Fiber Optics
				
Members of the retrieval team who foraged around inside the 
			spacecraft on the morning of the discovery told Colonel Blanchard 
			back at the 509th that they were amazed they couldn’t find any 
			conventional wiring. 
				
				
Where were the electrical connections? they asked, because obviously 
			the vehicle had electronics. They didn’t 
			understand the function of the printed circuit wafers they found, 
			but, even more important, they were completely 
			mystified by the single glass filaments that ran through the panels 
			of the ship. At first, some of the scientists thought 
			that they comprised the missing wiring that also had the engineers 
			so confused as they packed the 
			craft for shipping. Maybe they were part of the wiring harness that 
			was broken in the crash. But these filaments had a strange property 
			to them. 
				
				
The wire harness seemed to have broken loose from a control panel 
			and was separated into twelve frayed 
			filaments that looked something like quartz. When, back at the 
			509th’s hangar, officers from the retrieval team 
			applied light to one end of the filament, the other end emitted a 
			specific color. Different filaments emitted 
			different colors. The fibers - in reality glass crystal tubes - led 
			to a type of junction box where the fibers separated and went to different parts of the control panel that seemed to 
			acknowledge electrically the different color pulsing through the 
			tube. 
				 
				
				Since the engineers evaluating the material at Roswell knew 
			that each color of light had its own specific wavelength, they 
			guessed that the frequency of the light wave activated a specific 
			component of the spacecraft’s control panel. But beyond that, the 
			engineers and scientists were baffled. They couldn’t even determine 
			the spacecraft’s power source, let alone what generated the power 
			for the light tubes. And, the most amazing thing of all was that the 
			filaments not only were flexible but still emitted light even when 
			they were bent back and forth like a paper clip. 
				 
				
				How could light be 
			made to bend? the engineers wondered. This was one of the physical 
			mysteries of the Roswell craft that stayed hidden through the 1950s 
			until one of the Signal Corps liaisons, who routinely briefed 
			General Trudeau on the kinds of developments the Signal Corps was 
			looking for, told us about experiments in optical fibers going on at 
			Bell Labs. 
				
				
The technology was still very new, 
				Hans Kohler told me during a 
			private briefing in early 1962, but the promise of using light as a 
			carrier of all kinds of signals through single filament glass 
			strands was holding great promise. He explained that the premise of 
			optical fibers was to have a filament of glass so fine and free of 
			any impurities that nothing would impede the light beam moving along 
			the center of the shaft. You also had to have a powerful light 
			source at one end, he explained, to generate the signal, and I 
			thought of the successful ruby laser that had been tested at 
			Columbia University. I knew the EBEs had integrated the two 
			technologies for their glass cable transmission inside the 
			spacecraft. 
				
					
					“But what makes the light bend?” I asked Professor Kohler, still 
			incredulous that the aliens seem to have been able to defy one of 
			our own laws of physics. “Is it some kind of an illusion?” 
“It’s not a trick at all, “ the scientist explained. “It only looks 
			like an illusion because the fibers are so fine, you can’t see the 
			different layers without a microscope. “ 
				
				
				He showed me, when I gave him the broken pieces of filament that I 
			still had in my nut file, that each strand, which looked like one 
			solid piece of material enclosing the circumference of a tiny tube, 
			was actually double layered. When you looked down the center of the 
			shaft you could see that around the outside of the filament was 
			another layer of glass. Dr. Kohler explained that the individual 
			light rays are reflected back toward the center by the layer of 
			glass around the outside of the fiber so that the light can’t 
			escape. By running the glass fibers around corners and, in the case 
			of the Roswell spacecraft, through the interior walls of the ship, 
			the aliens were able to bend light and focus it just like you can 
			direct the flow of water through a supply pipe. I’d never seen 
			anything like that before in my life. 
				
				
Kohler explained that, just like lasers, the light can be made to 
			carry any sort of signal : light, sound, and even digital 
			information. 
				
					
					“There’s no resistance to the signal, “ he explained. “And you can 
			fit more information on to the light beam. “ 
I asked him how the EBEs might have used this type of technology. He 
			suggested that all ship’s communication, visual images, telemetry, 
			and any amplified signals that the vehicles sent or received from 
			other craft or from bases on the moon or on earth would use these 
			glass fiber cables. 
“They seem to have an enormous capacity for carrying any kind of 
			load, “ he suggested. “And if a laser can amplify the signal, in 
			their most refined form, these cables can carry a multiplicity of 
			signals at the same time. “ 
				
				
				I was more than impressed. Even before asking him about the specific 
			types of applications these might have for the army, I could see how 
			they could make battlefield communications more secure because the 
			signals would be stronger and less vulnerable to interference. Then 
			Professor Kohler began suggesting the uses of these fibers to carry 
			visual images photographed in tiny cameras from the weapons 
			themselves to controlling devices at the launcher. 
				
					
					“Imagine, “ he said, “being able to fire a missile and actually see 
			through the missile’s eye where it’s going. Imagine being able to 
			lock onto a target visually and even as it tries to evade the 
			missile, you can see it and make final adjustments. “ 
				
				
				And Kohler 
			went on to describe the potential of how fiberoptics based sensors 
			could someday keep track of enemy movements on the ground, carry 
			data heavy visual signals from surveillance satellites, and pack 
			very complicated multichannel communications systems into small 
			spaces. 
				
					
					“The whole space program is dependent upon carrying data, 
			voice, and image, “he said. “But now, it takes too much space to 
			store all the relays and switches and there’s too much impedance to 
			the signal. It limits what we can do on a mission. But imagine if we 
			could adapt this technology to our own uses. “ 
				
				
				Then he looked me very squarely in the eye and said the very thing 
			that I was thinking. 
				
					
					“You know this is their technology. It’s part 
			of what enables them to have exploration missions. If it became our 
			technology, too, we’d be able to, maybe we could keep up with them a 
			little better. “ 
				
				
				Then he asked me for the army’s commitment. He explained that some 
			of our research laboratories were 
			already looking into the properties of glass as a signal conductor 
			and this would not have to be research that was 
			started from complete scratch. Those kinds of start ups gave us 
			concern at R&D because unless we covered 
			them up completely, it would look like there was a complete break in 
			a technological path. How do you explain that? But if there’s 
			research already going on, no matter how basic, then just showing 
			someone at the company one of these pieces of technology could give 
			them all they need to reverse engineer it so that it became our 
			technology. But we’d have to support it as part of an arms 
			development research contract if the company didn’t already have a 
			budget. This is what I wanted to do with this glass filament 
			technology. 
				
					
					“Where is the best research on optical fibers being done?” I asked 
			him. 
“Bell Labs, “ he answered. “It’ll take another thirty years to 
			develop it, but one day most of the telephone traffic will be 
			carried on fiberoptic cable. “ 
				
				
				Army R&D had contacts at Bell just like other contractors we worked 
			with, so I wrote a short memo and proposal to General Trudeau on the 
			potential of optical fibers for a range of products that Professor 
			Kohler and I discussed. I described the properties of what had been 
			previously called a wiring harness, explained how it carried laser 
			signals, and, most importantly, how these fibers actually bent a 
			stream of light around a corner and conducted it the same way a wire 
			conducts an electrical current. Imagine conducting a beam of high 
			intensity single frequency light the same way you’d run a water line 
			to a new bathroom, I wrote. Imagine the power and flexibility it 
			provided the EBEs, especially when they used the light signal as a 
			carrier for other coded information. 
				
				
This would enable the military to recreate its entire communications 
			infrastructure and allow our new surveillance satellites to feed 
			find store potential targeting information right into frontline 
			command and control installations. The navy would be able to see the 
			deployment of an entire enemy fleet, the air force could look down 
			on approaching enemy squadrons and target them from above even if 
			our planes were still on the ground, and for the army it would give 
			us an undreamed of strategic advantage. We could survey an entire 
			battlefield, track the movements of troops from small patrols to 
			entire divisions, and plot the deployments of tanks, artillery, and 
			helicopters at the same time. 
				 
				
				The value of fiberoptic communication 
			to the military would be immeasurable. And, I added, I was almost 
			certain that a development push from the army to facilitate research 
			on the complete reengineering of our country’s already antiquated 
			telephone system would not be seen by any company as an unwarranted 
			intrusion. I didn’t have to wait long for the general’s response.
				
				
					
					“Do it, “ he ordered. “And get this under way fast. I’ll get you all 
			the development allocation you need. Tell them that. “ And before 
			the end of that week, I had an appointment with a systems researcher 
			at the Western Electric research facility outside of Princeton, New 
			Jersey, right down the road from the Institute for Advanced Study. I 
			told him it came out of foreign technology, something that the 
			intelligence people picked up from new weapons the East Germans were 
			developing but thought we could use. 
“If what you think you have, “ he said over the phone, “is that 
			interesting and shows us where our research is going, we’d be silly 
			not to lend you an ear for an afternoon. “ 
“I’ll need less than an afternoon to show you what I got, “ I said. 
			Then I packed my Roswell field reports into my briefcase, got myself 
			an airline ticket for a flight to Newark Airport, and I was on my 
			way. 
 
				
				
				Super-tenacity Fibers
				
Even before the 1960s, when I was, still on the National Security 
			staff, the army had begun to look for fibers for flak jackets, 
			shrapnel proof body armor, even parachutes, and a protective skin 
			for other military items. Silk had always been the material of 
			choice for parachutes because it was light, yet had an incredible 
			tensile strength that allowed it to stretch, keep shape, and yet 
			withstand tremendous forces. Whether the army’s search for what they 
			called a “tenacity fiber” was prompted purely by its need to find 
			better protection for its troops or because of what the retrieval 
			team found at Roswell, I do not know. I suspect, however, that it 
			was the discovery at the crash site that began the army’s search.
				
				
				
Among the items in my Roswell file that we retained from the 
			retrieval were strands of a fiber that even razors couldn’t cut 
			through. When I looked at it under a magnifying glass, its dull 
			grayness and almost matte finish belied the almost supernatural 
			properties of this fiber. You could stretch it, twist it around 
			objects, and subject it to a level of torque that would rend any 
			other fiber, but this held up. Then, when you released the tension, 
			it snapped back to its original length without any loss of tension 
			in its original form. It reminded me of the filaments in a spiderweb. 
			We became very interested in this material and began to study a 
			variety of technologies, including spider silks because they, alone 
			in nature, exhibit natural super tenacity properties. 
				
				
The spiders’ spinning of its silk begins in its abdominal glands as 
			a protein that the spider extrudes through a 
			narrow tube that forces all the molecules to align in the same 
			direction, turning the protein into a rod like, very 
			long, single thread with a structure not unlike a crystal. The 
			extrusion process not only aligns the protein molecules, 
			the molecules are very compressed, occupying much less space than 
			conventionally sized molecules. This 
			combination of lengthwise aligned and super compressed molecules 
			gives this thread an incredible tenacity and 
			the ability to stretch under enormous pressure while retaining its 
			tensile strength and integrity. A single strand of this 
			spider’s silk thread would have to be stretched nearly fifty miles 
			before breaking and if stretched around the entire globe, it would 
			weigh only fifteen ounces. 
				
				
Clearly, when the scientists at Roswell saw how this fiber - not 
			cloth, not silk, but something like a ceramic - had 
			encased the ship and formed the outer skin layer of the EBEs, they 
			realized it was a very promising avenue for
			research. When I examined the material and recognized its similarity 
			to spider thread, I realized that a key to 
			producing this commercially would be to synthesize the protein and
			find a way to simulate the extrusion process. General Trudeau 
			encouraged me to start contacting plastics and ceramics 
			manufacturers, especially Monsanto and Dow, to find out who was 
			doing research on super-tenacity materials, especially at university 
			laboratories. My quick poll paid off. 
				
				
I not only discovered that Monsanto was looking for a way to develop 
			a mass production process for a simulated spider silk, I also 
			learned that they were already working with the army. Army 
			researchers from the Medical Corps were trying to replicate the 
			chemistry of the spider gene to produce the silk manufacturing 
			protein. Years later, after I’d left the army, researchers at the 
			University of Wyoming and Dow Corning also began experiments on 
			cloning the silk manufacturing gene and developing a process to 
			extrude the silk fibers into a usable substance that could be 
			fabricated into a cloth. 
				
				
Our research and development liaison in the Medical Corps told me 
			that the replication of a super-tenacity fiber was still years away 
			back in 1962, but that any help from Foreign Technology that we 
			could give the Medical Corps would find its way to the companies 
			they were working with and probably wouldn’t require a separate R&D 
			budget. The development funding through U.S. government medical and 
			biological research grants was more than adequate, the Medical Corps 
			officer told me, to finance the research unless we needed to develop 
			an emergency crash program. But I still remained fascinated by the 
			prospect that something similar to a web spinner had spun the 
			strands of super-tenacity fabric around the spaceship. I knew that 
			whatever that secret was, amalgamating a skin out of some sort of 
			fabric or ceramic around our aircraft would give them the protection 
			that the Roswell craft had and still be relatively lightweight.
				
				
				
Again, I didn’t find out about it until much later, but research 
			into that very type of fabrication was already 
			under way by a scientist who would, years later, win a Nobel Prize. 
			At a meeting of the American Physical Society 
			three years before, Dr. Richard Feynman gave a theoretical 
			speculative assessment of the possibilities of creating 
			substances whose molecular structure was so condensed that the 
			resulting material might have radically different 
			properties from the non-compressed version of the same material. For 
			example, Feynman suggested, if scientists
			could create material in which the molecular structures were not 
			only compressed but arranged differently from 
			conventional molecular structures, the scientists might be able to 
			alter the physical properties of the substance to suit specific 
			applications. 
				
				
This seemed like brand new stuff to the American Physical Society. 
			In reality, though, compressed molecular structures were one of the 
			discoveries that had been made by some of the original scientific 
			analytical groups both at Alamogordo right after the Roswell crash 
			and at the Air Materiel Command at Wright Field, which took delivery 
			of the material. As a young atomic physicist, Richard Feynman was a 
			colleague of many of the postwar atomic specialists who were in the 
			army’s and then the air force’s guided missile program as well as 
			the nuclear weapons program in the 1950s. 
				 
				
				Although I never saw any 
			memos to this effect, Feynman was reported to have been in contact 
			with members of the Alamogordo group of the Air Materiel Command and 
			knew about some of the finds at the Roswell crash site. Whether 
			these discoveries suggested theories to him about the potential 
			properties of compressed molecular structures or whether his ideas 
			were also extensions of his theories about the quantum mechanics 
			behavior of electrons, for which he won the Nobel Prize, I don’t 
			know. But Dr. Feynman’s theories about compressed molecular 
			structures dove tailed with the army efforts to replicate the super-tenacity fiber composition and extrusion processes. By the 
			middle of the 1960s work was under way not only at large industrial 
			ceramics and chemical companies in the United States but in 
			university research laboratories here, and in Europe, Asia, and 
			India. 
				
				
With my questions about who was conducting research into 
			super-tenacity fibers answered and learning where that research was 
			taking place, I could turn my attention to other applications of the 
			technology to see whether the army could help move the development 
			along faster or whether any collateral development was possible to 
			create products in advance of the super-tenacity fibers. Our 
			scientists told us that one way to simulate the effect of 
			super-tenacity was in the cross alignment of composite layers of 
			fabric. This idea was the premise for the army’s search for a type 
			of body armor that would protect against the skin piercing injuries 
			of explosive shrapnel and rounds fired from guns. 
				
					
					“Now this won’t protect you against contusions, “ General Trudeau 
			told me after a meeting with Army Medical Corps researchers at 
			Walter Reed. “And the concussive shock from an impact will still be 
			strong enough to kill anybody, but at least it’s supposed to keep 
			the round from tearing through your body. “ 
				
				
				I thought about the many blunt trauma wounds you see in a battle and 
			could imagine the impact a large round would leave even if it 
			couldn’t penetrate the skin. But through the general’s impetus and 
			the contacts he set up for me at Du Pont and Monsanto, we 
			aggressively pursued the research into the development of a cross 
			aligned material for bulletproof vests. I hand carried the field 
			descriptions of the fabric found at Roswell to my meetings at these 
			Companies and showed the actual fabric to scientists who visited us 
			in Washington. 
				 
				
				This was not an item we wanted to risk carrying 
			around the country. By 1965, Du Pont had announced the creation of 
			the Kevlar fabric that, by 1973, was brought to market as the Kevlar 
			bulletproof vest that’s in common use today in the armed Services 
			and law enforcement agencies. I don’t know how many thousands of 
			lives have been saved, but every time I hear of a police officer 
			whose Kevlar vest protected him from a fatal chest or back wound, I 
			think back to those days when we were just beginning to consider the 
			value of cross aligned layers of super-tenacity material and am 
			thankful that our office played a part in the product’s development.
				
				
				
Our search for supertenacity materials also resulted in the 
			development of composite plastics and ceramics that with stood heat 
			and the pressures of high speed air maneuvers and were also 
			invisible to radar. The cross stitched super-tenacity fibers on the 
			skin of the Roswell vehicle, which I believe had been spun on, also 
			became an impetus for an entirely new generation of attack and 
			strategic aircraft as well as composite materials for future designs 
			of attack helicopters. 
				
				
One of the great rumors that floated around for years after the 
			Roswell story became public with the testimony of retired Army Air 
			Force major Jesse Marcel before he died was that Stealth technology 
			aircraft were the result of what we learned at Roswell. That is 
			true, but it was not a direct transfer of technology. Army 
			Intelligence knew that under certain conditions the EBE spacecraft 
			had the ability to hide their radar signature, but we didn’t know 
			how they did it. We also had pieces of the Roswell spacecraft’s 
			skin, which was a composite of super-tenacity molecular aligned 
			fibers. 
				 
				
				As far as I know, we’ve still not managed to recreate the 
			exact process to manufacture this composite, just like we’ve not 
			been able to duplicate the electromagnetic drive and navigation 
			system that enabled the Roswell vehicle to fly even though we have 
			that vehicle and others at either Norton, Edwards, and Nellis Air 
			Force bases. But through the study of how this material worked and 
			what its properties are, we’ve replicated composites and rolled an 
			entirely new generation of aircraft off the assembly line. 
				
				
				
Although the American public first heard about the existence of a 
			Stealth technology in President Jimmy Carter’s campaign against 
			President Ford in 1976, we didn’t see the Stealth in action until 
			the air attacks on Iraq during the Persian Gulf War. There, the 
			Stealth fighter, completely invisible to Iraqi radar, launched the 
			first high risk assaults on the Iraqi air force air defense system 
			and operated with almost complete impunity. Invisible to radar, 
			invisible to heat seeking missiles, striking out of the night sky 
			like demons, the Stealth fighters, with their flying wing almost 
			crescent shaped, look uncannily like the space vehicle that crashed 
			into the arroyo outside of Roswell. 
				 
				
				But appearances aside, the 
			composite skin of the Stealth that helps make it invisible to almost 
			all forms of detection was inspired by the Army R&D research into 
			the skin of the Roswell aircraft that we sectioned apart for 
			distribution to laboratories around the country. 
 
				
				Depleted Uranium Invisible Artillery Shells
				
For the air force, Stealth technology meant that aircraft could 
			approach a target invisible to radar and maintain that advantage 
			throughout the mission. For the army, Stealth technology for its 
			helicopters provides an incredible advantage in mounting search and 
			destroy, Special Forces recon, or counter insurgency missions deep 
			into enemy territory. But the possibility of a Stealth artillery 
			shell, which we conceived of at R&D in 1962, would have allowed us 
			something armies have sought ever since the first deployment of 
			artillery by a Western European army at Henry V’s victory at 
			Agincourt in the early fifteenth century. 
				 
				
				Certainly Napoleon would 
			have wanted this ability when he deployed his artillery against the 
			British line at Waterloo. So would the Germans in World War I when 
			their artillery pounded the Allied forces hunkered down in their 
			trenches and again at the Battle of the Bulge in 1944 when those of 
			us stationed in Rome could only pray that our boys could hang on 
			until the clouds broke and our bombers could hit the German 
			emplacements. 
				
				
In all artillery battles, once a shell is fired, it can be tracked 
			by an observer back to its source and then return fire can be 
			directed against whoever is firing. But as the range of artillery 
			increased and we found ways to camouflage guns, we became proficient 
			in hiding artillery until the advent of battlefield radar, which 
			allows the trajectory of shells to be tracked back to their source. 
			But imagine if the shell were composed of a material that rendered 
			it invisible to radar? That was the possibility we proposed to 
			General Trudeau: an invisible artillery shell, I suggested to him in 
			his office one morning as we were designing the plan for research 
			and development of composite materials. 
				 
				
				On the night battlefield of 
			the future you could deploy weapons that were invisible even to 
			radar tracking planes flying over head behind the lines. Shells 
			would start falling, and the enemy wouldn’t know where they were 
			coming from until after we had the advantage of five or more 
			unanswered salvos. By then, and with the advantage of surprise, the 
			damage might well be done. If we were using mechanized artillery, we 
			could set up positions, fire a series of quick salvos, redeploy, and 
			set up again. 
The secret lay not just in the same Stealth aircraft technology but 
			also in the development of a Stealth ceramic that could withstand 
			tremendous explosive barrel pressures and still maintain an 
			integrity through the arc of its trajectory. The search for just 
			such a molecularly aligned composite ceramic was inspired by the 
			composite material of the Roswell spacecraft. In analysis after 
			analysis, the army tried to determine how the extraterrestrials 
			fabricated the material that formed the hull of the spacecraft but 
			was unable to do so. 
				 
				
				The search for the kind of molecularly aligned 
			composite began in the1950s even before General Trudeau took command 
			of R&D, continued during my tenure at Foreign Technology when the 
			early “Stealth” experimentation began at Lockheed that resulted in 
			the F117 fighter and Stealth bomber, and continues right through to 
			today. 
				
				
The general was also more than interested in the kinds of warheads 
			we would propose for just such a shell, a warhead that did come into 
			use in 1961 and was successfully deployed during the Gulf War. And 
			we had a suggestion for a round that we thought could change the 
			nature of the kinds of battles we projected we’d be fighting against 
			the Warsaw Pact forces, a warhead fabricated out of depleted 
			uranium. This was a way to utilize the stockpile of uranium we 
			foresaw we’d have as a result of spent fuel from commercial nuclear 
			reactors, reactors powering U.S. Navy vessels, and the nuclear 
			reactors the army was developing for its own bases and for delivery 
			to bases overseas. 
				
				
				
				Depleted uranium was a dense, heavy metal, so dense in fact that 
			conventional armament was no match for a high speed round tipped 
			with it. Its ability to penetrate even the toughest of tank armor 
			and detonate once it was inside the enemy vehicle meant that a 
			single round fired from one of our own tanks equipped with a laser 
			range finder would disable, if not completely destroy, an enemy 
			tank. Depleted uranium would give us a decided advantage on a 
			European battlefield on which we knew we’d be outnumbered two or 
			three to one by the Warsaw Pact or in China where sheer numbers 
			alone would mean that either we’d be overwhelmed or we’d have to 
			resort to nuclear weapons. The depleted uranium shell kept us from 
			having to go nuclear. 
				
				
Privately, I suggested to General Trudeau that depleted uranium also 
			fulfilled our hidden agenda. It was another weapon in a potential 
			arsenal we were building against hostile extraterrestrials. If 
			depleted uranium could penetrate armor, might the heaviness of the 
			element enable it to penetrate the composite skin of the spacecraft, 
			especially if the spacecraft were on the ground? I suggested that it 
			certainly merited development at the nearby Aberdeen Proving Grounds 
			in Maryland, and if it proved worthwhile, it was a weapon we should 
			deploy. 
				
				
Even though the composite ceramic Stealth round is still an elusive 
			dream in weapons development, the depleted uranium tipped war head 
			saw action in the Gulf War, where it didn’t just disable the tanks 
			of the Iraqi Republican Guard, it exploded them into pieces. Fired 
			from the laser range finder equipped Abrams tanks, TOW missile 
			launchers, or even from Hedgehog infantry support aircraft, the 
			depleted uranium tipped warheads wreaked havoc in the Gulf. They 
			were one of the great weapons development successes of Army R&D that 
			came out of what we learned from the Roswell crash. 
				HARP - The High-Altitude Research Project 
				
HARP was another project whose need for research and development was 
			suggested to us by the challenge 
			posed by flying saucers. They could out fly our own aircraft, we had 
			no guided missiles that could bring them 
			down, and we didn’t have any guns that could shoot them down. We 
			were also exploring weapons systems that 
			had a double or triple use, and HARP, or “the big gun, “ was one 
			such system. Essentially, Project HARP was the 
			brainchild of Canadian gunnery expert and scientist Dr. Gerald Bull. 
			Bull had studied the threat posed by the 
			German “Big Bertha” in World War I and the Nazi V3 supergun toward 
			the end of World War II. He realized that
			long range, high powered artillery was not only a practical solution 
			to launching heavy payload shells, it was very 
			affordable once the initial research and development phase was 
			completed.
				 
				
				Mass produced big guns and their
			ordinance, assembled in stages right on the site, could provide 
			enormous firepower well back from the front lines 
			to any army. They would become a strategic weapon to rain nuclear 
			destruction down on enemy population 
			centers or military 
			staging areas. 
				
				
Dr. Bull had also suggested that the gun could be retasked as a 
			launch vehicle, blasting huge rounds into orbit, which could then be 
			jettisoned, like the booster stage of a rocket, so the payload 
			warhead could thrust itself into position. This would require a 
			minimum amount of rocket fuel and could effectively push a string of 
			satellites into orbit very quickly, almost like an artillery 
			barrage. If the army needed to put special satellites into orbit in 
			a hurry or, better still, explosive satellites that would pose a 
			threat to orbiting extraterrestrial vehicles, the big gun was one 
			method of accomplishing this mission. 
				
				
There was still a third potential to 
				the supergun. General Trudeau 
			foresaw the ability of this weapon to launch
			rounds that could ultimately be placed into a lunar orbit. 
			Especially if hostilities broke out between the United 
			States and USSR or, as we expected, between Earth military forces 
			and the extraterrestrials, we could re-supply a
			military moon base without having to rely on rocket launch 
			facilities, which would demand long turn around times and be very 
			vulnerable to attack. A camouflaged supergun, even a series of 
			superguns, would allow us all the benefits of a field artillery or 
			quick response antiaircraft unit, but with a piece that could launch 
			payloads into space. It was this combination of capabilities that 
			delighted General Trudeau because it enabled one R&D project to help 
			create many different systems. 
				
				
The United States, Canada, and the British military combined their 
			joint expertise to find ways to develop Dr. Bull’s supergun with 
			General Trudeau, I believe, becoming one of Bull’s staunchest 
			supporters. But by the time military budget decisions had to be made 
			to fund the weapon, all of the governments military establishments 
			had become committed to the guided missile and rocket launched space 
			vehicle rather than a supergun. While the weapon had some potential, 
			the United States, UK, and Canada were too far along with their own 
			missile programs to start up a completely new type of weapon. And in 
			the end, they decided to end the research while still keeping close 
			tabs on Bull’s efforts to sell his technology to other powers, 
			especially governments in the Middle East. 
				
				
Through the 1980s, Gerald Bull, whom I had met at a reception 
			honoring General Trudeau in 1986, Entered into negotiations with the 
			Israelis as well as with the Iraqis and perhaps even the Iranians. 
			The decade long war between Saddam Hussein and Iran proved a fertile 
			sales territory for weapons merchants in general, and particularly 
			for Gerald Bull, who was courted by both sides. In the end, he cut 
			his deal with the Iranians, testing experimental versions of a supergun and planning to build the monster weapon before the British 
			intervened and seized shipments of gun barrel units before they were 
			shipped out of the country. By this time, Dr. Bull may have become a 
			liability to the Iraqis, as well as to the Israelis and to the 
			United States as well, and was shot to death outside his apartment 
			in Belgium before the outbreak of the Gulf War. 
				
				
Like Jules Verne’s character Barbicane in From the Earth to the 
			Moon, Bull had a vision of the potential of a long range artillery 
			piece. Unlike Barbicane, he came very close to proving it a 
			practical way of launching vehicles into space. The murder of Gerald 
			Bull has never been solved, and whatever secrets he still possessed 
			about the assembly of a gun to launch vehicles into space probably 
			died with him in the hallway outside his apartment. 
				List of Omissions 
				
As I worked through the stack of projects on my desk during the 
			spring months of 1962, I found I was devoting more of my time to the 
			Roswell file and less to some of the other projects under 
			development. It was apparent to me that the treasure trove we’d 
			retrieved from Roswell was beginning to pay off in ways that not 
			even I thought would happen. There were so many army research 
			projects under way, I told my boss, that were not foundering, but 
			sputtering along that could benefit from something similar found in 
			the Roswell wreckage it we could find the match between the two. 
				
				 
				
				Night vision, lasers, and
				fiberoptic communication were obvious, I 
			said to him, but I was sure there were other areas we could find 
			just by looking at the problems posed by what we discovered from 
			Roswell, not just retrieved from the wreckage. 
				
					
					“Make it specific, Phil, “ the general asked. “What do you mean?”
					
“If you just look at what we didn’t find at the crash site, “ I 
			said. “That goes a long way to explaining the differences between 
			what we are and what they are. It also shows us what we need to 
			develop if we’re going to prepare for long periods of travel in 
			space. “ 
“Can you make me a list?” the general asked. “There are a lot of 
			ongoing research contracts out there that could benefit from a list 
			of things we’d have to concern ourselves with if we’re going to be 
			planning for space travel in the next fifty years. “ 
				
				
				By the time our conversation was finished, 
				General Trudeau had asked 
			me to prepare not only a list of what were called the “omissions” at 
			Roswell but a very brief report detailing the areas where I thought 
			development needed to take place. So I assembled all the reports and 
			information in the Roswell file and began looking for what was 
			missing that I might expect to find at a space traveler’s crash 
			site. 
				
				
There was no mention in any of the reports of any food source or 
			nutrient, and no one discovered any food preparation units or stored 
			food on board the spacecraft, nor were there any refrigeration units 
			for food preservation. There was no water on the ship either for 
			drinking, washing, or flushing of waste, nor were there any waste or 
			garbage disposal facilities. The Roswell field reports said that the 
			retrieval team found something they thought was a first aid kit 
			because it contained material that a doctor said was for bandaging 
			purposes, but there were no medical facilities nor any medications. 
			And finally, the army retrieval team said there were no rest 
			facilities at all on board the ship; nothing that could be construed 
			as a bunk or a bed. 
				
				
From this available data the army assumed that this 
				UFO was a 
			reconnaissance craft and could quickly return 
			to a larger or mothership where all of the missing items might be 
			found. The other explanation Dr. Hermann Oberth came up with was that this was a time dimensional travel ship 
			that didn’t traverse large distances in space. Rather, it “jumped” 
			from one time space to another or from one dimension to another and 
			instantly returned to its point of origin. But this was just Dr. Oberth’s speculation, and he would usually discount any of it the 
			moment he believed I was taking it as fact. 
				
				
I believed, however, that the EBEs didn’t require food or facilities 
			for waste disposal because they were fabricated beings, just like 
			robots or androids, who had been created specifically for space 
			travel and the performance of specific tasks on the planets they 
			visited. Just like our lunar rover in the 1970s, which was a robot, 
			so these creatures had been programmed with specific tasks to 
			perform and carried them out. Perhaps their programming could be 
			updated or altered from a remote source, but they weren’t life forms 
			that required ongoing sustenance. They were the perfect creatures 
			for long voyages through space and for visiting other planets. Human 
			beings, however, weren’t robots and did require sustenance. 
			Therefore, it would be necessary to provide for long term sustenance 
			and waste disposal needs if humans were going to travel long 
			distances in space. 
				
				
Other scientists from our R&D ad hoc brain trust suggested that, 
			indeed, this could have only been a scout ship that either got 
			caught in our tracking radars from the 509th or from Alamogordo or 
			was hit by lightning in the fierce electrical storm that night. They 
			believed that the ship was navigated by an electromagnetic 
			propulsion system. Other scientists suggested that even before we 
			could generate the necessary power to drive such a propulsion 
			system, we would have to have developed some form of a nuclear 
			powered ion drive first. As for the absence of food, scientists 
			suggested that this would pose a major drawback for long term human 
			space exploration. Thus, in my quick and dirty proposal for General 
			Trudeau, I suggested that the army had to complete the development 
			of at least two items that I knew had been in the R&D system for at 
			least ten years: a food supply that could never spoil and didn’t 
			require refrigeration and an atomic drive that could be assembled in 
			space out of components as the power plant for an interplanetary 
			space craft. 
				Irradiated Foods
				
The general read my notes a few days later, and seemed impressed. He 
			knew from the memo I had left him 
			the night before that I’d be ready to talk about my omissions list 
			the next day, but he didn’t say 
			anything to me right away Instead, he picked up the phone, dialed a 
			number, told someone at the other end that he’d be right over, then 
			looked up at me. 
				
					
					“Go get your hat, “ he said. “Meet me on the helipad. We’ve been 
			invited to lunch. “ 
				
				
				Ten minutes later after the general’s helicopter had picked us up, 
			we circled the Pentagon once and were flown over to the Quarter 
			master Center. 
				
				
An officer who shall remain anonymous met us at the helipad. He 
			saluted as we got off the chopper. “Thank you for joining us. “ 
				
				
				
He took us inside to a downstairs store room where he showed off 
			shelves and shelves of all types of meat, fruit, and vegetables. 
				
				
					
					“Look at this pork, “ he said. “It’s been stored here unrefrigerated 
			for months and it’s completely free of trichina worm. “ He held up a 
			couple of loose eggs and a chicken breast. “Eggs, unrefrigerated, 
			and chicken. Completely free of bacterium salmonella. And it’s the 
			same for the seafood. “ 
				
				
				He escorted us along the shelves of food and, almost like a 
			salesman, presented the virtues of each of the items. The food was 
			wrapped, but not vacuum sealed, in a clear cellophane to keep it 
			free from dust and surface dirt, but it was not preserved in any 
			manner that I could determine. 
				
					
					“Free of fungus or any spores, “ he said about the vegetables. “No 
			mold or any insect infestations in the fruit, “ he said. 
					
					“And the 
			milk, it’s been here on the shelf for over two years and it’s not 
			even slightly sour. We’ve taken great steps to preserve food 
			completely without salting, smoking, refrigeration, freezing, or 
			even canning. “ 
“Does this answer one of your questions, Colonel?” General Trudeau 
			asked as we looked at the stocks of food that seemed completely 
			resistant to spoilage. 
				
				
				The commanding general of the Quartermaster Center joined us in the 
			stockroom. 
				
					
					“Pick your lunch, gentlemen,“ he said and chose a thick 
			steak for himself. 
					
					“I’m going to have this and, if you don’t mind, 
			I’ll take the liberty of ordering up the same thing for you, General 
			Trudeau, and you, too, Colonel. How about some potatoes and maybe 
			some strawberries for dessert. All fresh, delicious, and harmless. “ 
					
					
					Then he paused. “And completely bombarded with what some people 
			would call lethal doses of radiation to destroy any bacteria or 
			infestation. “ 
				
				
				We were escorted upstairs to the commandant’s dining room, 
			where we were joined by a number of other officers and civilian 
			research and food technology experts who described the process of 
			ionizing radiation to destroy the harmful bacteria while preserving 
			the food without canning or smoking. The irradiation process was so 
			complete that if the food were maintained in an antiseptic or dust 
			free atmosphere, it wouldn’t be attacked and would remain 
			uncontaminated. However, because the atmosphere was as dirty as any 
			other atmosphere inside any other building, the food was wrapped in 
			cellophane. Other foods were packaged in a clear plastic wrap and 
			were displayed for visitors like us just as if they were on 
			supermarket shelves. 
				
					
					“We first wanted to determine whether the whole concept of 
			irradiated food was safe, “ one of the engineers explained. “So our 
			first studies were made with food which was irradiated and then 
			stored in the frozen area. We fed these foods to rats and noticed no 
			harmful effects. Then we did the same thing except this time we 
			increased the radiation to six mega rads and then froze the food. 
			Again, no harmful effects. “ 
				
				
				His presentation continued while we ate, accompanied by charts that 
			showed how the sterilization rate was increased to try to find any 
			harmful effects on rats. Then they tested the irradiated and then 
			frozen food on human volunteers. 
				
					
					“But wait, “ I asked. “I still don’t understand why you irradiated 
			the food and then froze it. “ 
				
				
				The engineer was waiting for this question because he had his answer 
			already prepared. He acted like he’d been asked it many times 
			before. 
				
					
					“Because,“ he said, “we were testing only for harmful 
			effects from the radiation, not for spoilage, not for taste, not 
			even for harmful effects from the food itself even though we knew it 
			had been sterilized and was tested completely free from bacteria 
			when it was defrosted. What we needed to prove in field trials was 
			the harmlessness to animals and humans of the irradiation process. “
					
				
				
				Then he described the field trials to prove that irradiation 
			preserved food stored at room temperature. 
				
					
					“We selected high 
			spoilage foods, “ he said. “Like the meats, chicken, and especially 
			the seafood. We also made composite foods like stews which we fed to 
			rats and dogs along with straight meat and then straight tuna. We 
			first irradiated a sample at three mega rads then another sample at 
			six mega rads and tested the animals over a period of six months to 
			see whether radiation became concentrated in any of their organs or 
			bones.“ He paused, letting the dramatic effect of what he was going 
			to say sink in while we were sinking our teeth into the irradiated 
			foods that resulted from the years of experimentation throughout the 
			1950s. 
					
					“No toxicological effects whatsoever. And we were very 
			thorough before we tested these foods on human volunteers. “ 
“What’s next?” I asked. 
					
“We’re setting taste trials of favorite foods at Fort Lee, Virginia, 
			to see how troops in the field respond to this. We think that before 
			the end of the decade we’ll have a variety of Meals Ready to Eat for 
			troops in the field who have no benefit of cooking facilities or 
			refrigeration. “ 
				
				
				General Trudeau looked across the table at me and I nodded. This was 
			perfectly good food that was right up to any quality you’d care to 
			measure. 
				
					
					“Gentlemen, “ General Trudeau said as he stood. As a three star 
			general, he was the highest ranking officer in the room, and when he 
			spoke everyone was silent. “My assistant believes that your work is 
			of utmost importance to the U.S. Army, our nation, and the world, 
			and will contribute to our travel in space. I am of the very same 
			opinion. We are most impressed with your test results and want to 
			help you expand your operation and speed up the testing process. The 
			army needs what you’ve developed. In the next two weeks, submit to 
			me your supplementary budget to expand your operation and I want it 
			also included into next year’s budget. “ 
					
					Then he turned to me, 
			nodded, and we thanked the commanding general for lunch and walked 
			out to General Trudeau’s helicopter. 
“How about that, Phil?” he asked. “I think we checked off some of 
			the items on your list right on the spot. “ 
The pilot helped the general into his seat and I got around on the 
			other side. 
“So what do you think?” he asked again. 
“I think if we move any faster we’ll have the 
					EBEs down here asking 
			for some of our irradiated food, “ I said. 
				
				
				General Trudeau laughed as we whisked off the helipad and headed 
			back for the short jump to the Pentagon. 
				
					
					“Now you have to get to 
			work on finding out what you can about your atomic propulsion 
			system. If NASA ever gets it into its mind to push ahead with 
			building its space station, I’d like the military to have a power 
			source that can keep us up there for a while. If we can get a 
			surveillance window on our visitors, I want it sooner rather than 
			later. “ 
				
				
				And before the week was out, I was at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, again 
			looking at the developments the army had made in the development of 
			portable nuclear reactors. 
				Portable Atomics
				
A challenge posed to us directly by the army’s retrieval of 
				the 
			Roswell craft and our further discovery that the craft was not 
			propelled by a conventional engine - either propeller, jet, or 
			rocket - pressed upon us the critical realization that if we were to 
			engage these extraterrestrial creatures in space we would need a 
			propulsion system that gave us a capability for long distance travel 
			similar to theirs. But we had no such system. The closest form of 
			energy we had that did not rely on a constant supply of fuel was 
			atomic power in a controlled, sustained reaction, and even that was 
			far away from development. However, at the close of the war the army 
			had operational control over atomic weapons because, under Gen.
				
				 
				
				Leslie Groves, director of the Manhattan Project, the army had 
			established the bureaucracy that developed and deployed the atomic 
			bomb. 
				
				
So for army engineers, struggling to find out how the Roswell 
			spacecraft was powered, atomic power was the 
			easiest form of propulsion to seize upon, in part because it was the 
			most immediate. However, by 1947, a struggle 
			was already breaking out within the Truman administration over who 
			would control nuclear power, a civilian 
			commission or the military. As the nation was making the transition 
			from wartime to peace time, the specter of a 
			General Groves secretly dictating how and in what manifestation 
			atomic power would be used frightened 
			Truman’s advisers. 
				 
				
				So in the end, President Truman made the decision 
			to turn control of the nation’s nuclear
			program over to a civilian commission. Thus, by 1947, the army was 
			getting out of running the nuclear power 
			business, but that didn’t mean that research into the military 
			applications of nuclear power plants stopped. We 
			needed to develop nuclear reactors, not only to manufacture nuclear 
			power propulsion systems for naval vessels 
			and for on site installation of power generating stations, but to 
			experiment with ways nuclear power could be 
			made portable in 
			space by assembling systems in orbit from component parts. 
				
				 
				
				This 
			would enable us to maintain long term outposts in space and even to 
			power interplanetary vessels that could serve as a defensive force 
			against any extraterrestrial hostile forces. If this sounds like 
			science fiction, remember, it was 1947, and the nation had barely 
			gotten out of World War II before the Cold War had begun. War, not 
			peace, was on the mind of the military officers who were in charge 
			of the Roswell retrieval and analysis of the wreckage. 
				
				
The army, I discovered from the “Army Atomic Reactors” reports at 
			Fort Belvoir, not only had a very sophisticated portable reactor 
			program under way, but had already built one in cooperation with the 
			air force for installation at the Sundance Radar Station six miles 
			out of Sundance, Wyoming, early in 1962. This was a highly 
			sophisticated piece of power generating apparatus that provided 
			steam heat to the radar station, electrical power for the base, and 
			a very precisely controlled separate power supply for the delicately 
			calibrated radar equipment. But this wasn’t the first portable power 
			plant, as most people thought it was. 
				
				
The first portable nuclear reactor plant anywhere was for a research 
			facility in Greenland, under the Arctic ice cap, designed for Camp 
			Century, an Army Corps of Engineers project nine hundred miles from 
			the North Pole. Ostensibly operated by the Army Polar Research and 
			Development Center conducting experiments in the Arctic winter, Camp 
			Century was also a vital observation post in an early warning system 
			monitoring any Soviet activity at or near the North Pole and any 
			activity related to UFO sightings or landings. 
				
				
During the years when I was at the White House, the UFO working 
			group had consistently pushed President Eisenhower to establish a 
			string of formal listening posts - electronic pickets staffed by 
			army and air force observers at the most remote parts of the planet 
			- to report on any UFO activity. General Twining’s group had argued 
			that if the EBEs had any plans to establish semipermanent Earth 
			bases, it wouldn’t be in a populated area or an area where our 
			military forces could monitor. It would be at the poles, in the 
			middle of the most desolate surroundings they could find, or even 
			underneath the ocean. 
				 
				
				The polar caps seemed like the most obvious 
			choices because during the 1950s we had no surveillance satellites 
			that could spot alien activity from orbit, nor did we have a 
			permanent presence at the two poles. It was thought that we wouldn’t 
			be able to put any sophisticated devices at the poles, either, 
			because doing so would require more power than we could transport. 
			However, the army’s Nuclear Power Program, developed in the1950s at 
			Fort Belvoir, provided us with the ability to install a nuclear 
			powered base anywhere on the planet. 
				
				
In 1958, work was started on the Camp Century power plant, which was 
			to be constructed beneath the ice in Greenland. Initially this was 
			supposed to be top secret because we didn’t want the Soviets to know 
			what we were up to. Ultimately, however, the high security 
			classification proved too unwieldy for the army because too many 
			outside contractors were involved and the logistics, transportation 
			to Thule, Greenland, then installation on skids beneath the ice pack 
			created a cover story nightmare. So Army Intelligence decided to 
			drop the security classification entirely and treat the entire plan 
			as a scientific information gathering expedition by its polar 
			research group. 
				
				
Just like the whole camouflage operation that had protected the 
			existence of the working group, Camp 
			Century provided the perfect cover for testing out a procedure for 
			constructing a prefabricated, prepackaged 
			nuclear reactor under arduous conditions and flying it to its site 
			for final assembly. It also provided the army with a 
			means of testing the performance of the reactor and how it could be 
			maintained at an utterly desolate location in the harshest climate 
			on the planet. 
				
				
The plant was the first of its kind. It had a completely modular 
			construction that had separately packaged components for air 
			coolers, heat exchangers, switch gear, and the turbine generator. 
			The power plant also had a mechanism that used the recycled steam to 
			melt the ice cap surface to provide the camp’s water supply. The 
			entire construction was completed in only seventy seven days, and 
			the camp remained in operation from October 1960 to August 1963, 
			when the research mission completed its work. The entire operation 
			was successfully taken apart and placed in storage in 1964, and the 
			site of Camp Century was completely restored to its natural state.
				
				
				
I received reports about the camp’s operation during the later 
			months of 1962 after General Trudeau had 
			asked me about the feasibility of the army’s portable atomics 
			program as a way to instigate research into a launchable atomics program for generating power in orbit. I was so 
			enthusiastic about the success of our
			portable atomics and the way they provided the research platform for
			the subsequent development of mobile atomics that I urged the 
			general to provide as much funding as R&D could to enable the Fort 
			Belvoir Army Nuclear Power Program to construct and test as many 
			mobile and portable power plants as possible. 
				 
				
				Each power plant gave 
			us a kind of a beachhead into remote areas of the world where the EBEs might have wanted to establish a presence because they believed 
			they could go about it undetected. They were a kind of platform. 
			Once we had demonstrated the ability to protect remote areas of the 
			earth, we’d be in a better position to establish a presence in 
			space. 
				
				
The atomics program, which was in part a direct outgrowth of the 
			challenge posed to us from our analysis of the Roswell craft, 
			ultimately helped us develop portable atomic power plants, which are 
			now used to power Earth satellites as well as naval vessels. It 
			showed us that we could have portable atomic generators and gave the 
			army a longer reach than anybody might have thought. Ultimately, it 
			allowed us to maintain surveillance and staff remote listening 
			posts. It also provided the basis for research into launching 
			nuclear power facilities into space to become the power plants of 
			new generations of interplanetary vehicles. The portable atomics 
			program allowed us to experiment with ways we would develop atomic 
			drives for our own space exploration vehicles, which, we believed, 
			would enable us to establish military bases on the moon as well as 
			on the planets near us in the solar system. 
				
				
And from our successes with atomics, we turned our attention to the 
			development of the weapons we could mount on surveillance satellites 
			in orbit, weapons we developed directly from what we found in the 
			flying saucer at Roswell.