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			by Gus Russo  
			from
			
			AmericanChronicle Website 
 
			 
 And weaving in and out of all these alleged controversies, especially in the UFO internet chat rooms, are at least three senior intelligence analysts and one retired Air Force Special Investigator: 
 What has been confounding UFO buffs for years is the regular presence of these well-informed “spooks” (and others less active) in both the physical UFO world and the world of cyberspace saucers. 
 The mystery seems to have its origins in 1956, pre Tom-Paul-Jim-Rick, and pre internet, and in the most unlikely of settings: the office of Ward Kimball, one of Walt Disney’s key animators. At a 1979 UFO symposium in San Francisco, Kimball told how the US Air Force had approached Disney to make a UFO documentary, the ostensible purpose being to help prepare the collective American psyche for planned revelations concerning the reality of extraterrestrials. 
 If that wasn’t enough, the senior flyboys offered to supply actual UFO footage, which Disney would be allowed to use in his film. It must have seemed to Kimball that his character Jiminy Cricket’s “wish upon a star” had actually been answered. However, a few weeks later, the offer was withdrawn just as quickly as it had been made. 
 Kimball said that an Air Force Colonel said brusquely, 
 The Air Force revisited the gambit in the early seventies, when Air Force Colonels Robert Coleman and George Weinbrenner approached documentary filmmaker Robert Emenegger with a very similar astounding offer. 
 
			The two colonels, who were 
			possibly attached to AFOSI, took Emenegger to Norton AFB near San 
			Bernardino and awed him with footage of what appeared to be three 
			flying saucers landing at Holloman AFB in New Mexico in 1971. 
			Incredibly, the Air Force was again, according to the colonels, 
			going to give the footage to Emenegger as a climax to his 
			forthcoming film, UFOs, Past, Present and Future. But once again, at 
			the eleventh hour the Air Force changed its mind, they said, because 
			of the Watergate scandal. Perhaps the country couldn’t handle more 
			bad news.  
 As a result, Doty was tasked not only with determining if Bennewitz had stumbled onto classified aircraft tests (and also scientific research such as Project Starfire), but also with feeding the physicist mountains of disinformation about UFOs, the furtive purpose being to divert his attention from classified goings-on, and later, to monitor the flow of information through the UFOlogy network. 
 A still-unidentified Air Force intelligence officer also seduced best-selling UFO writer Bill Moore (The Philadelphia Experiment and The Roswell Incident) into assisting Doty in his spycraft; in exchange, Moore was offered real UFO information, including meeting a live extraterrestrial – promises that, like Emenegger’s UFO footage, never materialized. 
 
			The charade played out for most of the 
			eighties, driving poor Bennewitz, who coined the disclosures 
			
			Project 
			Beta, to a mental meltdown. Moore actually admitted his double agent 
			role to an astonished UFO community at a Las Vegas convention in 
			July 1989, however the bizarre alien tales he fed Bennewitz poisoned 
			the UFO database, perhaps permanently. Infinite mutations of the 
			Doty fictions continue to spread like an internet virus. Just google 
			“SERPO” for a taste. 
 After meeting with Howe in Albuquerque, Rick Doty took her to the AFOSI offices at Kirtland, and not only promised her the same footage that was dangled in front of Emenegger, but he went one step further. 
 Allowed only to scan the explosive cache, Howe saw tales of crashed extraterrestrial craft, alien bodies, and even more astounding, UFO crash survivors. 
 
			Although Howe 
			was not allowed to take the papers away, Doty promised her the same 
			“landing footage” promised to Emenegger a decade earlier for his 
			film. But, just as they had with Emenegger, months of negotiating 
			went absolutely nowhere. Doty later admitted to author Greg Bishop 
			that the ploy was but another government counterintelligence probe 
			into the UFO community. 
 In 1991, Smith learned of the possibility of a real-life X-Files when UK crop circle researchers made him aware of analyst Tom, and his forays into their provenance. Before calling Tom, Smith vetted him with NASA, which readily agreed that Tom was the government’s man on “phenomenology.” 
 Thus, in September 1991, Smith started calling Tom, and in only their second conversation, Tom floored Dan by announcing, 
 
			The trip to the famed nuclear lab never happened, 
			as best Dan can ascertain. 
 When pressed for details, however, Tom only gives obtuse, often cryptic answers as to why the monitoring of the UFO crowd consumes what one insider estimates as 20% of his publicly funded workday. 
 Unbeknownst to Smith, in 1992 Tom allegedly admitted to another internet contact, Habib “Henry” Azadehdel, that he had indeed been part of a working group. 
 In a phone conversation recorded by Azadehdel, Tom, or someone impersonating Tom, confided that he had been the first member of an inter-agency “working group.” 
 In his 1990 book Out There, New York Times reporter Howard Blum described a top secret inter-agency Working Group, which he contended met in the Pentagon in 1987, the purpose being to investigate UFOs. 
 
			The participants Blum named 
			overlapped too nicely with those known to be in Tom and Jim’s 
			gathering: in the minds of many UFOlogists, Tom and Jim were members 
			of Blum’s UFO Working Group. Thus the current controversy often 
			postulates that their interest relates to an ongoing UFO Working 
			Group mandate.  
 
			Still, Smith’s friends worry that Smith’s 
			health is suffering from all the gamesmanship, worried that he might 
			become the next Paul Bennewitz. Since 1994, Tom continues to 
			communicate with Dan on a regular basis. 
 
			Enter officers Tom and Jim, now nick-named 
			collectively “The Aviary” by their contactees. Jim confirmed to a 
			popular website administrator that Bigelow’s think tank was the 
			subject of informal discussion at DIA sponsored meetings he attended 
			on the threats of emerging technologies. More importantly, analyst 
			Tom has openly admitted to Dan Smith that he was so interested in NIDS that he attended its inaugural meeting, and kept tabs on its 
			research until its dissolution on 2004. 
 Chris Iverson, administrator with the internet’s “Open Minds Forum,” says, 
 Iverson says that Tom corroborated what he told Smith years ago about the mysterious trips to Los Alamos. 
 The list of contacts goes on. Gary Bekkum, of Starstream Research, says, 
 Ryan Dube, of Reality Uncovered notes that his first contact with the trio came when Doty began harassing one of his moderators. 
 The Tom, Jim, and Rick Show even enjoys syndication across the pond. 
 Brendan Burton, the British administrator for the “Open Minds” forum, vividly recalls when Jim emailed him in early 2006. The missive is again a bit of a tease, wherein the agent makes “hypothetical” statements about the size of the UFO cover-up. 
 But, Burton adds, 
 
			The UK’s Caryn Anscomb, who frequently 
			contributes to the “Reality Uncovered” and “Starstream” sites, first 
			heard from analyst Jim in 2004, and has had regular communications 
			from him ever since. Ditto Steve Broadbent, another Reality 
			Uncovered administrator from England. 
 
			Their 
			impressive CV’s, contact information, and emails are regularly 
			exchanged by the bloggers as the amateurs try to brainstorm an 
			answer to the ultimate question: what is their agenda? Also asking 
			the question is UK filmmaker John Lundberg, who has been traipsing 
			across the US recently, filming anyone who will agree to speak on 
			the subject for his forthcoming film Miragemen. Lundberg has, like 
			this writer, also had communications with both Tom and Jim. 
 
			Chaired by CIA physicist Howard Percy 
			Robertson, the panel concluded that 90 percent of UFO sightings 
			could be readily identified with meteorological, astronomical, or 
			natural phenomena, and that the remaining 10 percent could be 
			similarly explained with more study. It further suggested that the 
			Air Force should begin to reduce "public gullibility" and utilize 
			the mass media, including influential media giants like the 
			
			Walt 
			Disney Corporation, to demystify UFO reports. 
 The investigation, undertaken by eight faculty members from the University of Colorado, concluded (albeit with some dissention amongst the faculty ranks) that all UFO reports had conventional explanations, and further study of the subject would not be worthwhile. 
 The Air Force put the issue aside for almost three decades, then in 1995 released a UFO “Fact Sheet” that noted: 
 Two years later, a Pentagon spokesman told the press that the military had “long ago” stopped tracking UFOs. 
 
			That same year, Gerald K. Haines, the official historian of 
			the CIA, joined the chorus of denials when he authored the Agency’s 
			position in its official publication, Studies in Intelligence. 
			Although the CIA was concerned about UFOs until the early 1950s, 
			Haines wrote, it has since “paid only limited and peripheral 
			attention to the phenomena.” Haines added that the actual 
			explanation to the UFO mystery was much more mundane than the 
			fantasy of alien visitation: UFOs were nothing more than classified, 
			experimental US aircraft.  
 (NASA ultimately ignored the Brookings warning when, in 1972 it launched the Pioneer 10 spacecraft to the farthest reaches of space; affixed to the craft was a gold-anodized aluminum plaque engraved with a map showing the location of Earth.) 
 
			Thus, it is postulated, the intelligence 
			community might be preparing the world for “Disclosure.” 
 
			 
 
			Recently, however, in private statements 
			to bloggers and to this writer, some clarity is coming to the issues 
			of “who knows what” and “what is their agenda?” Research for this 
			article points to these answers: they know little or nothing about 
			UFOs, and their agendas differ. 
 This is consistent with Tom’s statement to another site administrator: 
 Ryan points out the obvious paradox: 
 Tom’s motivation, it now appears certain, can be summed up in two words: national security. In a recent interview, a senior intelligence official who is familiar with spooks in cyberspace explained, 
 Joel Brenner, the United States national counterintelligence chief recently said that the number of Russian agents operating in the country had reached “Cold War levels,” according to the Russian News & Information Agency. 
 Former head of FBI counterintelligence David Szady echoed Brenner's, adding that Russian agents often arrived in the U.S. under the cover of students or businessmen. 
 The Times UK recently noted the Russians’ escalation in spy wars against the US: 
 
			The article adds that Putin’s 
			intelligence apparatus views cyberspace as a powerful new weapon. 
			Among the evidence cited is Moscow’s recent cyber attack against the 
			Baltic state Estonia over its decision to relocate a Soviet-era 
			military monument.  
 
			In 1979, eleven highly placed Church 
			executives, including Mary Sue Hubbard (wife of founder L. Ron 
			Hubbard and second in command of the organization), pleaded guilty 
			or were convicted in federal court of obstructing justice, burglary 
			of government offices, and theft of documents and government 
			property.  
 
			Working down the DNI hall from Tom, 
			cyberspace regular Paul, the aeronautics and advanced propulsion 
			researcher, explains that, much like fictional X-Files agent Fox 
			Mulder, he believes because he wants to believe. Further, he hopes 
			to end his science colleagues’ discrimination against UFO believers. 
 Chris Iverson believes that Tom and Jim clearly have differing agendas, noting, 
 Iverson is not far off the mark. However, in a recent meeting with this writer, Jim explained that his internet presence emanates from a number of overlapping pursuits. 
 Jim then reminds that he is first and foremost a medical scientist. 
 Jim elaborates that “viral memes,” [see below] in which disturbed people seek validation in numbers on the web, is, or should be, a growing public health concern. That said, Jim nonetheless has a real interest in UFO’s, and seemingly with good reason. 
 Jim refuses to divulge his sources, but when pressed, he reiterates what they told him: look to the Pentagon and the private sector’s aerospace and weapons labs, etc. 
 US intelligence “doesn’t have labs capable of dealing with something this profound.” He also notes that over the years he has received thousands of UFO-related government documents in unmarked envelopes. Although some are obvious fakes, others, according to Jim, contain information that correlates with known, but still classified, scientific studies. 
 In an intriguing footnote, Jim adds, 
 Both Tom and Jim seem to share at least one rationale for their internet excursions: studying the frightening potential of “viral internet memes.” 
 Coined by evolutionary theorist Richard Dawkins in 1976 (The Selfish Gene), a meme is a unit of cultural information that evolves the way a gene propagates from one organism to another, and subject to all the analogous unintended mutations. In the view of many, computers and blogs could function as powerful meme “replicators.” 
 Richard Brodie, the creator of Microsoft Word, notes, 
 It doesn’t take much intuition to envision an enemy creating memes that can be used to destabilize a society, or a freelance predator utilizing them to cozy up to potential victims. 
 Caryn Anscomb writes online, 
 Rick Doty’s intent seems by far the most mysterious. 
 He has been vouched for by two former Directors of Central Intelligence (DCI) – as well as Jim – but has been excoriated by his former superior at AFOSI, Col. Richard L. Weaver, who recently noted that Doty had been “cashiered out of OSI” and that he has a well-known “lack of veracity.” It should also be noted that the two DCIs only knew Doty before they ran the Agency, when they all were deployed in Europe together. 
 
			The DCIs are only vouching for his previous work, not his 
			UFO allegations. 
 But amidst the book’s sci-fi-like claims of extraterrestrials in US custody and “reverse engineered” saucers - currently being exploited by one Gordon Novel with his Project Camelot - Doty also admits the following: 
 
			Nonetheless, much the same way that 
			reporters speculated about the fraudulent New Orleans DA Jim 
			Garrison forty years ago, there remains a group of UFO bloggers who 
			continue to opine about Doty: “He must have something.”  
 What then of the so-called “Top Secret UFO Working Group” in which Tom, Jim and others participated in the 1980s? Fortunately, four participants in those gatherings have communicated with this writer, and one in particular shared original paperwork from the meetings with Caryn, who graciously shared them with me. 
 Consequently, the following can be said of the Working Group story: 
 Jim notes that quite a few of the attendees turned out to be closet UFO buffs who only showed up to see who knew the truth about ETs (no one did). 
 
			He called it a waste 
			of time, leaving after just the first day. Tom recalls attending a 
			follow-up meeting at the Pentagon that was so silly that he made a 
			derisive remark before walking out in the middle of it. 
 
			This 
			is small consolation to earnest UFO researchers, but at least they 
			should no longer feel alone and marginalized as kooks completely at 
			odds with officialdom.  
 The opinion of Ryan Dube appears inarguable. 
 
			And if Jim ever decides to reveal his 
			sources, things could get very interesting. 
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