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 Forward
 
				
				Senator Strom Thurmond 
 When I was first elected to the United States Senate in 1954, the 
			United States and democratic Western governments were locked in a 
			bitter, and sometimes deadly, Cold War with totalitarian Communist 
			governments that sought to expand their bankrupt-ideology throughout 
			the world. Though those who did not live during this era have a hard 
			time picturing it, the 1950s and 1960s were a period in our history 
			when there was a very real need to be concerned about a Communist, 
			especially Soviet, threat to our security and institutions.
 
				As a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, I took a lead 
			role in seeking out those in our 
			government who sought to muzzle military personnel who wanted to 
			alert Americans to the threats we faced 
			from our Communist enemies and to speak out against some of the 
			plainly misguided, incorrect and, frankly, 
			dangerous policies of the United States in dealing with the Soviets 
			and Red Chinese. Distinguished officers and 
			patriotic men such as Admiral Arleigh Burke and General Arthur 
			Trudeau were essentially censored by their own
			government because of the views they espoused about the state of the 
			world and the nature of the threat 
			before our nation. As a veteran of World War II, a commissioned 
			officer in the United States Army Reserve, and a 
			proponent of a strong and comprehensive military, I could not sit 
			idly by and watch our military be undermined 
			by people in government who were sympathetic to Communism.
 
 During this period, the Armed Services Committee held extensive 
			hearings into this matter. It seemed an alien concept that in a 
			nation that protects and cherishes free expression, the men who 
			risked their lives to keep us free and best understood how we should 
			confront our enemies would be ordered silent. It was under these 
			circumstances that I came to know Philip Corso, then a colonel in 
			the United States Army, who was equally disturbed about the muzzling 
			of our military, and who shared my concern about the future of our 
			military forces.
 
				As the members of the Armed Services Committee worked diligently to 
			discover who was working to quiet our soldiers, sailors, marines, 
			and airmen, Colonel Corso was brought to my attention by two of my 
			former staff members. The colonel had a great deal of credibility 
			and expertise not only as a military officer but also in the fields 
			of intelligence and national security. A veteran of World War II and 
			Korea, Corso had also spent four years working at the National 
			Security Council. In short, he was very familiar with issues that 
			concerned me and my colleagues on the Senate Armed Services 
			Committee, and he very quickly became a valued source of bountiful 
			information that was insightful and, most important, accurate. As a 
			matter of fact, the material he provided was invaluable in helping 
			us prove that the stifling of American military officers was being 
			ordered by individuals in high ranking positions within our own 
			government.
 
				In 1963, when I learned of Colonel Corso’s impending retirement from 
			the army, I thought that having a man with his background and 
			experiences on my staff would be of great benefit. So after offering 
			him a position that promised nothing more than long hours of hard 
			work at a modest salary, Philip Corso once again willingly went to 
			work serving and protecting the United States, this time as an aide 
			in my office.
 
				There is no question that Philip Corso has led a full and 
			adventurous life, and I am certain that he has many interesting 
			stories to share with individuals interested in military history, 
			espionage, and the workings of our government. We should all be 
			grateful that there are men and women like Colonel Corso - people 
			who are willing to dedicate their lives to serving the nation and 
			protecting the ideals we all hold dear - and we should honor the 
			sacrifices they have made in their careers and in their lives.
 
			 
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			Contents
 
 
 INTRODUCTION
 
 My name is Philip J. Corso, and for two incredible years back in the 
			1960s while I was a lieutenant colonel in the army heading up the 
			Foreign Technology desk in Army Research and Development at the 
			Pentagon, I led a double life. In my routine everyday job as a 
			researcher and evaluator of weapons systems for the army, I 
			investigated things like the helicopter armament the French military 
			had developed, the tactical deployment complexities of a theater 
			antimissile missile, or new technologies to preserve and prepare 
			meals for our troops in the field.
 
			  
			
			I read technology reports and met 
			with engineers at army proving grounds about different kinds of 
			ordnance and how ongoing budgeted development projects were moving 
			forward. I submitted their reports to my boss, Lt. Gen. Arthur 
			Trudeau, the director of Army R&D and the manager of a three 
			thousand plus man operation with lots of projects at different 
			stages. On the surface, especially to congressmen exercising 
			oversight as to how the taxpayers’ money was being spent, all of it 
			was routine stuff.  
			 Part of my job responsibility in Army R&D (research and 
			development), however, was as an 
			intelligence officer and adviser to General Trudeau who, himself, 
			had headed up Army Intelligence before coming to R&D. This was a job 
			I was trained for and held during World War II and Korea. At the 
			Pentagon I was working in some of the most secret areas of military 
			intelligence, reviewing heavily classified information on behalf of 
			General Trudeau. I had been on General Mac Arthur’s staff in Korea 
			and knew that as late as 1961 - even as late, maybe, as today - as 
			Americans back then were sitting down to watch Dr. Kildare or
			Gunsmoke, captured American soldiers from World War II and Korea 
			were still living in gulag conditions in prison camps in the Soviet 
			Union and Korea. Some of them were undergoing what amounted to sheer 
			psychological torture. They were the men who never returned.
 
			 As an intelligence officer I also knew the terrible secret that some 
			of our government’s most revered institutions had been penetrated by 
			the KGB and that key aspects of American foreign policy were being 
			dictated from inside the Kremlin. I testified to this first at a 
			Senate subcommittee hearing chaired by Senator Everett Dirksen of 
			Illinois in April 1962, and a month later delivered the same 
			information to Attorney General Robert Kennedy. He promised me that 
			he would deliver it to his brother, the President, and I have every 
			reason to believe he did. It was ironic that in 1964, after I 
			retired from the army and had served on Senator Strom Thurmond’s 
			staff, I worked for Warren Commission member Senator Richard Russell 
			as an investigator.
 
			 But hidden beneath everything I did, at the center of a double life 
			I led that no one knew about, and buried deep inside my job at the 
			Pentagon was a single file cabinet that I had inherited because of 
			my intelligence background. That file held the army’s deepest and 
			most closely guarded secret: the Roswell files, the cache of debris 
			and information an army retrieval team from the 509th Army Air Field 
			pulled out of the wreckage of a flying disk that had crashed outside 
			the town of Roswell in the New Mexico desert in the early morning 
			darkness during the first week of July 1947.
 
			  
			 The Roswell file was 
			the legacy of what happened in the hours and days after the crash 
			when the official government cover-up was put into place. As the 
			military tried to figure out what it was that had crashed, where it 
			had come from, and what its inhabitants’ intentions were, a covert 
			group was assembled under the leadership of the director of 
			intelligence, Adm. Roscoe Hillenkoetter, to investigate the nature 
			of the flying disks and collect all information about encounters 
			with these phenomena while, at the same time, publicly and 
			officially discounting the existence of all flying saucers. This 
			operation has been going on, in one form or another, for fifty years 
			amidst complete secrecy.  
			 I wasn’t in Roswell in 1947, nor had I heard any details about the 
			crash at that time because it was kept so tightly under wraps, even 
			within the military. You can easily understand why, though, if you 
			remember, as I do, the Mercury Theater “War of the Worlds” radio 
			broadcast in 1938 when the entire country panicked at the story of 
			how invaders from Mars landed in Grovers Mill, New Jersey, and began 
			attacking the local populace. The fictionalized eyewitness reports 
			of violence and the inability of our military forces to stop the 
			creatures were graphic.
 
			  
			 They killed everyone who crossed their path, 
			narrator Orson Welles said into his microphone, as these creatures 
			in their war machines started their march toward New York. The level 
			of terror that Halloween night of the broadcast was so intense and 
			the military so incapable of protecting the local residents that the 
			police were overwhelmed by the phone calls. It was as if the whole 
			country had gone crazy and authority itself had started to unravel.  
			
			Now, in Roswell in 1947, the landing of a flying saucer was no 
			fantasy. It was real, the military wasn’t able to prevent it, and 
			this time the authorities didn’t want a repeat of “War of the 
			Worlds. “ So you can see the mentality at work behind the desperate 
			need to keep the story quiet. And this is not to mention the 
			military fears at first that the craft might have been an 
			experimental Soviet weapon because it bore a resemblance to some of 
			the 
			German designed aircraft that had made their appearances near 
			the end of the war, especially the crescent shaped Horton flying 
			wing. What if the Soviets had developed their own version of this 
			craft?
 
			 The stories about the Roswell crash vary from one another in the 
			details. Because I wasn’t there, I’ve had to rely 
			on reports of others, even within the military itself. Through the 
			years, I’ve heard versions of the Roswell story in 
			which campers, an archeological team, or rancher Mac Brazel found 
			the wreckage. I’ve read military reports
			about different crashes in different locations in some proximity to 
			the army air field at Roswell like San Agustin and 
			Corona and even different sites close to the town itself. All of the 
			reports were classified, and I did not copy them or retain them for 
			my own records after I left the army.
 
			  
			 Sometimes the dates of the 
			crash vary from report to report, July 2 or 3 as opposed to July 4. 
			And I’ve heard different people argue the dates back and forth, 
			establishing time lines that vary from one another in details, but 
			all agree that something crashed in the desert outside of Roswell 
			and near enough to the army’s most sensitive installations at 
			Alamogordo and White Sands that it caused the army to react quickly 
			and with concern as soon as it found out.  
			 In 1961, regardless of the differences in the Roswell story from the 
			many different sources who had described it, the top-secret file of 
			Roswell information came into my possession when I took over the 
			Foreign Technology desk at R&D. My boss, General Trudeau, asked me 
			to use the army’s ongoing weapons development and research program 
			as a way to filter the Roswell technology into the main stream of 
			industrial development through the military defense contracting 
			program.
 
			  
			 Today, items such as lasers, integrated circuitry,
			fiberoptics networks, accelerated particle beam devices, and even 
			the Kevlar material in bulletproof vests are all commonplace. Yet 
			the seeds for the development of all of them were found in the crash 
			of the alien craft at Roswell and turned up in my files fourteen 
			years later.  
			 But that’s not even the whole story.
 
			 In those confusing hours after the discovery of the crashed Roswell 
			alien craft, the army determined that in the absence of any other 
			information it had to be an extraterrestrial. Worse, the fact that 
			this craft and other flying saucers had been surveilling our 
			defensive installations and even seemed to evidence a technology 
			we’d seen evidenced by the Nazis caused the military to assume these 
			flying saucers had hostile intentions and might have even interfered 
			in human events during the war.
 
			  
			 We didn’t know what the inhabitants 
			of these crafts wanted, but we had to assume from their behavior, 
			especially their interventions in the lives of human beings and the 
			reported cattle mutilations, that they could be potential enemies. 
			That meant that we were facing a far superior power with weapons 
			capable of obliterating us. At the same time we were locked in a 
			Cold War with the Soviets and the mainland Chinese and were faced 
			with the penetration of our own intelligence agencies by the KGB.  
			
			The military found itself fighting a two-front war, a war against 
			the Communists who were seeking to 
			undermine our institutions while threatening our allies and, as 
			unbelievable as it sounds, a war against 
			extraterrestrials, who posed an even greater threat than the 
			Communist forces. So we used the extraterrestrials’ 
			own technology against them, feeding it out to our defense 
			contractors and then adapting it for use in space-related
			defense systems.
 
			  
			
			It took us until the 1980s, but in the end we were 
			able to deploy enough of the Strategic 
			Defense Initiative, “Star Wars, “ to achieve the capability of 
			knocking down enemy satellites, killing the electronic guidance 
			systems of incoming enemy warheads, and disabling enemy spacecraft, 
			if we had to, to pose a threat. It was alien technology that we 
			used: lasers, accelerated particle-beam weapons, and aircraft 
			equipped with “Stealth” features. And in the end, we not only 
			outlasted the Soviets and ended the Cold War, but we forced a 
			stalemate with the extraterrestrials, who were not so invulnerable 
			after all.  
			 What happened after Roswell, how we turned the extraterrestrials’ 
			technology against them, and how we actually won the Cold War is an 
			incredible story. During the thick of it, I didn’t even realize how 
			incredible it was. I just did my job, going to work at the Pentagon 
			day in and day out until we put enough of this alien technology into 
			development that it began to move forward under its own weight 
			through industry and back into the army.
 
			  
			 The full import of what we 
			did at Army R&D and what General Trudeau did to grow R&D from a 
			disorganized unit under the shadow of the Advanced Research Projects 
			Agency, when he first took command, to the army department that 
			helped create the military guided missile, the antimissile missile, 
			and the guided missile launched accelerated particle beam firing 
			satellite killer, didn’t really hit me until years later when I 
			understood just how we were able to make history.  
			 I always thought of myself as just a little man from a little 
			American town in western Pennsylvania, and I didn’t assess the 
			weight of our accomplishments at Army R&D, especially how we 
			harvested the technology coming out of the Roswell crash, until 
			thirty-five years after I left the army when I sat down to write my 
			memoirs for an entirely different book.
 
			  
			 That was when I reviewed my 
			old journals, remembered some of the memos I’d written to General 
			Trudeau, and understood that the story of what happened in the days 
			after the Roswell crash was perhaps the most significant story of 
			the past fifty years. So, believe it or not, this is the story of 
			what happened in the days after Roswell and how a small group of 
			military intelligence officers changed the course of human history.
			
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