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The Cia's Secret Ufo Files

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DcupSheepNipples

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Huck this is as clean as I can get in the open channel!

JIM WILSON

The Central Intelligence Agency says it has finally come clean about UFOs. To absolutely no one's surprise, it knew more than it ever let on.
"Over half of all UFO reports from the late 1950s through the 1960s were accounted for by manned reconnaissance flights," says Gerald K. Haines, a historian for the National Reconnaissance Office who studied secret CIA UFO files for an internal CIA study that examined the spy agency's involvement in UFOs through the 1990s.

Why lie about UFOs? "The Soviets could use UFO reports to touch off mass hysteria and panic in the United States and overload the U.S. air warning system so that it could not distinguish real targets from phantom UFOs," Haines says.

If Cold War hysteria seems to be a less than satisfactory explanation, perhaps it is because there really is more to the story.

POPULAR MECHANICS has learned from nonclassified sources that the United States had a serious reason for wanting the public to keep believing that the strange lights in the sky were of unearthly origin. The government kept the UFO myth alive to disguise the embarrassing fact that during the hottest days of the Cold War, America's two most secret intelligence gathering assets–the A-12 and SR-71 spyplanes–flew toward hostile terrain with the equivalent of cow bells dangling from their necks.

The deception of the public began in the early 1950s. It involved the then highly secret, and to this day little-known, A-12. If you think you saw an SR-71 Blackbird at an air and space museum, the odds are you were actually looking at an A-12. The idea for the plane was conceived in 1954 by CIA director Allen Dulles. The objective of this secret program, according to aviation historian Paul F. Crickmore, was to build a spyplane capable of flying higher and faster than the U-2.

The secret development program, which was originally called Project Aquatone, and then Gusto and then Oxcart, led to the first A-12 mockup. It became connected with UFO lore in late 1959 when, according to Crickmore, it was trucked from the famous Lockheed Skunk Works, in Palmdale, California, to Groom Lake, Nevada. (Also known to UFO enthusiasts as Area 51, this formerly secret test site is located about 100 miles north of Las Vegas, Nevada.) Hidden in the desert and surrounded by then active Atomic Energy Commission testing grounds, the A-12 mockup underwent a series of tests to determine and then reduce its ability to deflect and absorb radar signals. The CIA liked what it saw and ordered a dozen.

Lockheed had built what to this day is considered the most amazing aircraft of all time. But before it could fly, it needed engines that could propel the plane to Mach 3.2 and an altitude of more than 97,600 ft. In February 1962, Pratt & Whitney announced its already overdue J58 engines could not be delivered anytime soon. As an interim solution, they offered less powerful J75 engines that, according to Crickmore, would take the A-12 to about 50,000 ft. and a speed of Mach 1.6. CIA engineers accepted the offer after calculating that an A-12 equipped with a pair of J75 engines should be able to fly faster than Mach 2. The radar-deflecting shapes of the F-117A (top) and SR-71 (above) lend themselves to misinterpretations as UFOs.

"In order to placate the directors who controlled the agency's purse strings, [Lockheed test pilot] Bill Park dived an A-12 to Mach 2," says Crickmore. "[It] relieved some of the high-level pressure on the design team." Without intending to, Park also opened a new chapter in UFO history.

One of the features about UFO sightings that has consistently baffled the experts is their apparent ability to swoop downward, hover and then soar into the sky at impossible speeds.

Viewed head on, this is exactly how an A-12 or an SR-71–its J58-powered successor–appears to move at times during a normal flight. The maneuver is called a "dipsy doodle."

Col. Richard H. Graham, who commanded the U.S. Air Force 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing and has written a history of the SR-71 titled SR-71 Revealed, recently explained the dipsy doodle to PM. The pilot begins by climbing to about 30,000 ft. with the afterburners glowing. At about 33,000 ft., with the plane at Mach .95, he noses the aircraft over. Heading down at a pitch as great as 30 degrees, the plane falls as fast as 3000 ft. per minute. After 10 to 20 seconds, the pilot pulls out of the dive, then accelerates skyward at more than twice the speed of sound.

There is one more very UFO-like characteristic of the SR-71: The glow of its exhaust periodically turns green.

The SR-71 burns fuel modified to withstand high temperatures. It doesn't light easily. "One early 'hiccup' was ignition," Crickmore recalls. "The [J58] engine would not start no matter what procedure was tried."

Eventually the problem was solved by the introduction of a chemical that explodes on contact with the atmosphere. Graham says it must be introduced into the engine when it is started, and it also kicks-in the afterburners. This happens after each aerial refueling, which, given the SR-71's enormous thirst, is quite often. Each time, it produces another image that could be misinterpreted as a UFO–flashing colored lights.

The green flash and distinctive dipsy doodle can be spotted from miles away. Observing the pattern created by these strange sights provides a map to the SR-71's target area, giving those on the ground enough time to hide whatever the spyplane has been sent to photograph.

Curiously, the ebb and flow of UFO sightings in the Southwest correspond with the comings and goings of secret aircraft. Some of the most intense UFO spottings coincided with the testing of the F-117A stealth fighter, which was stationed just west of Area 51. These may account for the yet unexplained sightings.

What better way to hide extraordinary aircraft than to wrap them in the compelling fiction of aliens?

http://popularmechanics.com/science/military/1997/11/secret_cia_ufo_files/
 
the truth is out there.

seriously, read carl sagan's "the demon haunted world" if you want a good look at how people's imaginations make them see what they want to see.

he also mentions how some UFO sightings were traced to test flights of the SR-71.
 
My mother actually used to work for California Microwave, which is a defense contracting company. She was good friends with the first pilot of an SR-71. I have heard some amazing stories from that gentleman.
 
Sorry don't buy this crap one bit.

Also this report completely conflicts with the one you posted with that interview with that scientist guy, Dcup.

Dcup, do you just post anything you find that you think we'd be interested in or do the things you post represent your personal feelings towards the subject?
 
what about those 2 days where "ufo's" were visible all around washington d.c during the truman administration? not only were mysterious 'bleeps' showing up on radar at speeds of 7200mph on both government airbases and civilian airports. air force jets went up to intercept them, and they went away. they jets landed back at base, and immediately they were back in the sky. the jets went up once again and intercepted the pilots (followed them), and then just went away after a few minutes.

the government even held press conferences on it to explain they were some kind of electro magnetic interference or something.

i'm a big skeptic when it comes to this type of shit, but i still find some of it to be interesting.
 
p0ink said:
what about those 2 days where "ufo's" were visible all around washington d.c during the truman administration? not only were mysterious 'bleeps' showing up on radar at speeds of 7200mph on both government airbases and civilian airports. air force jets went up to intercept them, and they went away. they jets landed back at base, and immediately they were back in the sky. the jets went up once again and intercepted the pilots (followed them), and then just went away after a few minutes.

the government even held press conferences on it to explain they were some kind of electro magnetic interference or something.



:freak:
 
you left out the part about me being a skeptic.

good, now that you have me off of ignore (i doubt you ever did, in the first place), you can now respond to my posts blowing each and every one of your inane arguments full of holes.
 
Burning_Inside said:
Sorry don't buy this crap one bit.

Also this report completely conflicts with the one you posted with that interview with that scientist guy, Dcup.

Dcup, do you just post anything you find that you think we'd be interested in or do the things you post represent your personal feelings towards the subject?

Me? Huck is the one that posted the Bob Lazar interview! So yes Hucks post does contradict this one! Do a thread check on this topic! I have covered it from every angle as much as possible and have expressed my feelings about it! Disinformation is the key so unless you are part of the system you will never really know the whole truth! Even the information awareness act is part of the game! So the odds of someone revealing the whole truth are about .01%! Bob Lazar, Carl Sagan and 6413, and Dreamland all work as great cover for the Sheeple to what is really going on! Which of course is Top Secret!
 
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