Authors: Timothy Good
Area 51
In the early 1960s, Mike Hunt, who held a “Q” clearance from the Atomic Energy Commission and an inter-agency top-secret clearance, observed one such craft, at Groom Dry Lake in Area 51, which he guessed was twenty or thirty feet in diameter. He also claimed to have been present on several occasions when the “flying saucer” was taking off or landing, although he was never allowed actually to observe it. Hunt believed that a highly secret program known as “Project Red Light” or “Redlight”âconnected to the discsâwas in operation at Area 51 at that time.
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“We talked about Area 51 years ago, and at that time I only knew it as a place where we tested our most advanced aircraft,” a friend informed me. “In fact, right up to my retirement two years ago, that was what I knew. At the end of my career, there was a program I was on that required a new development at Area 51.
Aviation Week
reported the existence of this building and the UFO enthusiasts who spied on Groom Lake caught sight of [it], and others wondered what it might be. In fact, it was business as usual with ground support for flight tests.
“Just yesterday I spoke again with a retired Lockheed mechanic [who] told me that he had worked with half a dozen other men at Area 51 in the nineties. Within five working years of working on that project, six of his buddies had died of cancer. He, however, did not have that problem because he said that he had only worked there about two months, whereas they stayed for two yearsâ¦. Apparently his diabetes has affected one of his legs, which now needs to be amputated. So with a bleak and possibly short future to look forward to, he told me that the reason he left after two
months was because the project scared him. The government had disassembled a flying disc and was building tooling to reassemble the thing. It was very large and had more height than the typically depicted flying saucer. He said that it was definitely not from here. He left the program as soon as he couldâ¦.”
Further Developments
In a publication of Borderland Sciences Research Foundation in 1967, an article on the infiltration of the U.S. government by aliens, based on a lecture by one Gordon Shandley, created a stir. “Those familiar with this field took Mr. Shandley's entertaining revelations in their stride,” explained the writer, “but the ânewcomers' received the shock of their lives as they listened to this Army Air Corps pilot (1941 clearance Top Secret) expound matter-of-factly on the various types of UFOs as casually as though he were discussing the latest models put out by General Motors.
“Most of Mr. Shandley's research in this field stresses the scientific and technical side; but his association with George Adamski, prior to the latter's death some time ago, acquainted him with the philosophical and religious framework of spaceâ¦.
“Mr. Shandley's elaboration upon the nature of the spaceships revealed that the large mother ships rarely come into the Earth's atmosphere. The saucers are contact discs operated by remote control from the main shipâ¦. An ionization force is placed around the ship to protect it. A magnetic screen will plow a path ahead of the ship in its course through spaceâ¦. Apparently the space people have gained comprehension of an unbelievably complex array of one-inch-thick invisible lines of force, none of which touch one another. If these lines do cross, a death ray is produced inimical to anything in its path.
“Although Earth has been visited by beings from other planets since the time higher forms of life developed here, their most recent attention has been sparked by our atomic explosions and the radar we bounced off the Moonâ¦.
“It seems that our government is as infiltrated by spacemen as it is supposed to be by Communistsâonly with better intentions. Their purpose is to aid us spiritually and technically. Mr. Shandley spoke of having consulted
personally with at least six individuals from other planets who in an unobtrusive way volunteered information aiding him in his research. Scientific laboratories have also received the benefit of extraterrestrial knowledge. Mr. âMan-from-Venus' will pose as a second or third laboratory assistant. Then, when his suggestions have been adopted, he will quietly melt away and move on to some other spotâ¦.
“John Q. Public, though conceding God's place in heaven, was nevertheless jolted on learning that said heaven was more thickly populated than was formerly suspected ⦠several brisk questions were directed to Mr. Shandley regarding the credentials of these interplanetary visitorsâ¦. Mr. Shandley calmly replied that their identity was confirmed by Government top brass, and more than this he could not part with as things were coming dangerously near to trespassing on Top Secret territory. The U.S. government, while completely cognizant of interplanetary beings, has formulated a twenty-year education program for the publicâ¦. The idea is to break everybody in gradually, by emphasis on outer space exploration, rockets, etc., through news and TV media, which will in time lead to an admission of the true nature of these strange objectsâ¦. Until this period of time is up, the Air Force officially will continue to manifest a state of amnesia on UFO reports.”
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White Sands
One of my sources served with the U.S. Army from 1969 to 1972. “In my initial six months of service,” he reported to me, “I was assigned to the Pentagon in a position that was reasonably uninteresting. During that time, living in and around Washington, D.C., I met with a gentleman who was working the electrical side of hot-rodding VW Beetles. Mine was one of his projectsâ¦.
“One evening, over a couple of beers, he showed me photos of a âhot-rod' version of a flying saucer he took at White Sands Missile Range. He had been employed by a contractor involved in a construction project there in the late 1960s, and the photos I was shown were less than three years old. The photos depicted the saucer-shaped craft maneuvering at about two thousand feet, then flying and hovering at fifty to a hundred feet, and landing. The closest shot was taken from about thirty feet away, when the hatch opened.
“There were no images of the personnel piloting the saucer, but he made i
t clear to me that these vehicles were ours, or at least under U.S. military control. The craft parked gave one the impression that the disc was about eighteen feet in diameter. My presumption here is based on my calculation from a three-foot-wide hatchway. It was a medium silver/gray color. The surface skin had a textureânot a rough profile texture, but a smooth and sort of porous-looking texture. To me, it looked like a sheet of aluminum or titanium that had been overheated, then cooled slowly rather than quenched. I recall that the sunlight reflected oddly on the craft, [giving] a pale orange-ish/silver-ish appearance. I drew my rendition in PowerPoint [see below], which has limited tools.”
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“Could you help me to distinguish between the types of craft that are constructed here, âunder license' as it were, and the âreal McCoy'?” I asked Fred Steckling in 1976.
“Well, as far as I have found out from my sources,” he replied, “the Air Force has managed to build several types of these scout ships, and they are not quite as sophisticated as the ones that they have on other planets. They look the same, and they do move around in our atmosphere, but they are not capable of going twenty thousand miles per hour in our atmosphere, because the knowledge that we have so far is to extend force-fields around this vehicle to protect it from any friction, and blend it. Actually, when the spacemen move with this spacecraft, it blends with our atmosphere; it does not force itself into the air, like a jet does, and we do not quite have this knowledge.
“I only know that what we have at the moment is a craft that uses mirror
systems ⦠we have a craft that looks like a doughnut: it has a hole in the center and it has a different arrangement of mirrors built in, so that when the craft is up about two, three hundred feet, hovering, they can, by reflecting the light around it, camouflage it with the background well enough so that if you really didn't know, you wouldn't see itâ¦.
“George Adamski said to me, before he passed on [in 1965], that âthe Boys' [as he called his alien friends] had just returned from Russia and they told him that the Russians had developed a scout ship that looked like the one from Venus. It could move around in our atmosphere quite well, and they were going to work on a modification which would take approximately nine months and then they could go to the Moon with it. By 1966, the ship should have been ready to go toâwe had not yet landed an astronaut there so, technically speaking, the Russians were capable of visiting the Moon long before we had our astronauts up thereâ¦.
“I know that nations work closer together than we think. This atmosphere of âcommunism' as the enemy, the escalation of war material, and so on, are a clever set-up to keep our industries from going bankrupt. In other words, âno breakage, no makeage.' So you know they're working togetherâ¦.”
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Lockheed Skunk Works
Brad Sorensen, an aviation designer who works mostly for aerospace companies, reported to aviation illustrator Mark McCandlish that during an air show at Norton Air Force Base, California, on November 12, 1988, he was invited by a wealthy former secretary or undersecretary of defense to visit a huge hangar at the base, surrounded by a cordon of military police armed with M-16s. Sorenson's companion asked one of the guards to fetch an acquaintance of his, the man in charge of the show. When he appeared, it was clear that the two men recognized each other. Queried about Sorensen's presence, the retired Defense source said Sorensen was his “aide.” Reportedly, the men were then escorted into “the Big Hangar” (as it was called) and shown some highly classified exotic aircraft, including three fully functioning flying saucers.
“At this point, the story becomes somewhat confusing,” explains Richard Dolan, the distinguished historian and researcher. “Sorensen originally told McCandlish and others that the exhibit of exotic craft took place within
the Big Hangar. In later tellings, he added a twist: that in fact the demonstration did not occur at Norton. Rather, the group was escorted aboard an Air Force passenger jet and flown fifty miles northwest to Palmdale. They arrived at the Lockheed Skunkworks facility at the west end of the complex, and it was here that the entire exhibit was held. It appears Sorensen was originally trying to withhold certain pieces of the story.
“They entered the Lockheed hangar, and it was obvious that the exhibit was for politicians and military officials who were cleared for high-security information. As McCandlish and aviation researcher Michael Schratt later put it, âthe express purpose of the exhibit was to garner additional support for classified “black,” or SAR “special access required” programs.'”
As soon as they walked in the huge hangar, Sorensen received a warning from the former Defense official. “There are a lot of things in here that I didn't expect they were going to have on displayâstuff you probably shouldn't be seeing,” he advised. “So, don't talk to anybody, don't ask any questions, just keep your mouth shut, smile and nod, but don't say anythingâjust enjoy the show.”
Among the first craft they were shown was a flattened football, diamond-shaped craft, known as the Pulser or “Flaming Pumpkinseed,” an unmanned vehicle supposedly capable of launching nuclear warheads within less than a tenth of a second (an absurdly short time). According to Schratt, eighteen of these vehicles were built during the Reagan administration.
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Sorensen told McCandlish that after he had been shown this and other craft, he noted a large black curtain dividing the hangar into two different areas. “Behind these curtains was another big area, and inside this area they had all the lights turned off.
“So, they go in and they turn the lights on, and here are three flying saucers floating off the floorâno cables suspended from the ceiling holding them up, no landing gear underneathâjust floating, hovering above the floor. They had little exhibits with a videotape running, showing the smallest of the three vehicles sitting out in the desert, presumably over a dry lakebedâsome place like Area 51. It showed this vehicle making three little quick, hopping motions; then [it] accelerated straight up and out of sight, completely disappearing from view in just a couple of secondsâ¦.
“They had a cutaway illustration [showing] what the internal components
of this vehicle [referred to as âthe Alien Reproduction Vehicle' (ARV) or âFlux Liner'] were, and they had some panels taken off so you could actually look in and see oxygen tanks and a little robotic arm that could extend out from the side of the vehicle for collecting samples and things.”
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The three craft were of different sizesâ24, 60, and 130 feet in diameter. Nearby, a general was addressing a group of people, referring to the craft and citing various attributes, including an extravagant claim that they could perform at “light speed or better,” Dolan learned from McCandlish. “It had extraordinary acceleration and maneuverability, able to move from a ground-level hovering position to 80,000 feet within 2.5 seconds.” (A preposterously precise time.) “Sorensen noted that the [ARV] looked âancient' and as though it had been used extensivelyâ¦. In 1992, McCandlish met a man named Kent Sellen who had been a crew chief at Edwards AFB years before,” Dolan learned. “In 1973, Sellen unintentionally went into an area where he saw a craft exactly matching the description of Sorensen's [small] ARV. At that point, he was thrown to the ground at gunpoint, blindfolded, taken into custody, and interrogated about his presence there and what he thought he had seen. Sellen even provided McCandlish with details and data about the object that had been unknown to Sorensen.”
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