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 CHAPTER 6
 
 
			The Strategy
 The Strategy there is an old story I once heard about keeping 
			secrets. A group of men were trying to protect their deepest secrets 
			from the rest of the world. They took their secrets and hid them in 
			a shack whose very location was a secret. But the secret location 
			was soon discovered and in it was discovered the secrets that the 
			group was hiding. But before every secret could be revealed, the men 
			quickly built a second shack where they stored those secrets they 
			still kept to themselves.
 
			  
			Soon, the second shack was discovered and 
			the group realized they would have to give up some secrets to 
			protect the rest. So they again moved quickly to build a third shack 
			and protect whatever secrets they could. This process repeated 
			itself over and over until anyone wanting to find out what the 
			secrets were had to start at the first shack and work their way from 
			shack to shack until they came to where they could go no further 
			because they didn’t know the location of the next shack.  
			  
			For fifty 
			years this was the very process by which the secrets of Roswell were 
			protected by various serial incarnations of an ad hoc confederation 
			of top-secret working groups throughout different branches of the 
			government, and it is still going on today.  
			 Were you to search through every government document to find the 
			declassified secrets of Roswell and the contact we maintained with 
			the aliens who were visiting us before and have been doing so ever 
			since, you would find code named project after code named project, 
			each with its own file, security classification, military or 
			government administration, oversight mechanism, some form of budget, 
			and even reports of highly classified documents. All of these 
			projects were started to accomplish part of the same task: manage 
			our ongoing relationship with the alien visitors we discovered at 
			Roswell. However, at each level, once the security had been breached 
			for whatever reason -even by design - part of the secret was 
			disclosed through declassification while the rest was dragged into a 
			new classified project or moved to an existing one that had not been 
			compromised.
 
			 It makes perfect sense, especially to those of us who understand 
			that the government is not some monolithic 
			piece of granite that never moves or reacts. To those of us inside 
			the military/government machine the 
			government is dynamic, highly reactive, and even proactive when it 
			comes to devising ways to protect its most 
			closely held secrets. For all the years after Roswell we weren’t 
			just one step ahead of people wanting to know what really happened, 
			we were a hundred steps ahead, a thousand, or even more. In fact, we 
			never hid the truth from anybody, we just camouflaged it. It was 
			always there, people just didn’t know what to look for or recognize 
			it for what it was when they found it. And they found it over and 
			over again.
 
			 Project “Blue Book” was created to make the general public happy 
			that they had a mechanism for reporting what they saw. 
			
			Projects 
			“Grudge” and “Sign” were of a higher security to allow the military 
			to process sightings and encounter reports that couldn’t easily be 
			explained away as balloons, geese, or the planet Venus. Blue Fly and 
			Twinkle had other purposes, as did scores of other camouflage 
			projects like Horizon, HARP, Rainbow, and even the Space Defense 
			Initiative, all of which had something to do with alien technology. 
			But no one ever knew it. And when reporters were actually given 
			truthful descriptions of alien encounters, they either fell on the 
			floor laughing or sold the story to the tabloids, who’d print a 
			drawing of a large headed, almond eyed, six fingered alien. Again, 
			everybody laughed. But that’s what these things really look like 
			because I saw the one they trucked up to Wright Field.
 
			 Meanwhile, as each new project was created and administered, another 
			bread crumb for anyone pursuing the secrets to find, we were 
			gradually releasing bits and pieces of information to those we knew 
			would make something out of it. Flying saucers did truly buzzover 
			Washington, D.C., in 1952, and there are plenty of photographs and 
			radar reports to substantiate it. But we denied it while encouraging 
			science fiction writers to make movies like The Man from Planet X to 
			blow off some of the pressure concerning the truth about flying 
			disks. This was called camouflage through limited disclosure, and it 
			worked. If people could enjoy it as entertainment, get duly 
			frightened, and follow trails to nowhere that the working group had 
			planted, then they’d be less likely to stumble over what we were 
			really doing. And what were we really doing?
 
			 As General Twining had suggested in his report to the Army Air 
			Forces, “foreign technology” was the category to which research on 
			the alien artifacts from Roswell was to be delegated. Foreign 
			technology was one of the great catch all terms, encompassing 
			everything from researching French air force engineering advances on 
			helicopter blades to captured Russian MiGs flown in from Cuba by 
			savvy pilots who could negotiate our southern radar perimeter better 
			than our own pilots. So what if a few pieces of technological debris 
			from a strange crescent shaped hovering wing turned up in an old 
			file somewhere in the army’s foreign technology files? If nobody 
			asked about it - and nobody did because foreign technology was just 
			too damned dull for most reporters to hang around - we didn’t have 
			to say anything about it. Besides, most foreign technology stuff was 
			classified anyway because it dealt with weapons development we were 
			hiding from the Soviets and most reporters knew it. Foreign 
			technology was the absolute perfect cover. All I had to do was 
			figure out what to do with the stuff I had. And General Trudeau 
			wasn’t in the mood to wait any longer.
 
			  
			“Come on, Phil, let’s go. “ The general’s voice suddenly filled the 
			room over the blown speaker hum of my desk intercom. I put down my 
			coffee and headed up the stairway to the back door of his inner 
			office. This was a routine that repeated itself three, sometimes 
			four times a day. The general always liked to get briefed in person 
			because even in the most secure areas of the Pentagon, the walls 
			tended to listen and remember our conversations.  
			 Our sessions were always private, and from the way our conversation 
			bounced back and forth among different topics, if it weren’t for his 
			three stars and my pair of leaves, you wouldn’t even think you were 
			listening to a pair of army officers. It was cordial and friendly, 
			but my boss was my boss and, even after we both retired like two old 
			war horses put out to pasture, our meetings were never informal.
 
			  
			“So now you figured out how the package arrived?” he asked me 
			after I sat down. I had figured it out by going through all of the 
			files I could get my hands on and tracing the path of the Roswell 
			information from the 509th to Fort Bliss and from there to Wright 
			Field, the dissemination point.  
			 General Trudeau motioned for me to sit down and I settled into a 
			chair. It was already ten thirty in the morning so I knew there’d be 
			at least two other sit down briefings that day.
 
				
				“I know it didn’t come by the parcel service, “ I said. “I don’t 
			think they have a truck that big. “ “Does that help you figure out what we should do?” he asked.
 
			Actually, knowing how the material got into the Foreign Technology 
			files was critically important because it meant that it was 
			dispatched there originally. Even if it had been neglected over the 
			years, it was clear that the Foreign Technology desk of the R&D 
			system was its intended destination, part of the original plan. And 
			I even had the documents from General Twining’s own files to 
			substantiate this. Not that I would have ever revealed them at that 
			time. General Twining, more than anyone else during those years 
			after the war, understood the sensitive and protected nature of the 
			R&D budget. And now that I understood how the camouflage was to take 
			place, I also saw how brilliant the general’s plan was. R&D, 
			although important and turning over records like topsoil from the 
			Nazi weapons development files captured after the war, was kind of a 
			backwater railroad junction. 
 Unnoticed by most officers on their way to the top and not called 
			upon in the late 1940s to do much more than record keeping, it 
			turned out to be the perfect hideaway when the CIA hirelings came 
			sniffing through the Pentagon in the early 1950s looking for 
			anything they could find on the Roswell technology. Unless they were 
			part of the working group from the start, not even members of the 
			Eisenhower White House National Security staff knew that R&D was the 
			repository of Roswell artifacts. I was there. I can vouch for that. 
			In fact, it wasn’t until I saw the files for myself and reverse 
			traced their path to my doorstep that I realized what General 
			Twining and the working group had accomplished. By the time I had 
			arrived at the White House, though, it was all ancient history. 
			People were more worried about the sighting information deluging 
			Project Blue Book every day than they were about the all but 
			forgotten story of Roswell.
 
			 But my mind was drifting and the general was still speaking. He 
			wanted to know what my research had uncovered and what I had learned 
			about Roswell during my years at the White House, what I’d seen, how 
			far the concentric circles of the group and the people who worked 
			for them went.
 
				
				“Phil, we both know that the package you have is no surprise, “ he 
			said very flatly.  
			I didn’t respond substantively, and he didn’t expect me to, because 
			to do so would have meant breaching security confidentiality that 
			I’d sworn to maintain when I was assigned to the NSC staff at the 
			White House.  
				
				“You don’t have to say anything officially, “ he continued. “And I 
			don’t expect you to. But can you give me your impressions of how 
			people working for the group talked about the package?” “I wasn’t working for the group, General, “ I said. “And whatever I 
			saw or heard was only because it happened to pass by, not because I 
			was supposed to do anything about it. “
 
			But he pushed me to remember whether the NSC staff had any direct 
			dealings with the group and how much the Central Intelligence 
			staffers at the White House pressed to get any information they 
			could about what the group was doing. Of course I remembered the 
			questions going back and forth about what might have happened at 
			Roswell, about what was really behind Blue Book, and about all those 
			lights buzzing the Washington Monument back in 1952. I didn’t have 
			anything substantive to tell my boss about my involvement, but his 
			questions helped me put together a bigger picture than I thought I 
			knew.  
			  
			From my perspective in 1961, especially after reviewing 
			everything I could about what happened in the days after the Roswell 
			crash, I could see very clearly the things that I didn’t understand 
			back in 1955. I didn’t know why the CIA was so aggressively agitated 
			about the repeated stories of flying saucer sightings or why they 
			kept searching for any information about the technology from 
			Roswell. I certainly didn’t volunteer any information, mainly 
			because nobody asked me, about having seen parts of “the cargo” as 
			it passed through Fort Riley. I just played position, representing 
			the army as the military member of the National Security Staff, but 
			I listened to everything I heard like a fly on the wall.  
			 General Trudeau’s questions forced me to ask myself what the big 
			picture was that he saw. He was obviously 
			looking for something in my descriptions of the architecture of the 
			group, as I had learned it 
			from my review of the history, and of the starters on the lower 
			security classification periphery as I understood it from my 
			experience at the White House. He really wanted to know how the 
			bureaucracy worked, how much activity the group itself generated, 
			what kinds of policy questions came up in my presence, and whether I 
			was asked to comment informally on anything having to do with the 
			issues of the group.
 
			 Did Admiral Hillenkoetter host many briefings for President 
			Eisenhower where Generals Twining, Smith, Montague, and Vandenburg 
			were present? Gen. W. B. Smith had replaced Secretary Forrestal 
			after he committed suicide during the second year of the Truman 
			administration. Were Professor Menzel and Drs. Bush and Berkner 
			visitors to the White House on regular occasions? Did they meet at 
			the White House with Admiral Hillenkoetter or the generals? What was 
			the level of presence of the CIA staffers at the White House through 
			all of this? And did I recognize anyone from the Joint Research and 
			Development Board or the Atomic Energy Commission at any briefings 
			chaired by Admiral Hillenkoetter?
 
			  
			Through General Trudeau’s questions I could see not only that the 
			general knew his history almost as well as I did about how the 
			original group was formed and how it must have operated, but he also 
			had a sense of what kind of problem was facing the military R&D and 
			how much leeway he had to solve it. Like most ad hoc creations of 
			government, the group must have at some point become as self-serving 
			as every other joint committee eventually became the longer it 
			functioned and the more its job increased. As the camouflage about 
			flying disks grew, so did the role of the group.  
			  
			Only the group 
			didn’t have the one thing most government committees had : the 
			ability to draw upon other areas of the government for more 
			resources. This group was above top secret and, officially, had no 
			right to exist. Therefore, as its functions grew over the next ten 
			years to encompass the investigations of more flying saucer 
			sightings and the research into more encounters with alien aircraft 
			or with the extraterrestrials themselves, its resources became 
			stretched so thin that it had to create reasons for drawing upon 
			other areas of the government. 
 Accordingly, task-defined subgroups were formed to handle specific 
			areas of investigation or research. These had to have had lower 
			security classifications even if only because the number of 
			personnel involved couldn’t have been cleared that quickly to 
			respond to the additional work the group was taking on. In fact, the 
			work of the group must have become unmanageable. Bits and pieces of 
			information slipped out, and the group had to determine what it 
			could let go into the public record and what had to be protected at 
			all costs. As in the story about the shacks, the group members 
			retreated to create new protected structures for the information 
			they had to preserve.
 
			 The official camouflage was sagging under the weight of the 
			information the group had to investigate and the pressure of time 
			they were allotted. Soon the military representatives found, just as 
			we did in Korea, that they really couldn’t trust the career 
			intelligence people, especially the CIA, because they seemed to have 
			a different agenda. Maybe the military became resistant to giving up 
			all the information it was collecting independently to the central 
			group? Maybe, in the absence of any actual legislation establishing 
			how the group’s work was to be paid for, the military saw valuable 
			and fundable weapons opportunities slip through its fingers to the 
			CIA’s budget? Maybe - and I know this is what happened - a power 
			struggle developed within the group itself.
 
			 The whole structure of the working group had changed, too, since the 
			late 1940s when it was formed. What started out as a close-knit 
			group of old friends from prep school had become an unmanageable 
			mess within five years. Many pieces of the pie were floating around, 
			and the different military branches wanted to break off chunks of 
			the black budget so that you needed an entire administration just to 
			manage the managers of the cover-up.
 
			  
			Therefore, at some point near 
			the middle of the Eisenhower administration, seams opened up in the 
			grand camouflage scheme where nobody knew what anybody else was 
			doing. Because of the cover-up, nobody really had a need to know, so 
			nobody knew anything. The only people who wanted to get their hands 
			on information and hardware belonged to the CIA, but nobody, even 
			those who vaguely understood what had happened fourteen years 
			earlier, trusted the CIA. Officially, then, nobody knew nothing and 
			nothing happened.  
			 Through the 1950s a cascade effect developed. What had started out 
			as a single-purpose camouflage operation was breaking up into 
			smaller units. Command and control functions started to weaken and, 
			just like a submarine that breaks up on the bottom of the ocean, 
			debris in the form of information bubbled to the surface. Army CIC, 
			once a powerful force to keep the Roswell story itself suppressed, 
			had weakened under the combined encroachments of the CIA and the 
			FBI. It was during this period that my old friend J. Edgar Hoover, 
			never happy at being kept out of any loop, jumped into the circle 
			and very quietly began investigating the Roswell incident. This 
			shook things up, and very soon afterward, other government agencies 
			- the ones with official reporting responsibilities - began poking 
			around as well.
 
			 For all intents and purposes, the original scheme to perpetrate a 
			camouflage was defunct by the late 1950s. Its functions were now 
			being managed by series of individual groups within the military and 
			civilian intelligence agencies, all still sharing limited 
			information with each other, each pursuing its own individual 
			research and investigation, and each - astonishingly - still acting 
			as if some super intelligence group was still in command. But, like 
			the Wizard of Oz, there was no super intelligence group. Its 
			functions had been absorbed by the groups beneath it. But nobody 
			bothered to tell anyone because a super group was never supposed to 
			exist officially in the first place.
 
			  
			That which did not exist 
			officially could not go out of existence officially. Hence, right 
			through the next forty years, the remnants of what once was a super 
			group went through the motions, but the real activities were carried 
			out by individual agencies that believed on blind faith that they 
			were being managed by higher-ups. Remember the lines of cars at gas 
			pumps during the fuel shortage of 1973 when one driver, thinking a 
			gas station was open, would wait at a pump and within fifteen 
			minutes scores of other cars pulled up behind him? Lines a mile long 
			formed behind pumps that were never open because there was no gas. 
			That’s what the great flying saucer camouflage was like by the time 
			President Kennedy was inaugurated.  
				
				“There’s nobody home, Phil, “ General Trudeau told me as we compared 
			our notes at that morning’s briefing. “Nobody home except us. We have to make our own policy. “
 
			I was a soldier and followed orders, but Trudeau was a general, the 
			product of a political process, stamped with congressional approval, 
			and reporting to a civilian executive. Generals are made by the 
			government, not by the army. They sit between the government and the 
			vast military machine and from the Army Chief of Staff all the way 
			down to the brigadiers at bases around the world, generals create 
			the way military policy is supposed to work. And on the morning of 
			this briefing over cups of coffee in his inner office of the third 
			floor of the Pentagon, Lieutenant General Trudeau was going to make 
			policy and do the very thing that over ten years of secret work 
			groups and committees and research planning had failed to do: 
			exploit the Roswell technology.  
				
				“I need you to tell me you found a way to make something out of this 
			mess, “ General Trudeau told me. “There must be some piece of 
			technology in your file that’ll make a weapon, that we can use for 
			one of our helicopters. What do we have in there, Phil?”  
				Then he 
			said. “Time is now of the essence. We have to do something because 
			nobody else will. “  
			In the great cloud of unknowing that had descended upon the Pentagon 
			with respect to the Roswell 
			package, the five or six of us in the navy, air force, and army who 
			actually knew what we had didn’t confide in 
			anyone outside his own branch of the military and certainly didn’t 
			talk to the CIA. So, in a way that could only happen inside the 
			military bureaucracy, the cover-up became covered up from the 
			cover-up, leaving the few of us in the know free to do whatever we 
			wanted.  
			 General Trudeau and I were all alone out there in so far as the 
			package went. Whatever vestige of the group remained had simply lost 
			track of the material delivered to Foreign Technology fourteen years 
			earlier. And the general was right, nobody was home and our enemies 
			inside government were capitalizing on whatever information they 
			could find. The Roswell package was one of the prizes, and if we 
			didn’t do anything with it, the Russians would. And they were onto 
			us.
 
			 Our own military intelligence personnel told us that the Soviets 
			were trafficking so heavily in our military secrets that they knew 
			things about us in the Kremlin before we knew them in Congress. The 
			army at least knew the KGB had penetrated the CIA, and the 
			leadership of the CIA had been an integral part of the working group 
			on flying disks since the early 1950s. Thus, whatever secrets the 
			group thought they had, they certainly weren’t secrets to the KGB.
 
			
			But here’s what kept the roof from falling in on all of us. The KGB 
			and the CIA weren’t really the adversaries everybody thought them to 
			be. They spied on each other, but for all practical purposes, and 
			also because each agency had thoroughly penetrated the other, they 
			behaved just like the same organization. They were all professional 
			spies in a single extended agency playing the same intelligence game 
			and trafficking in information. Information is power to be used. You 
			don’t simply give it away to your government’s political leadership, 
			whether it’s the Republicans, the Tories, or the Communists, just 
			because they tell you to. You can’t trust the politicians, but you 
			can trust other spies. At least that’s what spies believe, so their 
			primary loyalty is to their own group and the other groups playing 
			the same game. The CIA, KGB, British Secret Service, and a whole 
			host of other foreign intelligence agencies were loyal to themselves 
			and to the profession first and to their respective governments 
			last.
 
			 That’s one of the reasons we in the military knew that the 
			professional KGB leadership, not the Communist Party officers who 
			were only inside for political reasons, were keeping as much 
			information from the Soviet government as the CIA was keeping from 
			our government. Professional spy organizations like the CIA and the 
			KGB tend to exist only to preserve themselves, and that’s why 
			neither the U.S. military nor the Russian military trusted them. If 
			you look at how the great spy wars of the Cold War played out you’ll 
			see how the KGB and CIA acted like one organization: lots of 
			professional courtesy, lots of shared information to make sure 
			nobody got fired, and a few human sacrifices now and then just to 
			keep everybody honest. But when it came down to loyalty, the CIA was 
			loyal to the KGB and vice versa.
 
			 I believe they had a rationale for what they did. I know they 
			thought the rest of us were too stupid to keep the world safe and 
			that by sharing information they kept us out of a nuclear war. I 
			believe this because I knew enough KGB agents during my time and got 
			enough bits and pieces of information off the record to give me a 
			picture of the Soviet Union during the 1950s and 1960s that’s very 
			different from what you’d read on the front page of the New York 
			Times.
 
			 CIA penetration by the KGB and what amounted to their joint spying 
			on the military was a fact we accepted 
			during the 1950s and1960s, even though most of us in the Pentagon 
			played spy versus spy as much as we could; 
			those of us, like me, who’d gone to intelligence school during the 
			war and knew some of the counter espionage 
			tricks that kept the people watching you guessing. We would change 
			our routes to work, always used false 
			information stories as bait to test phones we weren’t sure about, 
			swept our offices for listening devices, always 
			used a code when talking with one another about sensitive subjects. 
			We had a counter intelligence agent in the 
			military attaché’s office over at the Russian consulate in 
			Washington whose friends in the Soviet army trusted the 
			KGB less than I did. If my name came up associated with a story, 
			he’d let me know it. But he’d never tell the 
			CIA. Believe it or not, in the capital of my very own country, that 
			kind of information helped me stay alive.
 
			 It was very disconcerting that the CIA had a tail on me all 
			throughout my four year tenure at the White House.
 
			  
			I was mad about it, but there was nothing much I chose to do. Then, 
			when I came back to Washington in 1961 to 
			work for General Trudeau, they put the tail back on and I led him 
			down every back alley and rough 
			neighborhood in D.C. that I could. He wouldn’t shake. So the next 
			day, after I told my boss what I was going to 
			do, I led my faceless pursuer right to Langley, Virginia, past a 
			sputtering secretary, and straight into the office of 
			my old adversary, the director of cover operations Frank Wiesner, 
			one of the best friends the KGB ever had. I told
			Wiesner to his face that yesterday was the last day I would walk 
			around Washington without a handgun. And I
			put my .45 automatic on his desk. I said if I saw his tail on me 
			tomorrow, they’d find him in the Potomac the next
			day with two bloody holes for eyes; that is, if they bothered to 
			look for him. Wiesner said, “You won’t do that,
			Colonel. “  
			  
			But I reminded him very pointedly that I knew where all 
			his bodies were buried, the people he’d gotten
			killed through his own ineptitude and, worse, his cooperation with 
			the Russians. I’d tell his story to everyone I knew 
			in Congress. Wiesner backed down. Subsequently, on a trip to London, 
			Wiesner committed suicide and was
			found hanging in his hotel room. I never did tell his story. Two 
			years later in 1963, one of Wiesner’s friends at the
			agency told me that it was “all in good fun, Phil. “ Part of an 
			elaborate recruitment process to get me into the CIA 
			after I retired from the army. But I went to work for Senator Strom 
			Thurmond on the Foreign Relations Committee and then Senator Richard 
			Russell on the Warren Commission instead.  
			 Our collective experience dodging the CIA and the KGB only meant 
			that when General Trudeau wanted the CIA kept out of our 
			deliberations at all cost, it was because he knew that everything we 
			discussed would be a topic of conversation at the KGB within twenty 
			four hours, faster if it were serious enough for the KGB to get 
			their counterparts in the CIA to throw a monkey wrench into things.
 
			
			How do I know all this? The same way I knew how the KGB stayed one 
			step ahead of us during the Korean 
			War and were able to advise their friends, the North Koreans, how to 
			hold POWs back during the exchange. We 
			had leaks inside the Kremlin just like they had leaks inside the 
			White House. What General Trudeau and I 
			knew in Army R&D, our counterparts in the navy and air force also 
			believed. The CIA was the enemy. You trust no one. So when it became 
			clear to the general even before 1961 that no one remembered what 
			the army had appropriated at Roswell, whatever we had was ours to 
			develop according to our own strategy. But we had to do it so as not 
			to allow the CIA, and ultimately our government’s enemies, to 
			appropriate it from us. So when General Trudeau said we have to run 
			radio silent on the Roswell package, I knew exactly what he was 
			talking about.
 
			 Logic, and clearly not my military genius, dictated the obvious 
			course. If nobody knows what you have, don’t announce it. But if you 
			think you can make something out of what you have, make it. Use any 
			resources at your disposal, but don’t say anything to anyone about 
			what you’re doing. The only people in the room when we came up with 
			our plan were the general and myself, and he promised, “I won’t say 
			anything if you don’t, Phil. “
 
				
				“There’s nobody in here but us brooms, General,“ I answered. 
				So we began to devise a strategy.
 “Hypothetically, Phil, “ Trudeau laid the question out. “What’s the 
			best way to exploit what we have without anybody knowing we’re doing 
			anything special?”
 “Simple, General, “ I answered. “We don’t do anything special. “
 “You have a plan?” he asked.
 “More of an idea than a plan, “ I began. “But it starts like this. 
			It’s what you asked: If we don’t want anybody to think we’re doing 
			anything out of the ordinary, we don’t do anything out of the 
			ordinary. When General Twining made his original recommendations to 
			President Truman and the army, he didn’t suggest they do anything 
			with this nut file other than what they ordinarily do. Business as 
			usual? That’s how this whole secret group operated. Nobody did 
			anything special. What they did was organize according to a business 
			plan even though the operation was something that hadn’t been done 
			before. That’s the camouflage: don’t change a thing but use your 
			same procedures to handle this alien technology. “
 “So how do you recommend we operate?” he asked. I think he already 
			figured out what I was saying but wanted me to spell it out so we 
			could start moving my nut file out of the Pentagon and out of the 
			encroaching shadow of the CIA.
 “We start the same way this desk has always started : with reports, 
			“I said. “I’ll write up reports on the alien 
			technology just like it’s an 
			intelligence report on any piece of foreign technology. What I see, 
			what I think the potential may be, where we might be able to 
			develop, what company we should take it to, and what kind of 
			contract we should draw up. “
 “Where will you start?” the general asked.
 “I’ll line up everything in the nut file, “ I began. “Everything 
			from what’s obvious to what I can’t make heads or tails out of. And 
			I’ll go to scientists with clearance who we can trust, Oberth and 
			von Braun, for advice. “
 “I see what you mean, “ Trudeau acknowledged. “Sure. We’ll lineup 
			our defense contractors, too. See which ones have ongoing 
			development contracts that allow us to feed your development 
			projects right into them. “
 “Exactly. That way the existing defense contract becomes the cover 
			for what we’re developing, “ I said. “Nothing is ever out of the 
			ordinary because we’re never starting up anything that hasn’t 
			already been started up in a previous contract. “
 “It’s just like a big mix and match, “ Trudeau described it.
 “Only what we’re doing, General, is mixing technology we’re 
			developing in with technology not of this earth, “ I said. “And 
			we’ll let the companies we’re contracting with apply for the patents 
			themselves. “
 “Of course, “ Trudeau realized. “If they own the patent we will have 
			completely reverse-engineered the technology. “
 “Yes, sir, that’s right. Nobody will ever know. We won’t even tell 
			the companies we’re working with where this technology comes from. 
			As far as the world will know the history of the patent is the 
			history of the invention. “
 “It’s the perfect cover, Phil, “ the general said. “Where will you 
			start?”
 “I’ll write up my first analysis and recommendation tonight, “ I 
			promised. “There’s not a moment to lose. “
 
			“The photographs in my file,“ I began my report that night over the 
			autopsy reports, which I attached, 
			show a being of about 4 feet tall. The body seemed decomposed and 
			the photos themselves aren’t of much use except to the curious. It’s 
			the medical reports that are of interest. The organs, bones, and 
			skin composition are different from ours. The being’s heart and 
			lungs are bigger than a human’s. The bones are thinner but seem 
			stronger as if the atoms are aligned differently for a greater 
			tensile strength.  
			  
			The skin also shows a different atomic alignment 
			in a way that appears the skin is supposed to protect the vital 
			organs from cosmic ray or wave action or gravitational forces that 
			we don’t yet understand. The overall medical report suggests that 
			the medical examiners are more surprised at the similarities between 
			the being found in the spacecraft (note: NSC reports refer to this 
			creature as an Extraterrestrial Biological Entity [EBE]) and human 
			beings than they are at the differences, especially the brain which 
			is bigger in the EBE but not at all unlike ours.  
			 I wrote on into the first of many nights that year, drafting rough 
			notes that I would later type into formal reports that no one would 
			ever see except General Trudeau, reaching conclusions that seemed 
			more science fiction than real. I was most happy not because I was 
			finally working on these files but, oddly enough, because when I sat 
			down to write, I believed these reports would never see the light of 
			day. In the harsh reality of the everyday world, they sound, even 
			now as I remember them, fantastic. Even more fantastic, I remember, 
			were the startling conclusions I allowed myself to come to. Was this 
			really I writing, or was it somebody else? Where did these ideas 
			come from?
 
			 If we consider similar biological factors that affect human beings, 
			like long distance runners whose hearts and lungs are larger than 
			average, hill and mountain dwellers whose lung capacity is greater 
			than those who live closer to sea level, and even natural athletes 
			whose long striated muscle alignment is different from those who are 
			not athletes, can we not assume that the EBEs who have fallen into 
			our possession represent the end process of genetic engineering 
			designed to adapt them to long space voyages within an 
			electromagnetic wave environment at speeds which create the physical 
			conditions described by Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity?
 
			  
			 (Note for the record: Dr. Hermann Oberth suggests we consider the 
			Roswell craft from the New Mexico desert not a spacecraft but a time 
			machine. His technical report on propulsion will follow.) 
 
			
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