| 
			
 
 CHAPTER 10
 
 The U2 Program and Project Corona 
			- Spies in Space
 
				
				“Of course, General Trudeau has been in touch with Don and the whole 
			development team here, “Dr. Fredericks continued as he watched me 
			open the night vision file that I’d taken out of my briefcase. 
				 
				“And 
			I’m aware of the nature of the material you’ve got. It’s not 
			something we wanted to talk about over the phone. “ “I appreciate your being discreet about this, Dr. Fredericks, “ I 
			said. “If you think what I’m about to show you can help you in the 
			development process, it’s yours to use. But the arrangement will be 
			that everything is originated here at Fort Belvoir. All R&D will do 
			will be to provide the budget necessary to fund this development. 
			You use your own sources to manufacture the product and take all the 
			credit for the process. “
 “And this conversation?” Dr. Fredericks asked.
 “Once you tell me you can use what I’ve brought and we get you the 
			budget you require, “ I began, “this conversation never took place 
			and you will take my name off your appointment schedule. “
 “Now you really do have my interest, “ he said with just the edge of 
			a bemused sarcasm in his voice as if he’d been down this road many 
			times before. “What did you bring in that briefcase that’s so 
			secret?”
 
			And with that I held up the first of the army’s 1947 sketches of the 
			night viewer we pulled from the wreckage at Roswell. I handed it 
			across to Dr. Fredericks, who looked at it and turned it around with 
			his fingertips as if he were holding one of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
			 
				
				“You don’t have to be so careful with it, Dr. Fredericks,“ I said. 
			“I made a few thermal copies. “ “Do you have the actual device?” he asked.
 “Back at the Pentagon. “
 “Who was wearing this?” he continued.
 “At the time, nobody, “ I told him. “According to the field report, 
			they found this in the sand near one of the bodies. “
 “Bodies? At the Roswell crash?” Now he was completely incredulous. 
			“General Trudeau didn’t tell anyone about bodies. “
 “No, that’s true, “ I said. “That’s not information we give out. 
			General Trudeau authorized me to answer any questions you have up to 
			a certain level of security classification. “
 “We’re not there yet, “ Dr. Fredericks asked and asserted at the 
			same time.
 “But we’re close, “ I suggested. “I can talk about the device, talk 
			about where it was found, but that’s probably as far as I can go 
			myself. If General Trudeau wants to give a background briefing and 
			authorizes me to do so, then I can go deeper. “
 “Funny, but I always thought Roswell was a kind of legend. You know, 
			they found something but maybe it was Russian, “ Dr. Fredericks 
			said. Then he asked again if anyone at the Roswell retrieval had 
			actually seen any of the creatures wearing the night vision device 
			in the sketches.
 “No, “ I said. “There was a lot of debris that spilled out of the 
			craft. The soldiers on the retrieval team looked through one of the 
			seams that had been split open running along the craft’s lengthwise 
			axis and they saw view ports built into the hull. Well, what 
			astonished them was that when they looked through the view ports, 
			they could see daylight, or a greenish, hazy kind of diffused light 
			that looked like dusk, but outside it was completely dark. “
 Paul Fredericks was on the edge of his seat now.
 “No one at the crash site knew anything about the night viewers the 
			Germans were developing during the war, “ I explained. “So even the 
			officers on the retrieval team were amazed at what they were seeing. 
			When they autopsied the alien at the 509th and pulled off these 
			‘eyepieces,’ is the only word I can use for them, they realized that 
			they were a complicated set of reflectors that gathered all the 
			available light and turned them into night time image intensifiers. 
			“
 
				I continued, pointing to the sketch in Paul Fredericks’s hands. 
			“Some medical officer tried to look through it down a darkened hall 
			and it made the images stand out, but nothing was ever done with it 
			and they packed it away with the rest of the alien. “ “Did they perform any analysis on this when they brought it back?” 
			Fredericks asked.
 “Some, “ I told him. “But they had no facilities at the 509th and 
			had to wait until they brought it back to Wright. It wasn’t until 
			the intelligence boys at the Air Materiel Command got hold of it 
			that they realized that this was something the Germans were trying 
			to deploy. “
 “But this is far more sophisticated, “ Dr. Fredericks said. “The 
			Germans weren’t even close to something like this. “
 “Yes, sir, “ I said. “Not even close. And that’s what got the 
			intelligence people at Wright so concerned. Just how close were the 
			Germans about to get when the war ended? What else had they gotten 
			their hands on? Did they have help?”
 “Or, “ Dr. Fredericks said very slowly, “did they find a crash just 
			like we found?”
 “That’s exactly the point, Dr. Fredericks, “ I said. “What did they 
			find?”
 “And if the Germans could get their hands on this material, what 
			about the Soviets?” he asked. But he was talking to himself now, 
			talking in a way that made him sound as if he were really thinking 
			out loud. “Why not the Chinese or any of our European allies? Just 
			how much of this stuff is out there?” he finally asked me.
 “We don’t have any of those answers, “ I told him. “At least not 
			those of us in the army. And for obvious reasons nobody’s walking 
			around sharing this information back and forth among the services or 
			with any other agencies. We have what we have, and that’s as far as 
			we’re willing to go. “
 “And you don’t want me talking about this or trying to sniff around 
			for any information, “ he said.
 “If we thought you were going to do that I wouldn’t even be here, “ 
			I said. “I have these reports here and descriptions of the device. 
			I’ll leave them with you. If you think you can work these into your 
			development program, I’ll have the material itself sent over and 
			then it’s out of our hands completely. Farm it out to wherever you 
			want it developed. Offer your defense contractor the right to patent 
			it. Never tell them where you got it or what its origin might be. As 
			far as we’re concerned whoever comes up with the night viewers you 
			ultimately contract with to build can own the whole product and slap 
			their name on it. All we want to do is get this thing developed. 
			That’s it. “
 “May I?” Dr. Fredericks asked, reaching for the reports I’d spread 
			out on the arm of the leather chair.
 I handed them across in a bundle, and he flipped through them as if 
			he were my old college professor looking at a term paper, 
				harrumphing, 
			grunting, and nodding at every page.
 “That’s more about how they handled the alien at Wright Field than 
			about the eyepieces themselves, “ I said.
 “Because in reality, they didn’t know what made the thing tick and 
			they didn’t really want to tear it apart. “
 “So they just threw it in a package?” he asked.
 “Basically, that’s exactly what happened, “ I said. “At first they 
			didn’t know how it was supposed to work. Or maybe they thought it 
			would turn human beings blind or something. They were that afraid. 
			After a while, they just let it stay in dead storage and hoped 
			someone else would take it off their hands. “
 “And that’d be you, “ Dr. Fredericks said.
 “Actually, “ I told him, “that’d be you, if you want it. “
 “I need to read this material more thoroughly and see where we can 
			slip your night vision into the project without causing a ripple on 
			the surface, “ Dr. Fredericks explained.
 “How easy will that be?” I asked.
 “At Fort Belvoir, “ he answered, “teams here are taught to keep 
			their own thoughts to themselves. If you tell them this is a piece 
			of foreign technology our intelligence boys got from some other 
			country and we’re supposed to make it disappear into what we’re 
			doing, that’s the story. “
 “Nobody asks any questions?” I pushed.
 “Nobody asks questions under any circumstances, “ he said. “It would 
			move along faster and create its own little development bureaucracy 
			if we had the budget to turn it into a crash development project 
			with a real development phase deadline. “
 “Then what happens?” I asked.
 “It’s just like Santa’s workshop on the first day of winter. None of 
			the elves looks up from his workbench until it’s done. Then the next 
			project comes along and everybody forgets. By the time the troops 
			are wearing these things in the field and they’re handing out the 
			gold watches over a prime rib at the Potomac Inn, night vision is 
			just one big happy memory with the details rewritten to fit the view 
			of history that serves the moment. No one will ever even guess, 
			Colonel Corso, “ he said. “From the moment your boys hand the 
			material over, it goes into the developmental soup at Fort Belvoir 
			and comes out the other end as a weapon in the field. “
 I stood up and closed my briefcase while he walked around his desk. 
			“So what are you going to recommend to General Trudeau?” he asked.
 “I’d like to suggest we send the device over, you come up with the 
			budget you need, and General Trudeau finds the allocation, “ I said.
 “And you?” he said.
 “It was a pleasure not meeting you, Dr. Fredericks, “ I told him. 
			“Of course, there will be a liaison over in Army R&D who will 
			officially be placed in charge of night vision development. He will 
			report to General Trudeau and anything I need to know I’ll find out 
			from the general. I look forward to seeing the development reports 
			as they come out. Congratulations on your new piece of technology. 
			And congratulations to the company who winds up with this defense 
			contract. “
 “Congratulations, indeed, “ Dr. Fredericks said.
 
			We shook hands and he walked me out of his office into the corridor. 
			For a moment, it was like stepping out of the surreal into the real. 
			We’d just stitched our own piece of fabric over reality, created a 
			piece of history. The technology boys in research and development at 
			Fort Belvoir would receive a device from one of their consultants 
			who would whisper to them that this was liberated from one of our 
			enemies. Don’t ask any questions. But it was just the thing that the 
			lab people at Fort Belvoir were looking for to show them how a 
			finished device might look. Can they come up with a reverse 
			engineering plan? Is there a company they’re already working with on 
			night vision?  
			  
			And within a few months, some company, whoever it 
			might be, would wind up with a plan in place, a development budget, 
			and a new identity for the strange looking eyepieces that turned up 
			in my Roswell files. It might take five or so years, but when it 
			came rolling off the assembly line somewhere in Pennsylvania, 
			Maryland, Ohio, or wherever, it would be “Made in the USA” and I’d 
			read about it in the papers or see it on television.  
			 Night vision was the first project we actually seeded during the 
			first year of my tenure at Foreign Technology. It would turn out to 
			be easier than most because of the history of German development 
			during the war and the research already done through the 1950s. By 
			the time I brought the Roswell night viewer to Fort Belvoir, it fit 
			right in through the seam of an existing development program and no 
			one was the wiser. The actual weapons development program at Fort 
			Belvoir served as the cover for the dissemination of Roswell 
			technology so perfectly that the only distortion anyone could find 
			as he went back through the history is what might seem like a sudden 
			acceleration in the development program itself shortly after 1961.
 
			  
			Night vision got a boost in funding, a new officer was assigned to 
			the project by General Trudeau, and General Trudeau’s name starts 
			turning up on a regular basis as one of the apparent benefactors of 
			the program. By 1963, when he and I were gone from the Pentagon, the 
			project was at Martin Marietta Electronics - now part of Lockheed 
			Martin - and already on its way through the initial deployment that 
			would take place in Europe and Vietnam..  
			 But I didn’t know that as I drove through the Fort Belvoir gate and 
			headed back to my Pentagon office. I only felt satisfied that it 
			looked like we had successfully inserted one of our own Foreign 
			Technology projects into an ongoing development stream already under 
			way and had camouflaged our appropriation of a piece of alien 
			technology. At this point, I believed, we’d kept it out of the hands 
			of the Soviets for the time being, and the aliens, if they were 
			monitoring what we were doing, maybe didn’t know what we were doing 
			with it either. It would give us time.
 
			 I headed north along the Potomac and through the green woods of 
			Fairfax County, Virginia, back to a desk that was quickly piling up 
			with other projects that needed disposition. One of them, which was 
			running parallel with the night vision I’d just handed off, was the 
			embryonic “Project Corona, “ an idea whose time was suddenly thrust 
			upon us by the shooting down of a U2 surveillance plane and the 
			capture of its pilot, Francis Gary Powers.
 
			 The air force and the CIA had been running the U2 program for awhile 
			during the Eisenhower administration, and the reports and photos 
			routinely crossed my desk at the National Security Council. Like so 
			many other events during the Cold War, the U2 didn’t have just a 
			single purpose, the surveillance of the Soviet Union to monitor 
			their guided missile development program. It had a triple intent. Of 
			course, we wanted to know exactly what the Soviets were up to, but 
			we also wanted to test their air defense capability.
 
			  
			We wanted to 
			know how accurately their radars could track the U2 and whether any 
			of their missiles could bring it down. So we deliberately provoked 
			them by making our presence known when we wanted them to fire at us. 
			Could they shoot us down? Cameras on the U2 picked up the launch of 
			enemy surface to air missiles as the pilot flew over sensitive 
			installations where the Soviets had to challenge us or cede to us 
			the control of top classified zones in their airspace.  
			 So we played gamesmanship with them, probing their defenses, 
			deliberately sacrificing pilots who we believed died when their 
			planes were shot down, and always denying what we were doing even as 
			Khrushchev screamed at Eisenhower that the U2 program was putting 
			Khrushchev himself at risk inside the Kremlin. “We can deal with 
			each other, “ the Communist Party chairman told Ike. “But not if you 
			force me out of office. “
 
			  
			But as much as Eisenhower hated the U2 
			program and the jeopardy into which it placed our pilots, the 
			President had to accommodate himself to one of the other agendas of 
			the surveillance: the ongoing search for any evidence of 
			extraterrestrial spacecraft landings or crashes within the vastness 
			of the Soviet Union. We also wanted to see whether the Soviets were 
			harvesting any of the alien aircraft technology for themselves. 
			That’s what made the U2 program too valuable to give up until we had 
			an alternative. And the alternative, although it was an air force 
			and not an army program, was part of a shared R&D between our 
			intelligence services and the National Security Council/CIA 
			apparatus. And it was already in development within Lockheed in a 
			division they called “skunk works. “  
			 Because we had set up our U2 flights to provoke the Soviets and 
			because we knew that ultimately we would start to lose pilots and 
			planes, the National Security staff began looking aggressively for a 
			more secure surveillance program as early as 1957, my last year at 
			the White House. Intelligence decided to take orbital satellite 
			photos of Soviet installations, but only if they could get a bird up 
			there that would be reliable. Also, we didn’t want to let the 
			Soviets know we were turning earth orbit into a surveillance 
			facility because we didn’t want to encourage them to go after our 
			satellites. So the trick was to get a satellite up there in complete 
			secrecy. But how could you do that with the whole world watching?
 
 The army and air force had an idea. Lockheed had already shown that 
			it could develop a surveillance plane, the U2 and eventually the 
			SR71, out of the public view and run those flights without too much 
			interference from Senate watchdog committees and out of the presence 
			of any newspaper reporters. Could they do the same thing with a 
			satellite? And if they could, would the satellite recon photos be as 
			reliable as the photos we were getting from the U2s?
 
			 Normally, I would have said that if the army were putting up a 
			satellite, it could do anything it wanted because everything we did 
			under our intelligence blanket remained relatively secure. However, 
			both the army and the air force were effectively put out of the 
			satellite launching business toward the end of the Eisenhower 
			administration by the civilian National Aeronautics and Space Agency 
			under a pooled resources crash program to get satellites up into 
			space to show the world the flag. The Soviets had beaten us in the 
			race initially with Sputnik, and the failed army and navy attempts 
			to launch satellites only made us look worse. I learned for a fact 
			that when the New York Daily News ran the full page headline, “Oh 
			Dear, “ after the Corporal rose a few inches, fell back onto the 
			launchpad, and blew up into smithereens, no one was laughing harder 
			than Nikita Khrushchev.
 
			 After a few of these attempts, the National Security Council advised 
			President Eisenhower to throw in the towel, pool all the national 
			scientific resources he could, and turn the U.S. entry into the 
			space race over to a civilian agency. The military services had 
			learned their lesson about competing over the same technology the 
			hard way and had to stand back and watch NASA take over.
 
			 NASA had some immediate successes, and before the end of the 
			Eisenhower administration in 1960, they had managed to put 
			satellites in orbit and experiment with the effects of orbital 
			flight on animals in far more sophisticated ways than the army’s V2 
			experiments with small primates at Alamogordo in the late 1940s and 
			early1950s. As the army and air force intelligence offices looked at 
			the successes of these NASA satellites and at the increasing 
			vulnerabilities of the U2 flights, they saw the possible answer to 
			their need for a fail safe surveillance program.
 
			  
			When NASA began its 
			Discoverer orbiter program, launching a payload into low orbit and 
			returning it, the military services thought they saw a solution. If 
			they could somehow manage to build a workable photo recon satellite 
			small enough to fit into the very limited space inside the 
			Discoverer payload capsule, recover the surveillance device when the 
			orbiter returned to Earth, and install the entire military spying 
			program within a civilian scientific exploration program that was 
			getting a lot of attention from the newspapers without alerting the 
			public to the military’s secret agenda, they would have their covert 
			surveillance.  
			 We knew that the Soviets would very quickly find out about the 
			program, but that wasn’t such a bad thing. We reasoned that there 
			was no way, given the CIA’s penetration by the KGB, to keep the 
			program completely covert, but if the Soviets knew we were able to 
			watch them it might keep them honest. And Khrushchev wouldn’t have 
			to worry about our deliberately violating his airspace, so he was 
			off the hook at the Kremlin and thankful for it. All we had to do 
			was keep it out of the public arena and we’d be home free. The whole 
			program rested on our being able to slip what we now called “Corona” 
			into the existing Discoverer program without a whisper in the air, 
			the Soviets would go along without a protest, and we would get our 
			surveillance photos.
 
			 We added an additional incentive for the Soviets to discourage them 
			from getting their friends in the CIA to leak the story to friendly 
			journalists and blowing the cover on the whole operation. We 
			encouraged them to participate with us in the hidden agenda of 
			Corona: surveillance of potential alien crash landings. Army 
			Intelligence, upon Eisenhower’s and the NSC’s express approval, let 
			it be known to their counterparts in the Soviet military that any 
			aerial intelligence we developed as a result of Corona that revealed 
			the presence of aliens on Soviet territory would be shared with the 
			military. What they did with the information, we said, we really 
			didn’t care.
 
			  
			But the military was more than grateful. The 
			professional military didn’t trust the commissars in the Communist 
			Party anymore than we did and hated being under their collective 
			thumb. Thus, in a perverse way, although we were tipping off the 
			Russian military about alien activity in their territory, we really 
			weren’t sharing information with the Communists because of the deep 
			division within the Soviet government between the Communist Party 
			and the military.  
			 Our incentive worked and the KGB encouraged the CIA - even I was 
			surprised at how effectively they worked together - not to leak the 
			story. Now it was up to the air force and the skunk works division 
			at Lockheed to build the Corona surveillance satellite out of the 
			public arena and load the vehicle into the Discoverer rocket right 
			under the noses of the American press. It was one of the trickiest 
			operations of the Cold War because the Russians knew what we were 
			doing, NASA was making the entire project happen, but the American 
			press, hungry for even the smallest tidbit of spaceflight 
			information, had to be kept completely in the dark.
 
			  
			If necessary, we 
			had to lie to them, provide them with cover stories, completely 
			trick them into thinking that all the American people had to think 
			about was the little chimp that was blasted into orbit wearing his 
			custom sized space helmet. And we didn’t have much time to do it 
			because we knew the Soviets were trying to embarrass Ike at the end 
			of his term by bringing down one of our U2 planes with a live pilot 
			inside. We were now in a race against the Soviets to replace the U2 
			with the Corona, even though the Soviets understood and accepted 
			what we were doing every step of the way. It was one of the ironies 
			of the Cold War.  
			 The engineers at Lockheed designed the satellite camera package to 
			fit neatly into the payload cone of the 
			Discoverer capsule. They worked under brutal time constraints 
			because President Eisenhower was putting 
			pressure on the National Security Council to cut off the U2 
			overnights completely. The old general knew it was just a matter of 
			time before the Soviets would capture a living American pilot, 
			extract his confession, and march him in front of the television 
			cameras to the humiliation of the United States. Eisenhower was a 
			man of his word who disliked politicians because they always sought 
			the expedient solution, not the most honorable one.
 
			  
			Eisenhower 
			disliked expedience for expediency’s sake and always preferred to 
			take the most directly honest path whenever he could. But, as 
			Khrushchev complained about the U2 flights, Ike always denied we 
			were sending them. It was such an obvious lie that Khrushchev kept 
			goading Eisenhower about exposing himself that way. “We will shoot 
			one of them down, you’ll see, “ he kept telling Eisenhower whenever 
			he complained. “Then what will you say?”  
			 But President Eisenhower denied the existence of the U2, putdown the 
			telephone, and turned on his own staff, furious that they had put 
			him into such an untenable situation. “Stop the nights, “ he 
			ordered. But the CIA kept pushing for one more flight. It was 
			serving a purpose, they argued. They were learning about the Russian 
			air defense system at the same time they were surveilling possible 
			areas of alien spacecraft activity. With or without the Russians’ 
			knowledge, the U2s denied the extraterrestrials a complete 
			camouflage because of our high resolution aerial surveillance. I 
			don’t know whether we actually found any evidence of an alien 
			landing on Russian territory from our U2 surveillance, but the 
			extraterrestrials certainly could see that we were able to surveil 
			the Soviet Union, and their knowledge of our capability served as a 
			deterrent to roaming the vast areas of the Soviet Union with 
			impunity.
 
			 The CIA claimed the U2s were so important to our national security 
			that they were even ready to sacrifice one of their own pilots. 
			However, I also believe that the KGB moles who had penetrated them 
			wanted Eisenhower to be embarrassed before the entire world. And 
			when Francis Gary Powers took off in May 1960, they had their 
			chance.
 
			 There is still a great deal of doubt about the shoot-down of Powers’s 
			U2. His mission was to fly over the most sensitive Soviet missile 
			installations and make himself a target. We believed the Russian SAMs couldn’t reach his altitude. But, whether 
			Powers fell asleep at 
			the stick because of oxygen deprivation or whether his CIA 
			controllers forced him to a lower altitude to get better photos or 
			even to make himself a more provocative target, we’ll never know. I 
			believe that Powers was probably startled out of a low oxygen 
			lethargy by the explosion of a SAM close enough to force him to lose 
			control. His plane was not hit by the missile. The U2 was the type 
			of aircraft that was very difficult to fly. Powers probably pulled 
			into a stall and was unable to bring it back. As his plane spun 
			toward the ground and Powers became too disoriented to regain 
			control, he pulled on the lever next to his seat, blew the canopy 
			off, and ejected.
 
			 Powers was captured alive, paraded before cameras, and forced to 
			confess that he was spying on the Soviet Union. Khrushchev had his 
			excuse to cancel a summit meeting with Eisenhower and put on one of 
			the great performances of his career in front of the Supreme-Soviet. 
			Eisenhower, as he had most feared, was publicly humiliated and 
			forced to admit to Khrushchev that he had sent the U2s over the 
			Soviet Union. He promised Khrushchev that the U2 flights would end, 
			eliminating a valuable surveillance tool and potentially blinding us 
			not only to what the Soviet Union was doing but potentially to what 
			the extraterrestrials were doing in Asia as well. It was a terrible 
			experience for the old man, who believed he had been compromised by 
			his own administration.
 
			 All the while during the final months of preparations before Gary 
			Powers’s U2 flight, NASA was completing the engineering details to 
			insert the Corona payload into the Discoverer payload. If all went 
			well, the first launch of Corona would give the National Security 
			Council the results they wanted and the U2 program would come to an 
			end because it had been made obsolete by Corona. Then Gary Powers 
			was shot down and the U2 program came to an end because Eisenhower 
			terminated it. We were blind. Then Discoverer was launched from Cape 
			Canaveral and those of us in the army and air-force missile programs 
			who were aware of Corona and what was at stake in the mission held 
			our collective breaths. If it worked, we had eyes. If it failed, our 
			best surveillance opportunity would have failed.
 
			 You can imagine the jubilation at the Pentagon when the Corona 
			payload was recovered and we developed the first photos. They were 
			better than what we had gotten from the U2, and the Corona was 
			completely invisible to the Soviets. Khrushchev hid the information 
			from his own Supreme Soviet, and Eisenhower certainly didn’t make a 
			public statement to the American people. We were back in the photo 
			intelligence business, and in addition to keeping tabs on Soviet 
			missile developments, we had a way to track any possible EBE attempt 
			to set up a base in the remotest parts of Asia, Africa, or South 
			America. We were gaining parity with the EBEs, a small victory, but 
			a victory nevertheless.
 
			 What satisfied me the most about 
			
			Project Corona, I thought as I 
			reached the outskirts of Washington on my way back from Fort Belvoir, 
			was that it was elegant as well as successful; Just like the ease 
			with which we had slipped the Roswell night visor into the 
			development and engineering stream at Fort Belvoir, so had we 
			slipped the Corona photo-surveillance payload directly into the 
			ongoing Discoverer program, reverse engineering Discoverer to make 
			the payload fit. No one realized what we had accomplished or how 
			effectively the military utilized traditional programs as a cover 
			for their own secret weapons development systems.
 
 At the same time, we knew we were gaining on the aliens. With each 
			successful start of a new project, some based on the Roswell 
			technology, others initiated specifically to counter the alien 
			capabilities we had discovered at Roswell, we believed we were 
			advancing our game piece to the next square. We believed that no 
			matter how hostile the aliens’ intentions were, they didn’t have the 
			raw power to launch a global war against us. They would study us, 
			infiltrate us, wear us down until we might not be able to resist 
			them, but they had neither the intention nor the capability, we 
			believed, of destroying the planet so as to take it for themselves. 
			In that, we held the upper hand.
 
			 But what we needed was a real outpost in a location that would 
			enable us to establish a strategic advantage, a base to strike at 
			them far enough away so that we wouldn’t create a panic on Earth. We 
			needed a base on the moon. It was something the army had dreamed 
			about from the very first months after our encounters with the 
			aliens outside of Roswell and something we had tried to fund without 
			the public’s knowledge. It was an ambitious project that had bounced 
			around from skeptic to skeptic inside the military for over a year 
			before it landed in front of me. And when I took over the Foreign 
			Technology desk, it was a project we almost had.
 
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