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The REAL
X-Files: Is Uncle Sam a Closet UFOlogist?
BY GUS RUSSO
With terrorism, drug trafficking, climate change, and ever-present pork projects
on its plate, the US government, one would think, would have zero free time –
not to mention resources -- to devote the supremely elusive topic of flying
saucers. But, for some observers, there is compelling evidence that it does --
and in direct contradiction of its own official statements.
(STARpod.org)
-- These federal forays into the fanciful seem inspired by
the relatively new buzzwords added to the UFO lexicon, not the iconic “Roswell,”
“Alien Autopsies,” or even “MJ-12 documents” of old. Those passe' riddles are no
longer considered “coins of the realm.” Now the most intense debates involve
subjects with names like Project Beta, SERPO, Project Camelot, Operation Snow
White, and Star Gate. And weaving in and out of all these alleged controversies,
especially in the UFO internet chat rooms, are at least three senior
intelligence analysts and one retired Air Force Special Investigator: “Tom”
(pseudo.), a MASINT specialist (Measures and Signals Intelligence) with a PhD in
chemistry and Paul, an aeronautics scholar interested in “breakthrough
propulsion and gravity-modification technologies,” work down the hall from each
at the Directorate of National Intelligence (DNI) headquarters in Washington.
“Jim” (pseudo.), a physician and former CIA officer in the Directorate of
Science and Technology, maintains his security clearance, and travels back to
Washington often to work on classified psychological studies. Richard “Rick”
Doty, a longtime friend and colleague of Jim, was an investigator assigned the
Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI).
What has been confounding UFO buffs for years is the
regular presence of these well-informed “spooks” (and others less active) in
both the physical UFO world and the world of cyberspace saucers. The mystery
seems to have its origins in 1956, pre Tom- Paul-Jim-Rick, and pre internet, and
in the most unlikely of settings: the office of Ward Kimball, one of Walt
Disney’s key animators. At a 1979 UFO symposium in San Francisco, Kimball told
how the US Air Force had approached Disney to make a UFO documentary, the
ostensible purpose being to help prepare the collective American psyche for
planned revelations concerning the reality of extraterrestrials. If that wasn’t
enough, the senior flyboys offered to supply actual UFO footage, which Disney
would be allowed to use in his film. It must have seemed to Kimball that his
character Jiminy Cricket’s “wish upon a star” had actually been answered.
However, a few weeks later, the offer was withdrawn just as quickly as it had
been made. Kimball said that an Air Force Colonel said brusquely, “There indeed
was plenty of UFO footage, but that neither Ward, nor anyone else, was going to
get access to it.”
The Air Force revisited the gambit in the early seventies,
when Air Force Colonels Robert Coleman and George Weinbrenner approached
documentary filmmaker Robert Emenegger with a very similar astounding offer. The
two colonels, who were possibly attached to AFOSI, took Emenegger to Norton AFB
near San Bernardino and awed him with footage of what appeared to be three
flying saucers landing at Holloman AFB in New Mexico in 1971. Incredibly, the
Air Force was again, according to the colonels, going to give the footage to
Emenegger as a climax to his forthcoming film, UFOs, Past, Present and Future.
But once again, at the eleventh hour the Air Force changed its mind, they said,
because of the Watergate scandal. Perhaps the country couldn’t handle more bad
news.
In the eighties, AFOSI agent Rick Doty, a longtime
colleague and friend of analyst Jim, appeared in New Mexico in order to tease
scientist Paul Bennewitz with promises to divulge the government’s UFO secrets.
And in this case, the Air Force actually delivered the goods, in a sense.
Bennewitz, an entrepreneur who specialized in selling high altitude testing
equipment to the Air Force, had contacted AFOSI after filming bizarre flying
craft near Kirtland AFB, outside Albuquerque. As a result, Doty was tasked not
only with determining if Bennewitz had stumbled onto classified aircraft tests
(and also scientific research such as Project Starfire), but also with feeding
the physicist mountains of disinformation about UFOs, the furtive purpose being
to divert his attention from classified goings-on, and later, to monitor the
flow of information through the UFOlogy network. A still-unidentified Air Force
intelligence officer also seduced best-selling UFO writer Bill Moore (The
Philadelphia Experiment and The
Roswell Incident) into assisting
Doty in his spycraft; in exchange, Moore was offered real UFO information, including
meeting a live extraterrestrial –
promises that, like Emenegger’s UFO footage, never materialized. The charade
played out for most of the eighties, driving poor Bennewitz, who coined the
disclosures Project Beta, to a
mental meltdown. Moore actually admitted his double agent role to an astonished
UFO community at a Las Vegas convention in July 1989, however the bizarre alien
tales he fed Bennewitz poisoned the UFO database, perhaps permanently. Infinite
mutations of the Doty fictions continue to spread like an internet virus. Just
google “SERPO” for a taste.
In 1983, the government next approached Emmy Award winning
documentarian Linda Howe, then at work on a UFO film for HBO. After meeting with
Howe in Albuquerque, Rick Doty took her to the AFOSI offices at Kirtland, and
not only promised her the same footage that was dangled in front of Emenegger,
but he went one step further.
“My superiors asked me to show this to you,” Doty said as he handed Howe a file
entitled “Briefing Paper for the President of the United States.” Allowed only
to scan the explosive cache, Howe saw tales of crashed extraterrestrial craft,
alien bodies, and even more astounding, UFO crash survivors. Although Howe was
not allowed to take the papers away, Doty promised her the same “landing
footage” promised to Emenegger a decade earlier for his film. But, just as they
had with Emenegger, months of negotiating went absolutely nowhere. Doty later
admitted to author Greg Bishop that the ploy was but another government
counterintelligence probe into the UFO community.
The Kimball, Emenegger, Bennewitz, and Howe affairs were just the beginning of
excursions into the world of UFO ephemera by federal employees. In the 1990’s
the feds seemed determined to insert their agenda into the nascent internet,
where UFOlogists were now trading “evidence” around the world at lightening
speed. Their newest civilian contact became a soft-spoken computer analyst who
was determined to use the new technology to get to “the truth.”
Dan Smith of Maryland, the son of a former economic advisor to the White House,
has spent two decades, largely via internet blogging, pursuing his interest in
future apocalyptic scenarios. Invariably, his quest led him into the miasma of
rumored UFO disclosure scenarios. In 1991, Smith learned of the possibility of a
real-life X-Files when UK crop circle researchers made him aware of analyst Tom,
and his forays into their provenance. Before calling Tom, Smith vetted him with
NASA, which readily agreed that Tom was the government’s man on “phenomenology.”
Thus, in September 1991, Smith started calling Tom, and in only their second
conversation, Tom floored Dan by announcing, “I’m going to Los Alamos next week
to talk to aliens.” The trip to the famed nuclear lab never happened, as best
Dan can ascertain.
Dan and Tom’s relationship has progressed from phone calls and email exchanges
to attending family outings and ball games together, and even to meeting at his
agency’s headquarters. Throughout the course of the relationship, Tom made it
abundantly clear that he is officially following the UFO topic as part of his
intelligence portfolio, admitting that he had participated, as did Jim, in an
inter-agency “Phenomenology Working Group.” When pressed for details, however,
Tom only gives obtuse, often cryptic answers as to why the monitoring of the UFO
crowd consumes what one insider estimates as 20% of his publicly funded workday.
Unbeknownst to Smith, in 1992 Tom allegedly admitted to another internet
contact, Habib “Henry” Azadehdel, that he had indeed been part of a working
group. In a phone conversation recorded by Azadehdel, Tom, or someone
impersonating Tom, confided that he had been the first member of an inter-agency
“working group.” “You know,” Tom offered, “I was a member of that Working Group,
ah, when it started…I was a member of it, but I, I resigned I guess after the
first meeting,” claimed Tom. The meeting, he explained was organized by Jim, and
there were “about a dozen people there.”
In his 1990 book Out There, New York Times reporter Howard Blum described a top
secret inter-agency Working Group, which he contended met in the Pentagon in
1987, the purpose being to investigate UFOs. The participants Blum named
overlapped too nicely with those known to be in Tom and Jim’s gathering: in the
minds of many UFOlogists, Tom and Jim were members of Blum’s UFO Working Group.
Thus the current controversy often postulates that their interest relates to an
ongoing UFO Working Group mandate.
Although Smith seemed only bemused by the attention, one of his friends, an
engineer who frequently holds classified government contracts, became so
concerned that he reported Tom to his agency’s Inspector General. “I later found
out that it became a six-month internal investigation,” says the friend, “but,
in the end, Tom was able to convince them that his communication with Smith fell
within his official purview.” Still, Smith’s friends worry that Smith’s health
is suffering from all the gamesmanship, worried that he might become the next
Paul Bennewitz. Since 1994, Tom continues to communicate with Dan on a regular
basis.
Next up on the US intel radar was one Bob Bigelow, the billionaire heir to the
Bigelow Tea fortune and owner of the Budget Suites of America hotel chain and
Bigelow Aerospace. In 1996,†Bigelow created the National Institute of Discovery
Science (NIDS) to explore paranormal activity, especially cattle mutilations in
the Utah badlands and UFO reports. Enter officers Tom and Jim, now nick-named
collectively “The Aviary” by their contactees. Jim confirmed to a popular
website administrator that Bigelow’s think tank was the subject of informal
discussion at DIA sponsored meetings he attended on the threats of emerging
technologies. More importantly, analyst Tom has openly admitted to Dan Smith
that he was so interested in NIDS that he attended its inaugural meeting, and
kept tabs on its research until its dissolution on 2004.
The dawning of the twenty-first century saw a marked escalation in the
activities of Tom, Jim, and Rick, especially in cyberspace. Chris Iverson,
administrator with the internet’s “Open Minds Forum,” says, “ I have spoken
directly with Tom, Jim, and Rick.† The highlight so far is the conversation I
had with Tom several weeks ago.† He went quite far in describing not just his
relationship with Dan Smith but also covered several other topics as well.”
Iverson says that Tom corroborated what he told Smith years ago about the
mysterious trips to Los Alamos. “The story is that these people made several
monthly trips out from Washington DC to Los Alamos several years ago to either
meet directly with "The Visitors" or to meet with the people who were
responsible for holding or communicating with them,” explains Iverson. “Tom
stated that yes, these trips did take place, but they occurred over 15 years ago
and are not happening today.”
The list of contacts goes on. Gary Bekkum, of Starstream Research, says, “I†have
had increasing contact, by email, and phone, with some of the Aviary members,
concerning stories I have written about their activities, including requests not
to†expose ‘sources and methods.’†I have also had increasing contact from others,
including a DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Project) subcontractor.” Ryan Dube,
of Reality Uncovered notes that his first contact with the trio came when Doty
began harassing one of his moderators. “Tom contacted us in 2006, via email,
with a request to assist him in his investigation of Richard Doty,” remembers
Dube.†“He wanted to know the details of the harassment and Rick's supervisor
contact information.† I was suspicious of Tom from the start, and didn't believe
him.† However we verified that his emails were coming from DIA military servers
and the contact phone number he initial gave me was in fact located in the DC
area.† That's when I realized that I was actually talking to the real Tom - the
intelligence analyst.†I've been in contact (phone and email) with Tom up until
about three months ago, as well as Jim.”
The Tom, Jim, and Rick Show even enjoys syndication across the pond. Brendan
Burton, the British administrator for the “Open Minds” forum, vividly recalls
when Jim emailed him in early 2006. The missive is again a bit of a tease,
wherein the agent makes “hypothetical” statements about the size of the UFO
cover-up. But, Burton adds, “He seemed to confirm that the US government was
indeed in this thing, right up to their necks!” The UK’s Caryn Anscomb, who
frequently contributes to the “Reality Uncovered” and “Starstream” sites, first
heard from analyst Jim in 2004, and has had regular communications from him ever
since. Ditto Steve Broadbent, another Reality Uncovered administrator from
England.
Both Tom and Jim have made only half-hearted attempts to hide their identities
(this is especially peculiar regarding Tom, who still works full-time at the
highest echelons of US intelligence.) Their impressive CV’s, contact
information, and emails are regularly exchanged by the bloggers as the amateurs
try to brainstorm an answer to the ultimate question: what is their agenda? Also
asking the question is UK filmmaker John Lundberg, who has been traipsing across
the US recently, filming anyone who will agree to speak on the subject for his
forthcoming film Miragemen. Lundberg has, like this writer, also had
communications with both Tom and Jim.
Dan Smith and the rest of his web colleagues, who are still in regular contact
with Tom, Jim, and Rick, are confused for another reason: the feds have
officially stated ad nauseum that they maintain no interest in the subject of
little green men. The proclamations began in 1953 with the publication of the
CIA’s “Robertson Panel Report.” Chaired by CIA physicist Howard Percy Robertson,
the panel concluded that 90 percent of UFO sightings could be readily identified
with meteorological, astronomical, or natural phenomena, and that the remaining
10 percent could be similarly explained with more study. It further suggested
that the Air Force should begin to reduce "public gullibility" and utilize the
mass media, including influential media giants like the Walt Disney Corporation,
to demystify UFO reports.
In 1968, Rick Doty’s Air Force weighed in with the 1,438-page Condon Committee
Report, a two-year study chaired by physicist Edward Condon. The investigation,
undertaken by eight faculty members from the University of Colorado, concluded
(albeit with some dissention amongst the faculty ranks) that all UFO reports had
conventional explanations, and further study of the subject would not be
worthwhile. The Air Force put the issue aside for almost three decades, then in
1995 released a UFO “Fact Sheet” that noted: “From 1947 to 1969, the Air Force
investigated Unidentified Flying Objects under Project Blue Book. The project,
headquartered at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, was terminated Dec. 17,
1969. Of a total of 12,618 sightings reported to Project Blue Book, 701 remained
‘unidentified.’”
Two years later, a Pentagon spokesman told the press that the military had “long
ago” stopped tracking UFOs. That same year, Gerald K. Haines, the official
historian of the CIA, joined the chorus of denials when he authored the Agency’s
position in its official publication, Studies in Intelligence. Although the CIA
was concerned about UFOs until the early 1950s, Haines wrote, it has since “paid
only limited and peripheral attention to the phenomena.” Haines added that the
actual explanation to the UFO mystery was much more mundane than the fantasy of
alien visitation: UFOs were nothing more than classified, experimental US
aircraft.
How then to explain the ongoing presence of Tom, Jim, and Rick?
UFOlogists are quick to point out one other study that might explain their true
goal. In 1960, the Brookings Institution drafted a 100-page report for NASA,
advising the newborn US space agency of societal chaos if it discovered alien
life and did not release the story in a very controlled way. (NASA ultimately
ignored the Brookings warning when, in 1972 it launched the Pioneer 10
spacecraft to the farthest reaches of space; affixed to the craft was a
gold-anodized aluminum plaque engraved with a map showing the location of
Earth.) Thus, it is postulated, the intelligence community might be preparing
the world for “Disclosure.”
Some Answers
Greg Bishop, who chronicled the Bennewitz-Doty saga in his 2005 book Project
Beta, and has himself been contacted separately by four intelligence
professionals, sums up the feelings of many, saying “There is no denying a
concern with the UFO subject in the corridors of the Pentagon and the halls of
our government. How much these people actually know is the subject of hot
debate.” Recently, however, in private statements to bloggers and to this
writer, some clarity is coming to the issues of “who knows what” and “what is
their agenda?” Research for this article points to these answers: they know
little or nothing about UFOs, and their agendas differ.
Ryan Dube recalled what Tom once revealed about his interest. “Once,” Dube said,
“when I pushed Tom over the phone on why he remains so involved with in ufology
“his statement - paraphrased, was essentially: ‘No one needs to know why I'm
interested...and if I have any hint that anyone is at all on to why I am
interested, I'll certainly do everything within my power to distract them - but
I can tell you one thing - my interest certainly has nothing at all to do with
aliens or UFOs.’” This is consistent with Tom’s statement to another site
administrator: “There are no classified files on UFOs because UFOs don’t exist.”
Ryan points out the obvious paradox: “The active involvement of current and
former government officials certainly suggests that our government sees value in
the field of UFOlogy for some reason.”
Tom’s motivation, it now appears certain, can be summed up in two words:
national security. In a recent interview, a senior intelligence official who is
familiar with spooks in cyberspace explained, “Tom is interested in the subject
because, one, he is concerned that DIA officers parading as CIA officers -- a
felony -- are leaking classified material to the UFO groups. He also knows that
in years past the KGB used parapsychology and paranormal groups to get to
military people with classified information. He is concerned that any enemy
group could easily use these forums to search out national security secrets.”
Joel Brenner, the United States national counterintelligence chief recently said
that the number of Russian agents operating in the country had reached “Cold War
levels,” according to the Russian News & Information Agency.
“They are sending over an increasing and troubling number of intelligence
officers into the United States,” Brener reported. Former head of FBI
counterintelligence David Szady echoed Brenner's, adding that Russian agents
often arrived in the U.S. under the cover of students or businessmen. The Times
UK recently noted the Russians’ escalation in spy wars against the US: “White
House intelligence advisers believe no other country is as aggressive as Russia
in trying to obtain US secrets, with the possible exception of China. In
particular the SVR, as the former KGB’s foreign intelligence arm is now known,
is using a network of undercover agents in America to gather classified
information about sensitive technologies, including military projects under
development and high-tech research.” The article adds that Putin’s intelligence
apparatus views cyberspace as a powerful new weapon. Among the evidence cited is
Moscow’s recent cyber attack against the Baltic state Estonia over its decision
to relocate a Soviet-era military monument.
Some see corroboration for the government’s interest in internet UFO writers in
the so-called “Stargate Archive” files. Stargate was the name of a remote
viewing project founded by the DIA in 1972, then later transferred to CIA. In
2004 the CIA released under a FOIA request the Stargate Archive files, which
reveal that the CIA was indeed concerned about monitoring UFO authors who might
be privy to classified material.
Then there were the security breaches that occurred during Operation Stargate
itself, which Tom was instrumental in bringing to an end in 1996. By the
mid-seventies it was learned that Stargate, which had Aviary members on its
board, and other CIA projects, had been massively infiltrated, the target of
Scientology’s infamous “Operation Snow White.” In 1979, eleven highly placed
Church executives, including Mary Sue Hubbard (wife of founder L. Ron Hubbard
and second in command of the organization), pleaded guilty or were convicted in
federal court of obstructing justice, burglary of government offices, and theft
of documents and government property.
Tom admits that there is one other minor reason for him to be surfing the UFO
web. In a recent email, he let his guard down a tad, explaining how UFO bloggers
can serve a patriotic purpose, if inadvertently. “Under normal times this
tendency towards mass delusional states and radical heresies is perhaps a
weakness,” Tom wrote.†“However in stressful times it promotes radical
out-of-the-box thinking…[it]†plays an increasingly important role as we approach
cataclysmic species survival stress points.† The end of accessible oil could be
such a point.† Most people will continue to believe new oil discoveries are just
around the corner…[bloggers] search for solutions in the strangest places.†
Perhaps they will find one in time.”
Working down the DNI hall from Tom, cyberspace regular Paul, the aeronautics and
advanced propulsion researcher, explains that, much like fictional X-Files agent
Fox Mulder, he believes because he wants to believe. Further, he hopes to end
his science colleagues’ discrimination against UFO believers.
Then there is Jim, whose professional history in the subject goes back to his
personal involvement in the Stargate project in the 1970’s and as a participant
in the legendary “Working Group” meetings in the eighties. As one of the intel
community’s most senior medical analysts, Jim frequently communicates with
UFOlogists. Chris Iverson believes that Tom and Jim clearly have differing
agendas, noting, “Jim is the person I have had the most contact with over the
last several months and he seems to be interested in the spreading of viral
memes over the internet, particularly in relation to this subject.” Iverson is
not far off the mark. However, in a recent meeting with this writer, Jim
explained that his internet presence emanates from a number of overlapping
pursuits.
“The whole subject,” Jim says in wonderfully measured speech, “is composed of
three components: delusion, sociological groupthink, and a kernel of truth.” Jim
then reminds that he is first and foremost a medical scientist. “My interest in
this subject is much, much more professional than it is personal. That is, 90 to
95% of all persons who are engaged fully with this [UFO] subject are
psychiatrically ill, and by that I mean that they are on medication or should
be.” Jim elaborates that “viral memes,”[see below] in which disturbed people
seek validation in numbers on the web, is, or should be, a growing public health
concern. That said, Jim nonetheless has a real interest in UFO’s, and seemingly
with good reason.
“I believe there’s a ‘core story’,” Jim explained, “but I don’t know what it is.
I have been told by people more senior than me that there is some truth to it,
but they told me time and time again to stop pursuing it with CIA people and
other intel types. Two very senior officials told me they saw briefing books,
[however] the only ones who would be cleared to know the story are the most
senior Pentagon career officers.” Jim refuses to divulge his sources, but when
pressed, he reiterates what they told him: look to the Pentagon and the private
sector’s aerospace and weapons labs, etc. US intelligence “doesn’t have labs
capable of dealing with something this profound.” He also notes that over the
years he has received thousands of UFO-related government documents in unmarked
envelopes. Although some are obvious fakes, others, according to Jim, contain
information that correlates with known, but still classified, scientific
studies. In an intriguing footnote, Jim adds, “I have spoken to three former
Presidents and the subject always comes up, not as a briefing, but they also
want to know the truth. But apparently they aren’t cleared for it.”
Both Tom and Jim seem to share at least one rationale for their internet
excursions: studying the frightening potential of “viral internet memes.” Coined
by evolutionary theorist Richard Dawkins in 1976 (The Selfish Gene), a meme is a
unit of cultural information that evolves the way a gene propagates from one
organism to another, and subject to all the analogous unintended mutations. In
the view of many, computers and blogs could function as powerful meme
“replicators.” Richard Brodie, the creator of Microsoft Word, notes, “Most of
these viruses of the mind are spread because they are intriguing or frightening
or inspiring, and not necessarily because they're true. That's the problem.” It
doesn’t take much intuition to envision an enemy creating memes that can be used
to destabilize a society, or a freelance predator utilizing them to cozy up to
potential victims. Caryn Anscomb writes online, “The UFO community has been
deeply penetrated by the manipulators of information, who couldn’t really give a
fig whether there might be any valuable data pertaining to Aliens and contact
hidden behind the deafening noise. That’s not their business; their business is
information warfare.”
Rick Doty’s intent seems by far the most mysterious. He has been vouched for by
two former Directors of Central Intelligence (DCI) – as well as Jim – but has
been excoriated by his former superior at AFOSI, Col. Richard L. Weaver, who
recently noted that Doty had been “cashiered out of OSI” and that he has a
well-known “lack of veracity.” It should also be noted that the two DCIs only
knew Doty before they ran the Agency, when they all were deployed in Europe
together. The DCIs are only vouching for his previous work, not his UFO
allegations.
Doty has promulgated some of the most outlandish “alien contact” stories extant.
He not only fed them to Paul Bennewitz in the 1980’s, but to the public at large
in his 2005 book with Robert Collins, Exempt From Disclosure. But amidst the
book’s sci-fi-like claims of extraterrestrials in US custody and “reverse
engineered” saucers -- currently being exploited by one Gordon Novel with his
Project Camelot -- Doty also admits the following: “There are times when you
deceive the public you are doing the public a great service and I certainly
protect the public with deception operations if it were for their own good.”
Nonetheless, much the same way that reporters speculated about the fraudulent
New Orleans DA Jim Garrison forty years ago, there remains a group of UFO
bloggers who continue to opine about Doty: “He must have something.”
Greg Bishop, among the most sober of the UFO authors, sums up the continued
presence of federally employed UFO believers like Jim, Paul and Rick thus:
“Their agenda is to do their jobs first, and find out what is going on behind
the scenes with the UFO enigma… They get hints, but never the whole picture, and
that becomes the quest after they leave active service.”
What then of the so-called “Top Secret UFO Working Group” in which Tom, Jim and
others participated in the 1980s? Fortunately, four participants in those
gatherings have communicated with this writer, and one in particular shared
original paperwork from the meetings with Caryn, who graciously shared them with
me. Consequently, the following can be said of the Working Group story:
• The key meetings were held from May 20-25, 1985 in the secure facility of the
BDM Corporation (a high clearance military contractor) in MacLean, VA.
• There were twenty known attendees (we have the names) representing Los Alamos
Nuclear Labs, Army Intelligence, CIA, Lockheed, McDonnell Douglas, and various
scientists with security clearances. Other unnamed guests such as Jim attended.
• The meeting was titled “Advanced Theoretical Physics Conference” and its main
objective was to study odd radar tracings to determine their origins (“friendly”
“enemy” or “unknown”). They turned out to be totally anomalous.
Jim notes that quite a few of the attendees turned out to be closet UFO buffs
who only showed up to see who knew the truth about ETs (no one did). He called
it a waste of time, leaving after just the first day. Tom recalls attending a
follow-up meeting at the Pentagon that was so silly that he made a derisive
remark before walking out in the middle of it.
Summing it all up, there is certainly a very small percentage government
officials with intelligence clearance -- some active, some retired -- who are
interested in the UFO research community, if not UFOs themselves. Some of these
men are of the impression, rightly or wrongly, that a very few individuals in
government and the private sector are keeping the big secret even from them.
This is small consolation to earnest UFO researchers, but at least they should
no longer feel alone and marginalized as kooks completely at odds with
officialdom.
All this does not mean that evidence for alien visits is non-existent, it’s just
that Tom, Jim, Paul, and Rick don’t appear to be the keepers of it. The opinion
of Ryan Dube appears inarguable. “If the field of UFOlogy could be cleaned of
the rubbish,” Dube wrote me, “we may find that there remains very valid and
important evidence and stories that demand our attention - and might actually
finally reveal the truth about the alien and UFO question.Ӡ And if Jim ever
decides to reveal his sources, things could get very interesting.
Copyright (c) 2006 by GUS RUSSO -- reproduced here by
express permission of the author.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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