gary Powers was shot down over Sverdlovsk, Russia, in 1960, 
the U-2 program lost its cover. But the CIA already had Lovick and some 
200 scientists, engineers and pilots working at Area 51 on the A-12 
OXCART, which would outfox Soviet radar using height, stealth and speed.

Col. Slater was in the outfit of six pilots who flew OXCART missions 
during the Vietnam War. Over a Cuban meat and cheese sandwich at the 
Bahama Breeze restaurant off the Las Vegas Strip, he says, "I was 
recruited for the Area after working with the CIA's classified Black Cat 
Squadron, which flew U-2 missions over denied territory in Mainland 
China. After that, I was told, 'You should come out to Nevada and work 
on something interesting we're doing out there.' "

Even though Slater considers himself a fighter pilot at heart—he flew 84 
missions in World War II—the opportunity to work at Area 51 was 
impossible to pass up. "When I learned about this Mach-3 aircraft called 
OXCART, it was completely intriguing to me—this idea of flying three 
times the speed of sound! No one knew a thing about the program. I asked 
my wife, Barbara, if she wanted to move to Las Vegas, and she said yes. 
And I said, 'You won't see me but on the weekends,' and she said, 
'That's fine!' " At this recollection, Slater laughs heartily. Barbara, 
dining with us, laughs as well. The two, married for 63 years, are 
rarely apart today.

"We couldn't have told you any of this a year ago," Slater says. "Now we 
can't tell it to you fast enough." That is because in 2007, the CIA 
began declassifying the 50-year-old OXCART program. Today, there's a 
scramble for eyewitnesses to fill in the information gaps. Only a few of 
the original players are left. Two more of them join me and the Slaters 
for lunch: Barnes, formerly an Area 51 special-projects engineer, with 
his wife, Doris; and Martin, one of those overseeing the OXCART's 
specially mixed jet fuel (regular fuel explodes at extreme height, 
temperature and speed), with his wife, Mary. Because the men were sworn 
to secrecy for so many decades, their wives still get a kick out of 
hearing the secret tales.

Barnes was married at 17 (Doris was 16). To support his wife, he became 
an electronics wizard, buying broken television sets, fixing them up and 
reselling them for five times the original price. He went from living in 
bitter poverty on a Texas Panhandle ranch with no electricity to buying 
his new bride a dream home before he was old enough to vote. As a 
soldier in the Korean War, Barnes demonstrated an uncanny aptitude for 
radar and Nike missile systems, which made him a prime target for 
recruitment by the CIA—which indeed happened when he was 22. By 30, he 
was handling nuclear secrets.

"The agency located each guy at the top of a certain field and put us 
together for the programs at Area 51," says Barnes. As a security 
precaution, he couldn't reveal his birth name—he went by the moniker 
Thunder. Coworkers traveled in separate cars, helicopters and airplanes. 
Barnes and his group kept to themselves, even in the mess hall. "Our 
special-projects group was the most classified team since the Manhattan 
Project," he says.

Harry Martin's specialty was fuel. Handpicked by the CIA from the Air 
Force, he underwent rigorous psychological and physical tests to see if 
he was up for the job. When he passed, the CIA moved his family to 
Nevada. Because OXCART had to refuel frequently, the CIA kept supplies 
at secret facilities around the globe. Martin often traveled to these 
bases for quality-control checks. He tells of preparing for a top-secret 
mission from Area 51 to Thule, Greenland. "My wife took one look at me 
in these arctic boots and this big hooded coat, and she knew not to ask 
where I was going."

So, what of those urban legends—the UFOs studied in secret, the 
underground tunnels connecting clandestine facilities? For decades, the 
men at Area 51 thought they'd take their secrets to the grave. At the 
height of the Cold War, they cultivated anonymity while pursuing some of 
the country's most covert projects. Conspiracy theories were left to 
popular imagination. But in talking with Collins, Lovick, Slater, Barnes 
and Martin, it is clear that much of the folklore was spun from threads 
of fact.

As for the myths of reverse engineering of flying saucers, Barnes offers 
some insight: "We did reverse engineer a lot of foreign technology, 
including the Soviet MiG fighter jet out at the Area"—even though the 
MiG wasn't shaped like a flying saucer. As for the underground-tunnel 
talk, that, too, was born of truth. Barnes worked on a nuclear-rocket 
program called Project NERVA, inside underground chambers at Jackass 
Flats, in Area 51's backyard. "Three test-cell facilities were connected 
by railroad, but everything else was underground," he says.

And the quintessential Area 51 conspiracy—that the Pentagon keeps 
captured alien spacecraft there, which they fly around in restricted 
airspace? Turns out that one's pretty easy to debunk. The shape of 
OXCART was unprece-dented, with its wide, disk-like fuselage designed to 
carry vast quantities of fuel. Commercial pilots cruising over Nevada at 
dusk would look up and see the bottom of OXCART whiz by at 2,000-plus 
mph. The aircraft's tita-nium body, moving as fast as a bullet, would 
reflect the sun's rays in a way that could make anyone think, UFO.

In all, 2,850 OXCART test flights were flown out of Area 51 while Slater 
was in charge. "That's a lot of UFO sightings!" Slater adds. Commercial 
pilots would report them to the FAA, and "when they'd land in 
California, they'd be met by FBI agents who'd make them sign 
nondisclosure forms." But not everyone kept quiet, hence the birth of 
Area 51's UFO lore. The sightings incited uproar in Nevada and the 
surrounding areas and forced the Air Force to open Project BLUE BOOK to 
log each claim.

Since only a few Air Force officials were cleared for OXCART (even 
though it was a joint CIA/USAF project), many UFO sightings raised 
internal military alarms. Some generals believed the Russians might be 
sending stealth craft over American skies to incite paranoia and create 
widespread panic of alien invasion. Today, BLUE BOOK findings are housed 
in 37 cubic feet of case files at the National Archives—74,000 pages of 
reports. A keyword search brings up no mention of the top-secret OXCART 
or Area 51.

Project BLUE BOOK was shut down in 1969—more than a year after OXCART 
was retired. But what continues at America's most clandestine military 
facility could take another 40 years to disclose.

-----------
ANNIE JACOBSEN is an investigative reporter who sat for more than 500 
interviews after she broke the story on terrorists probing commercial 
airliners.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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