It appears more than possible that "those controlling this subject" may be covertly directing military action against the Extra-terrestrials assets that manifest as UFOs. In his 1998 book, "Confirmation", author Whitley Strieber analyzes a controversial NASA videotape made on the space shuttle Discovery during mission STS-48. This video has been featured several times on national television. It displays what appears to be unidentified flying objects being fired upon by some sort of particle beam weapon. The incident transpired on September 15, 1991. The Discovery was flying near Australia, approximately 1500 miles northwest from a secret US military base located at Pine Gap near Alice Springs. Strieber details a thorough analysis of the videotape by physicist Dr. Jack Kasher and imaging specialist Dr. Mark Carlotto. They conclude that the tedious explanations provided by NASA are simply not credible.
Support for the notion that covert military forces are fighting a secret war against the Extra-terrestrials also has been provided by Philip Corso, a retired US Army Colonel and author of the controversial book, "The Day After Roswell." Corso was a former staff member of President Eisenhower's National Security Council. He worked under General Trudeau at the Army's Research and Development Division's Foreign Technology desk. In "Day After Roswell", Corso alleges that he passed out pieces of the wreckage of a crashed UFO to high tech firms. This supposedly allowed advanced alien technology to be analyzed and then integrated into our industrial culture.
After the publication of his book, Philip Corso quickly became a celebrity within the flying saucer subculture. Sadly, few UFO experts criticized his openly bellicose response to the Et presence. He writes,
"These creatures weren't benevolent alien beings who had come to enlighten human beings. As long as we were incapable of defending ourselves, we had to allow them to intrude as they wished. ... We hid the truth and the EBEs(Extra-terrestrial Biological Entities) used it against us until 1974 when we had our first real shoot-down of an alien craft over Ramstein Air Force base in Germany."
It is virtually impossible to verify the particulars of Philip Corso's account. In "Day after Roswell", he does not offer the names of others who might corroborate his version of the events described. On July 16, 1998, at the age of 83, he reportedly died from a heart attack.
As a former peace movement activist, I find Philip Corso's extremist views chilling. Still, I suspect that his perspective on the Et-human relationship has great value. It is my suspicion that Corso's bellicose posture may provide us with insight into the thinking of a very important group, the wing of military-industrial complex that will likely try to use disclosure of the Et presence to unleash a new cold war.
After the downfall of the Soviet Union, defense expenditures were expected to decrease dramatically. The good fortune of some of the most economically powerful and politically influential weapons based corporations was threatened. The war on terrorism has changed all that. In the current political atmosphere, I fear that any disclosure of a probable Et presence will be used to fuel xenophobia and to precipitate an ever more costly arms race against a new adversary. The non-human intelligence that likely is responsible for many aspects of the UFO phenomenon.
Open war with advanced Et civilizations is an extremely remote possibility given the likelihood that UFOs are an ancient phenomenon. Extra-terrestrials have probably been here for centuries, if not millennia. If Extre-terrestrials were planning aggressive action against humans, then why wait so many years before mounting an open attack? By passing a test of time, their non-threatening posture has been repeatedly been strongly suggested.
If disclosure of an Et presence was suddenly made today, then defense corporations, along with their military and political allies, would probably use such a revelation for their own narrow interests. They would intensify and accelerate the " Star Wars" program. I imagine the slogan, "We must negotiate from a position of strength," would be featured prominently in the congressional sales campaign for more space based weapon systems. A trillion dollars might be needlessly spent to prepare us to battle an enemy we could never truly fight. On a planet where some 10 million children every year die from hunger and preventable disease, squandering our limited economic resources on such weaponry would be tragic.
Home- About- Field Reports- Tales of High Strangeness- Bio- Contact us