| 
			   
			  
			  
			 
			April 1954 
			extracted from 
                
				
				
				Eisenhower’s 1954 Meeting With Extraterrestrials 
			by Michael Salla 
			  
			  
			The uncertainty over the motivations and behavior of the 
			
			Grey 
			extraterrestrials appears to have played a large role in the 
			government decision not to disclose the extraterrestrial presence 
			and the treaty Eisenhower signed with them.
 
			  
			The following 
			passage from an ‘alleged official document’ leaked to UFO 
			researchers describes the official secrecy policy adopted in April 
			1954, two months after
			
			Eisenhower had ‘First Contact’ with 
			extraterrestrials who were spurned by the Eisenhower 
			administration: 
				
				Any encounter with entities known to 
				be of extraterrestrial origin is to be considered to be a matter 
				of national security and therefore classified TOP SECRET (click 
				below images).  
				  
				Under no circumstances is the general public or 
				the public press to learn of the existence of these entities. 
				The official government policy is that such creatures do not 
				exist, and that no agency of the federal government is now 
				engaged in any study of extraterrestrials or their artifacts. 
				Any deviation from this stated policy is absolutely forbidden.
				
 Penalties for disclosing classified 
				information concerning extraterrestrials are quite 
				severe.
 
				  
				In December 1953, the Joint Chiefs of Staff issued 
				Army-Navy-Air Force publication 146 that made the unauthorized 
				release of information concerning UFOs a crime under the 
				Espionage Act, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a 
				$10,000 fine.  
				  
				According to 
				
				Robert Dean, this draconian 
				penalty is what prevents most former military servicemen from 
				coming forward to disclose information. 
				  
				
				        
 
				  
				  
				  
				  
				 
				    
				
 
				  
				Special Operations Manual 1-01 
				by 
				Jan 
				Aldrich 
				Dec 1996 
				from
				
				VirtuallyStrange Website 
				recovered through
				
				WayBackMachine Website 
				
 
				  
				
				
				
				Special Operations Manual 1-01 - Part 1
 
				During a visit to Washington, D.C. 
				I stopped off at Richard Hall’s home and during my stay 
				there he showed me a copy SOM 1-01. I noticed a number items in 
				the publication atypical and unusual in military writings. 
				The next day I discussed this manual with Don Berliner. Since it 
				appeared to have the US Army seal on the cover, I urged him to 
				send it to the Army for security determination which I thought 
				might prove very interesting; especially any comments they might 
				make. He said he had given it to the GAO Roswell investigators 
				and felt that was the best place to get further information on 
				it.
 
				Don Berliner can certainly speak for himself. However, my 
				impression was that his attitude towards the authenticity of the 
				manual was ambivalent. He had after all presented a talk at a 
				MUFON symposium about how a recovery team would retrieve crashed 
				saucers.
 
				Berliner mentioned that he had consulted with several experts 
				and came away with some conflicting opinions. (I didn’t 
				extensive notes at the time so I am relying on memory for the 
				following.) He asked someone from the government printing office 
				if they produced a manual like this and was told that it 
				appeared a sloppy job, but it well might have come from them. He 
				consulted some military officers about the manual, and they 
				disagreed about whether it could be authentic.
 
				  
				He had also asked 
				archivists at Carlisle Barracks about the manual, and they had 
				pointed out that the publications list in the manual was correct 
				for the date of the manual. However, just shortly after the 
				manual date the publications cited had changed, and the list 
				would have contained incorrect references just a month or so 
				later. 
				Berliner and I heatedly disagreed about some of the problems in 
				the manual. He told me that the manual had come in the mail from 
				an unknown source. He did not feel that necessarily reflected on 
				the authenticity. He pointed out that the news media in 
				Washington, DC live on leaks. We also disagreed on the effect of 
				the espionage laws in this case.
 
				  
				He felt, as an aviation writer, 
				that he was a member of the press and had no responsibility to 
				try to help the authorities identify the source of the 
				document - which since purported to be a security document of the 
				US, a security violation had occurred. 
				The Special Operations Manual tells retrieval teams how to 
				conduct such operations. Manuals of this type would be used by 
				the commander or team leader (or whatever the designation) to 
				develop Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), 
				Operational Plans (OPlans) which would contained 
				detailed instructions and tasks on retrieval, and Operation 
				Orders (OPORD), which would apply the plan to a 
				specific operation.
 
				  
				Oplans can easily become OPORDs. OPORD are 
				used in specific situations: if the thing came down in a swamp, 
				this would require special techniques and equipment and be 
				addressed in the OPORD. Of course, once the location is known, 
				the specifics of the area, (ie local population, terrain, 
				communication, etc., etc.) would be addressed in the OPORD. 
				To make sure that all necessary actions are accomplished 
				correctly, manuals are written to establish guidance and 
				standards.
 
				  
				It is too late when the event has taken place to 
				research what should be done. The guidance on this is set out 
				long in advance by people who careful consider all aspects of 
				the problem. This guidance is used to craft Oplans and OPORDs 
				for specific situations and develop training. When unforeseen 
				developments happen, there is feed back and the manuals are 
				revised as necessary. 
				Oplans and OPORDs address Administrative and Personnel, Security 
				and Intelligence, Operations, Logistics, Communications and 
				Electronics and other areas of concern as necessary. (For 
				example all modern Oplans and ORORDs address Safety as a 
				separate area - not so, of course, in 1954.)
 
				So any reviewer of this document should keep in mine that it 
				should establish minimal standards for the tasks and goals 
				planned.
 
				Generally all publications in the military and other agencies 
				solicit recommendations for improvements and corrections of 
				errors. Drafts of new publications are generally sent to 
				activities having some interest or expertise on the subject for 
				coordination. Generally such coordinations improves the final 
				product. I worked in offices that received such publications and 
				from time to time and was tasked to critique these publications. 
				The result was a long list of discrepancies, errors, comments, 
				and recommendations which was submitted to the proponent agency.
 
				I proposed to do such a review (a little less formal than when 
				it was an official duty) on SOM 1-01. Some of the 
				discrepancies, etc. are impossible to address since the manual 
				is fragmentary. However, they are included for future reference. 
				Items considered major discrepancies are indicated with an 
				asterisk *.
 
				  
				A short analysis will be included at the end of the 
				list. (Page numbers are those in Berliner’s copy of the 
				document.)
 
 
 
				
				
 Special Operations Manual 1-01 - Part 2
 
 
 
				COVER 
				List of comments  
					
						
						
						* The word “RESTRICTED” is 
					placed on the cover. Restricted was a security 
					classification that was being phased in 1954. Restricted 
					Data (RD) and Formerly Restricted Data (FRD) 
					are used to refer to nuclear weapons data. Use of the word 
					RESTRICTED, therefore, causes confusion especially since the 
					cover is the only place it is used. Security regulations at 
					the 1954 do not have a special use for the word other than 
					those cited above. Nowhere in the text of the manual is this 
					use addressed.
						
						The classification of “SOM 1-01” 
					on the cover is not indicated. (See below 6)
						
						* The designation TO 12D1-3-11-1 
					is not explained anywhere in the manual. The Army and the 
					Air Force issued many joint manuals. The Army’s designation 
					would be TM (Technical Manual) and a series of 
					number (and sometime letters.) The Air Force designation TO (Technical Order) was also used in smaller 
					lettering/numbering as in this case. A research item would 
					be to look up the TO-12D1-3-11-1 in the index of Air Force 
					Technical Orders. (A prediction is that it will refer to an 
					unclassified packaging manual.)
						
						What is the security 
					classification of “TO-12D1-3-11-1”? (See below 6)
						
						What is the security 
					classification of the manual title? (See below 6)
						
						There is no short title. The 
					security classification of numerical and title determine the 
					classification of documents that refer to these titles and 
					designations. To allow manuals to be cited in lower 
					classified security documents a “short title” either 
					unclassified or a lower classification is created. While 
					this procedure was not effective in 1954, a modification 
					should have been made later and added to the cover.
						
						“Eyes Only” is not a security 
					classification. It is sometimes used as a communication 
					procedure and sometimes as custom in the military. It sounds 
					very “James Bond.” However, when used in communication it is 
					generally directed to one named individual. I would very 
					much like to see a security manual that covers “Eyes Only.”
						
						There should be on the cover 
					somewhere “copy #---- of----copies.” This was a printed 
					manual. Each copy should be serial numbered. (See below 9)
						
						* There is no Top Secret Control 
					Number. The US Army Europe Supplement to Army Regulation 
					380-5 has a good designation, not used universally 
					throughout the Army, Continuous Controlled Accountability 
					(CCA), but helpful in understanding the security 
					procedures for Top Secret and other specially classified 
					documents. Top Secret, Communication Security items such as 
					codes and key material (COMSEC), NATO Secret are CCA 
					documents. They must be individual accounted for (that means 
					control and serial numbers), an individual is always signed 
					for them, and they must be under control of that individual 
					or in an authorized security container.    
						In addition each person that 
					looks at a Top Secret document is required to sign a form 
					that he has read it. The argument has been made on this list 
					that Top Secret documents have been found in the archives 
					that do not have TS control number. This is argument by 
					exception and is meaningless. Such documents appear to be 
					security violations. A security violation does not negate 
					the regulation - it is a violation of the regulation. Just as 
					someone who commits murder but is never caught does not 
					negate the law against murder. Archived documents also have 
					to a certain extent been demilitarized or sanitized so the 
					argument does not necessarily apply. SM 1-01 does not appear 
					to be an archived document, but an active document. As such, 
					there were almost 40 years to correct this major deficiency, 
					but no one bothered. 
						This is extraordinary considering the almost constant 
					admonishment against security lapses in the manual itself.
 
						
						The manual, issued by the 
					MAJESTIC--12 GROUP, has what appears to be an US Army seal. 
					Army manual from this period carried such seals.
						
						The security warning appears to 
					be incomplete. Most - although I can’t say all - usually 
					enumerate the penalties for security violations.
						
						There is not page count. Most, 
					not all manuals of this time would have a page count so the 
					accountable individual could easily verify that the manual 
					was complete. 
				
 
				
				Special Operations Manual 1-01 - Part 3
 
 List of comments (Continued)
 
					
						
						
						There is no authentication page. 
					Now if this is an Army manual, as indicated by the seal, 
					there should be a page which states the manual is official 
					by the Chief of Staff or the Secretary of the Army and 
					countersigned or sealed by the Adjutant General’s office.
						
						There is no page to register 
					changes to the publications.
						
						On the content page: The 
					previous statements on the classification of the manual 
					designations, title and short title apply.
						
						It is unusual to have the 
					Chapter 2 as the Introduction.
						
						The text, paragraphs and titles 
					are not portion marked. This was not effective in 1954 but 
					should have been changed later to comply with current 
					regulations that require is paragraph - subparagraph to be 
					classified individually.
						
						Majestic-12, Majestic 12 Group, 
					Majic 12, MJ-12 are not defined. Sometimes they are used 
					interchangeable.
						
						There is no glossary to define 
					these term listed in the Table of Content.
						
						Paragraph (Para) 2, Chapter 1. 
					“MJ-12 takes the subject of the UFOBs...” Procedures require 
					that when an acronym is first used it is defined. (Comment 
					19 applies)
						
						Para 2a, chapter 1. “The general 
					aspects of MJ-12 to clear up any misconception that anyone 
					may have.” This is a howler. Manual are published to 
					prescribe actions and set standards not “clear up 
					misconceptions..”
						
						Para 3, Chapter 1. “Eyes Only” 
					previous comments apply. The classification of two points 
					above Top Secret is not defined here. A reference is not 
					given for the definition, and finally there is no official 
					publication that makes such a designation.
						
						Para 4d, Chapter 1. “...secret 
					locations...” This could be confusing. The proper 
					terminology would be at... classified locations...
						
						Para 6b, Chapter 2. Appendix I 
					contain a list of reference that is completely inadequate to 
					support this manual. (See below)
						
						Para 6c, Chapter 2. Appendix II 
					is said to contain a list of Majectic--12 personnel. (Not in 
					the manual available to Berliner.) Note that nowhere is a 
					clear chain of command and support relationships discussed 
					for the MJ-12 teams
						
						Para 7, Chapter 2. Forms and 
					Records. This Appendix (Ia) is not available in the Berliner 
					material.
						
						Par 12c, Chapter 3. “down 
					satellites” is listed as one of the cover stories. Since the 
					mission stated in paragraph 12, is a press blackout down 
					satellite in 1954 will not work. It will only reinforce the 
					press’s effort to get information. Arguments that there were 
					mystery satellites, searches for natural satellites, etc. 
					completely miss the point. A story from the military that 
					they were recovering a downed satellite in 1954 would cause 
					a sensation. There would be no possibility of a press 
					blackout.
						
						Para 13a, Chapter 3. The 
					solution to security concerns is to form a perimeter. 
					Maintaining a perimeter requires large number of personnel. 
					Are all these personnel to be cleared? Solution to this 
					problem of course well known to military personnel. Set up 
					an exclusion area within the perimeter. Keep all the unclear 
					military personnel out of the exclusion area. You can then 
					keep the number of cleared personnel to a minimum. Exclusion 
					areas are used for communication facilities, tactical 
					operation centers, command posts, nuclear weapons areas, and 
					actually ordinary crash sites. Seems unlikely that MJ-12 
					people couldn’t think of this.
						
						Para 13ª, Chapter 3. Just what 
					type of electronic surveillance existed in 1954. Ground 
					radar. Then, maybe the manual should be included references 
					in Appendix 1. (See item 24.) However, I don’t think there 
					was really much in the way of electronic surveillance that 
					was effective in 1954.
						
						Para 13ª, Chapter 3. Personnel 
					are going to be issued live ammunition for perimeter duty. 
					There is no discussion here of the use of deadly force. No 
					publications are cited. There are not regulations on the use 
					of the deadly force in Appendix I. There are no references 
					to qualifications with weapons. Neither are there an 
					publications cited in appendix I. This borders on gross 
					negligence!
						
						Para 13d, Chapter 3. Situation 
					Evaluation. What information does MJ-12 want and in what 
					format? Notice that is not discussed. Nor is there a 
					reference cited in Appendix I.
						
						Para 13, Chapter 3. Under 
					“Secure the Area” no provisions are made to prevent 
					observation from the air. No provisions are made to prevent 
					observations from higher ground. Tentage and camouflage 
					would nets seem to be the answer. No guidance and no 
					publications cited.
						
						Para 14ª, Chapter 3. How is the 
					site to be documented? Is aerial photography to be used? Is 
					a grid system to be established on the site? Is the area to 
					be surveyed in? No guidance, no publications which might 
					help are cited.
						
						Para 14ª, Chapter 3. The area 
					will be checked for radiation. What type? What type of 
					monitoring equipment should be used? Should radiation 
					exposure records be kept on personnel? Should dosimeters 
					(sp?) be issued? Decontamination procedures and monitoring 
					of exposed personnel are not discussed. No guidance and no 
					publications are cited.
						
						Para 14ª, Chapter 3. Check for 
					toxic agents. How? With what? What are recommended 
					procedure, protective clothing, decontamination procedures? 
					No guidance and no publications are cited.
						
						Para 14ª, Chapter 3. 
					Documentation. It does not seem that the person who wrote is 
					familiar with Technical Intelligence procedures. (Maybe we 
					fell asleep in that class?) No forms, procedures, guidance, 
					or publications are cited.
						
						Para 13ª, Chapter 3. No guidance 
					is given on special containers, material handle equipment, 
					etc. No publications are cited.
						
						Para 14b, Chapter 3. No much is 
					said about “Red Team.” What support is required from the 
					site commander, etc.?
						
						Para 14c, Chapter 3. 
					Contamination is mentions, but no protective gear or 
					procedures are recommended.
						
						Para 15, Chapter 3. Cleansing 
					the Area. Extraterrestrial technology, in light of modern 
					technology, would be thought to included some very small 
					items. The method for cleaning the area is apparently visual 
					inspection. Should the soil be checked? Too what depth? 
					Should the top soil be striped and screened? There is no 
					guidance. Here is definitely a place where minimum standard 
					can and should be established. It is left to the discretion 
					of the officer in charge. The site commander should have the 
					area checked and certify in writing that nothing was left 
					there.
						
						Para 16, Chapter 3. Special or 
					Unusual Circumstances only anticipates a crash in a 
					populated area. There is a publications cited here. Once 
					again the “Eyes Only” comment applies. However, other 
					special situations like recovery from lakes, swamps, 
					mountain tops are not addressed.
						
						Para 17, Chapter 3. This is not 
					a multipart serial numbered form. Even bills of lading were 
					that way in 1954.
						
						Para 18ª, Chapter 3. Note once 
					again the idea of tagging each item as standard procedures 
					in technical intelligence is ignored.
						
						Para 18, Chapter 3. A copy of 
					the inventory is not placed inside the inner box.
						
						Para 18, Chapter 3. Packing of 
					unusual, toxic, liquid or other items is not discussed.
						
						As there are several page 
					missing only packing is the inner box is described. In the 
					removal process procedures are from other wooden contains 
					are described in detail.
						
						Chapter 4 talks about 
					Extraterrestrial Biological Entities (EBE). If alive, they 
					are to be handle by the OPNAC - BBS team which is never 
					explained. Nor is the type of support expected from the cite 
					commander discussed.
						
						Contact with EBE. Generally no 
					protective gear is recommend although it thought that they 
					there is a possibility of contamination.
						
						Although the front of the manual 
					apparently has an Army seal, chapter 6 talks about squadrons 
					which expect for the calvary exist in the Air Force.
						
						The Appendix on publications is 
					completely inadequate. See above. 
				  
				  
				
 Special Operations Manual 1-01 - Part 4
 
 Finally, for a wrap up, some general comments.
 
					
						
						
						Nowhere in this manual is the 
					prevention of taking souvenir discussed. If this is as 
					serious of as the manual says, everyone would deposit their 
					clothing in a container on leaving the exclusion area and a 
					body cavity search should be considered, and then receive 
					new clothing. For morale and dignity sake this could be part 
					of a “decontamination procedure.” (Unfortunate that the MJ12 
					personnel did think of an exclusion area, isn’t it?) 
						Those of you that have been in the military may remember 
					that as you left the firing range you came to inspection 
					arms in front of a commissioned officer and were required to 
					say, “No brass or ammo, sir.” You might have thought that 
					this was some quaint military ritual. However, as some 
					decided to disobey the written and verbal orders against 
					taking live or spent ammunition off the range would later 
					find out, this little exercise sealed their guilty at legal 
					proceedings. Of course, SOM 1-01 is much more 
					serious. So we probably would have each member of sign a 
					certificate that he did not remove anything.
 
  
						
						There is a planning process for 
					military manuals. It is long and complicated. One of the 
					NCOs where I worked diagramed it out on a flow chart for a 
					presentation he was required to make. It stretched half way 
					around the room. SOM 1-01 would be one in a series of 
					planned manual since as can be seen from the foregoing the 
					operation is more complicated than meets the eye. In the 
					Appendix I we should see SOM 1-02, SOM 1-03, etc. with the 
					dreaded term everyone in the military hates “TBP” To be published. However, nowhere in the manual are 
					future publications mentioned.
 One must remember that these guys are supposedly the best 
					and brightest and have unlimited “black” resources. If this 
					is the best they can do in the planning cycle, maybe it’s 
					time for the president to junk MJ-12.
 
  
						
						The format of this manual is 
					sloppy. The way to get covered with spit and bad breathe is 
					to hand in a manual manuscript which has a section one, but 
					no section two or that has a subparagraph 21ª, but no 21b. 
					If the outline format does not have two items, then they are 
					not numbered. That is basic.
  
						
						The manual fails to address what 
					the basic equipment each team should have. Specialized 
					equipment that might be required should be discussed. The 
					Appendix I should bulge out with references to authorization 
					documents, technical and field manuals. The location of 
					units and equipment that recovery teams can call on should 
					be discussed in the manual. (Dec 8, 1941 is too late!)
  
						
						The manual fails to address the 
					composition of recovery teams: what specialties are 
					required, what certifications and credentials should they 
					have, what specialized team training is required, how will 
					this be done.
  
						
						How does some one become an 
					MJ-12 team member. In the nuclear weapons program there is 
					the Personal Reliability Program (PRP). The 
					individual’s administrative, medical, dental, etc. status is 
					constantly screened. When you visit the dentist, the first 
					place to go after your return is to the commander’s office 
					(or the PRP officer if the commander is a full colonel.) and 
					tell him what treatment you received. The person’s 
					character, personnel status, any legal infractions are 
					constantly monitored.    
						All records of all PRP personnel 
					checked at least quarterly. SOM 1-01 is silent on this. If 
					you think about it, this program is more vital than nuclear 
					weapons. A break through in technology in this era means the 
					owner could rule the world. Of course, the PRP evolved over 
					the years. However, the start did exist in 1954. The 
					anticipated counter argument is that the individual will 
					received Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmentalize Information 
					(SCI) clearance and be indoctrinated into the program. Then 
					the old broken record starts up again: this should be 
					mentioned in the manual and Appendix I should reference 
					these documents concern SCI indoctrination.
  
						
						The only operation that the 
					manual addresses in detail is the simple packing and 
					unpacking of material for routine military shipment. (BTW 
					Nowhere is the military specification -MIL-SPECS- 
					for the packing material discussed -i.e. material strength, 
					heat resistance, etc.- nor are the Federal Stock Numbers of 
					the packing material provided.....)
  
						
						The most important thing about 
					this manual it fell out of the sky. It is supposedly written 
					by some of the best brains in the country or people who can 
					get the best brains. The military is in the middle of this, 
					but the manual is full of military gaffes. It was not sent 
					(that we know of) to Peter Jennings or Jack Anderson, but to 
					Don Berliner. So we are to believe that someone somewhere in 
					a highly classified facility risked it all to send to this 
					bomb shell to someone with little media influence. 
						   
						Hmmmm... 
				Is it possible that this manual is 
				real? Possible yes, but highly unlikely.
 How about an alternate more likely possibility. An Air Force 
				buck Sgt. with some intelligence training (but who probably fell 
				asleep in technical intelligence class) and some friends cut and 
				pasted this little number from a military packing manual. The 
				buck Sgt. was too young to have been around in 1954 so there are 
				so many anachronisms.
   
				I have no proof, of course. Just a 
				little possibility.....
 
				  
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