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Using recently declassified government files, the authors present a compelling argument that the government knows a great deal more about UFOs than it has sshared with the public, and has in fact deliberately concealed the findings of more than 30 years of investigations. Photographs.
Committee Serial No. 55. Considers sightings of unidentified flying objects, together with U.S. Air Force evaluations of the sightings as part of Project Blue Book.
What if the CIA didn't destroy NICAP? What if it started it? In 1956 a Washington, D.C. flying saucer club inspired the launch of the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena. The founders quickly assembled impressive boards consisting of community leaders and career intelligence officers. Over the next 13 years NICAP mounted a public relations campaign that amassed some 14,000 members. It pushed for and obtained Congressional hearings resulting in an Air Force-sponsored scientific UFO study. Why did key personnel leave the Committee over the next year, and was it related to a former CIA officer on the Board of Governors? Did the CIA destroy the organization, or is the NICAP sto...
The Flying Saucers Are Real by Donald Keyhoe, printed in 1950, is one of the first books investigating numerous encounters between the United States Air Force fighters, personnel, and other aircraft and UFOs between 1947 and 1950. The author contended that the Air Force was investigating these cases of close encounters, with a policy of concealing. Keyhoe also said that Earth had been visited by extraterrestrials for two centuries, with the frequency of these visits increasing sharply after the first atomic weapon test in 1945.
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