208 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
208 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
|
The following is taken from:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE COMMUNION LETTER Autumn Issue, 1989; Volume 1, No. 3 / p.1,2,3 & 13
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HOW DISINFORMATION EXPERTS SPREAD FEAR ABOUT UFOS by Anne Strieber
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*******************************************************************************
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bill Moore, UFO investigator and author, has learned a great deal about the
|
|||
|
government coverup of UFO information over the years. A large part of this
|
|||
|
coverup has to do with what intelligence agencies, such as the Cia, refer to as
|
|||
|
DISINFORMATION.
|
|||
|
In his speech to the MUFON convention in LAs Vegas on July 1, 1989, Mr.
|
|||
|
Moore had this to say about the subject: "Disinformation is a strange and bi-
|
|||
|
zarre game. Those who play it are completely aware that an operation's success
|
|||
|
is dependent upon dropping false information upon a target or `mark', in such a
|
|||
|
way that the person will accept it as truth and will repeat, and even defend it
|
|||
|
to others as if it were true. One of the key factors in any successful disin-
|
|||
|
formation scheme is that it must contain some elements of truth in order to be
|
|||
|
credible. Once the information is believed, the work of counterintelligence is
|
|||
|
complete. They can simply withdraw in the confidence that the dirty work of
|
|||
|
spreading their poisonous seeds will be done by others."
|
|||
|
Some of the most frightening and bizarre stories about UFOs and visitors
|
|||
|
may well be lies that originated with disinformation experts and are innocently
|
|||
|
spread by gullible people who do not bother to check facts, but who love a
|
|||
|
good story. And some of the people telling these tales may not be so innocent-
|
|||
|
they may be disinformation experts themselves.
|
|||
|
While there is no final proof that the U.S. government has sponsored disin-
|
|||
|
formation programs concerning UFOs, the circumstantial evidence is growing
|
|||
|
stronger every day. It is a matter of record that at least one individual
|
|||
|
spread disinformation in this field while working as a government employee in
|
|||
|
an intelligence-related job, and the revelations of Bill Moore and others in-
|
|||
|
dicate that false stories have been planted among UFO researchers for years.
|
|||
|
Certainly something strange happened outside of Roswell, New Mexico in July
|
|||
|
of 1947, when Air Force officials retrieved some debris with properties that
|
|||
|
did not fit any known technology. According to Colonel Jesse Marcel, who gave
|
|||
|
a number of videotaped interviews before he died, and who was responsible for
|
|||
|
the recovery of this debris, the fact of its extreme strangeness was covered up
|
|||
|
by the Air Force.
|
|||
|
This coverup took place when the cold war was just starting and America was
|
|||
|
entering a period of near-paranoia over the issue of Soviet expansionism.
|
|||
|
America's obsession with secrecy began when President Truman created the Central
|
|||
|
Intelligence Agency in 1947 in order to obtain information about the
|
|||
|
threats being made by the Communists after the second world war. Ever since
|
|||
|
then, Americans have been told less and less about what is really going on in
|
|||
|
our government. As Norman Thomas, who unsuccessfully ran for President many
|
|||
|
times,said, `Where the secrets start, the republic stops.' We may live in a
|
|||
|
democracy, but we cannot have an effect on policy which we know nothing about.
|
|||
|
When Bill Moore became a director of the now dormant APRO (Aerial Phenome-
|
|||
|
na Research Organization) in 1979, he became acquainted with the work being
|
|||
|
done by Paul Benewitz and Dr. Leo Sprinkle with a young woman who remembered
|
|||
|
being abducted and witnessing cattle mutilations. Bennewitz had become con-
|
|||
|
vinced that aliens had implanted some sort of communication device in the wom-
|
|||
|
an's head, and that they were using this device to control her actions.
|
|||
|
Since Paul Bennewitz was a physicist, he had a certain amount of electron-
|
|||
|
ics equipment at his disposal, and he set out to determine whether he could de-
|
|||
|
tect the electromagnetic signals he believed aliens must be using to exercise
|
|||
|
control over their alleged victims, and to try to devise a way to shield vic-
|
|||
|
tims from the control of these signals. He told APRO in late '79 that he be-
|
|||
|
lieved he had succeeded in detecting low frequency signals from UFOs and had
|
|||
|
begun to make calculations about the sort of electronic and propulsion technol-
|
|||
|
ogy employed by the aliens. He also began to take pictures of strange lights
|
|||
|
maneuvering in the vicinity of the Manzano Nuclear Weapons Storage Facility,
|
|||
|
which is located to the east of Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque. Ben-
|
|||
|
newitz had a perfect view of the weapons base from his home in the Four Hills
|
|||
|
section of the city.
|
|||
|
Bill Moore says, "In early September, 1980, I was approached by a well-
|
|||
|
placed individual within the intelligence community who claimed to be directly
|
|||
|
connected to a high-level project dealing with UFOs. This individual told me
|
|||
|
that he spoke for a small group of similar indiivuals who were uncomfortable
|
|||
|
with the government's continuing cover-up of the truth and indicated that he
|
|||
|
and his group would like to help me with my research into the subject in the
|
|||
|
hope and expectation that I might be able to help them find a way to change
|
|||
|
the prevailing policy and get the facts to the public without breaking any
|
|||
|
laws in the process. The man who acted as liason between this group and myself
|
|||
|
was an Air Force Office of Special Investigations agent named Richard Doty. I
|
|||
|
knew I was being recruited, but at that point I had no idea for what."
|
|||
|
It soon became apparent to Bill that he was expected to supply information
|
|||
|
to this individual about the activities of Paul Bennewitz and APRO in exchange
|
|||
|
for being given `sensitive' (or presumably classified) information on UFOs.
|
|||
|
Bill realized that, whatever it was Bennewitz was involved with, he was the
|
|||
|
subject of considerable interest on the part of not one but several government
|
|||
|
agencies, and that they were actively trying to defuse him by pumping as much
|
|||
|
disinformation through him as he could possibly absorb. Bill decided to play
|
|||
|
along with these government agents so he could learn more about the disinfor-
|
|||
|
mation process by witnessing it firsthand.
|
|||
|
Bennewitz, for his part, continued to make what seemed to be increasingly
|
|||
|
bizarre claims, most of which gave every appearance of having been influenced
|
|||
|
by a heavy blanket of disinformation mixed with a small, but significant,
|
|||
|
amount of truth. The problem was always one of keeping a level head and trying
|
|||
|
to sort the fact from fantasy - something which Paul Bennewitz was having a
|
|||
|
hard time doing.
|
|||
|
"By 1981", according to Bill, "Paul was gathering data from a variety of
|
|||
|
sources and amalgamating it with information being fed to him by a number of
|
|||
|
government people in whom, for some reason, he seemed to have an implicit and
|
|||
|
abiding faith. The story that emerged from this melange of fact, fiction, fan-
|
|||
|
tasy, heresay, hard data and government disinformation was absolutley incred-
|
|||
|
ible! Yet somehow, Paul believed in it and set out on a one-man crusade to
|
|||
|
tell the world that malevolent aliens from space were in league with our gov-
|
|||
|
ernment to take over the planet. What had begun in 1979 as an effort to learn
|
|||
|
whether the behavior of a woman who claimed she had been abducted by UFO aliens
|
|||
|
was being influenced by some sort of radio remote control had, in the space of
|
|||
|
less than three years, blossomed into a tale which rivaled the wildest science
|
|||
|
fiction scenario anyone could possibly imagine."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bennewitz continued with his experiemnts regarding the radio signals he was
|
|||
|
receiving and the film footage he was getting of unusual lights. Both of these
|
|||
|
phenomena seemed to be largely connected to activities within the Kirtland AFB
|
|||
|
Sandia National Labs complex just south of the city of Albuquerque. Bill feels
|
|||
|
that Bennewitz definitely was receiving some sort of low frequency electromag-
|
|||
|
netic signal on his equipment, and is equally certain that his photos and films
|
|||
|
depicted unusual lights, most of which were filmed while hoovering or maneuver-
|
|||
|
ing over the Kirtland/Sandia complex. The real question is whether this evi-
|
|||
|
dence was sufficient to conclude that either of these phenomena was directly
|
|||
|
related to UFO activity, or whether, in fact, the strange things he was witnes-
|
|||
|
sing had to do with some classified government research project going on near-
|
|||
|
by. Either reason would be a good explanation for the government's counterin-
|
|||
|
telligence activities in this case.
|
|||
|
Bill reports that government survelliance of Paul's activities, some of
|
|||
|
which Paul was astute enough to detect and some of which Bill learned about
|
|||
|
but Paul seemed unaware of, included wire taps and even break-ins. "Paul took
|
|||
|
these activities as proof positive that he was onto something big. Unfortu-
|
|||
|
nately, he seemed largely unaware that the same people who would go to such
|
|||
|
lengths to spy on him also had the capabilities to mount an effective disinfor-
|
|||
|
mation campaign."
|
|||
|
In any case, by mid-1982, Paul's story contained virtually all of the ele-
|
|||
|
ments found in the current crop of rumors being circulated around the UFO com-
|
|||
|
munity by people such as John Lear. There were two groups of aliens, one mal-
|
|||
|
evolent, one more friendly. The malevolent ones, which he referred to as the
|
|||
|
`greys', were really in control, and they were the ones responsible for the
|
|||
|
cattle mutilations, for human abductions and the implanting of sinister control
|
|||
|
devices in humans, for having first made and then broken a secret treaty with
|
|||
|
the U.S. government, for maintaining a secret underground base in Dulce, New
|
|||
|
Mexico, and for having supplied the U.S. government with alien space hardware
|
|||
|
and weapons which ultimately proved defective or which were caused to crash,
|
|||
|
thus leaving human civilization virtually defenseless against invasion.
|
|||
|
Bill Moore says, "I know that this whole body of information if false, be-
|
|||
|
cause I was in a position to observe much of the disinformation process as it
|
|||
|
unfolded. And I can tell you it was effective, because I watched Paul become
|
|||
|
systematically more paranoid and more emotionally unstable as he tried to as-
|
|||
|
similate what was happening to him. He had guns and knives all over his house,
|
|||
|
had installed extra locks on his doors, and he swore that `they' (meaning the
|
|||
|
aliens) were coming through his walls at night and injecting him with hideous
|
|||
|
chemicals which would knock him out for long periods of time. He began to suf-
|
|||
|
fer increasing bouts of insomnia. I knew at that time that he was not far from
|
|||
|
an inevitable nervous collapse. His health had deteriorated, he had lost con-
|
|||
|
siderable weight, his hands shook as if from palsy, and he looked terrible. I
|
|||
|
tried to counsel him to drop the entire UFO thing before his health was com-
|
|||
|
pletely destroyed. Not long afterward I heard he had been hospitalized and was
|
|||
|
under psychiatric care."
|
|||
|
The disinformation campaign was also effective because it insured that no
|
|||
|
one in the mainstream media or scientific or scientific community would pay
|
|||
|
any attention to the outlandish claims that Paul Bennewitz made. Thus the ele-
|
|||
|
ments of truth that were conatained in his experiments became lost to the pub-
|
|||
|
lic forever.
|
|||
|
Were UFOs ever actually involved with all of this? Bills says we may never
|
|||
|
really know. Perhaps Bennewitz had merely stumbled upon signals generated from
|
|||
|
some sophisticated, high-level government project whose security people hit
|
|||
|
upon UFO-related disinformation as the ultimate cover. Or perhaps he discovered
|
|||
|
a real government UFO project which elected to disinform him to protect what
|
|||
|
they were really doing. The one thing that Bill does know from first-hand ex-
|
|||
|
perience is that there was a tremendous amount of government disinformation
|
|||
|
involved, and that a large proportion of what we are hearing today about mal-
|
|||
|
evolent aliens, underground bases and secret treaties with the U.S. government
|
|||
|
has its roots firmaly planted in the Bennewitz affair. "The current crop of
|
|||
|
disinformation is really nothing new; it's just that a different crop of people
|
|||
|
are spreading it this time around," says Moore.
|
|||
|
From this experience, and from his other research, Bill has come to the
|
|||
|
conclusion that the U.S. government counterintelligence people have conducted
|
|||
|
an on-again, off-again campaign of deception and disinformation against the
|
|||
|
American public about the UFO phenomenon for more than 40 years. He feels that
|
|||
|
the people who have been responsible for the operations are highly placed indi-
|
|||
|
viduals within the intelligence community. There are several possible explana-
|
|||
|
tions for this situation. One, the disinformation could be a security cover for
|
|||
|
a real UFO project which exists at a very high level and is known only to an e-
|
|||
|
lite few. Two, it could be a security process designed to divert attention away
|
|||
|
from real, but non-UFO related, high tech research and development projects.
|
|||
|
Three, it may be a manipulation by UFO aliens themselves as part of a longterm
|
|||
|
plan to gradually make human society aware of their presence here. Bill's po-
|
|||
|
sition is that the truth is best described in terms of a combination of all of
|
|||
|
the above.
|
|||
|
It's a fact that somebody powerful is spreading disinformation about UFOs.
|
|||
|
It would be foolish to believe any story on the basis of too little evidence.
|
|||
|
On the other hand, those people who have experienced the visitors first-hand
|
|||
|
need not allow themselves to be convinced that their experiences were mere hal-
|
|||
|
lucinations.
|
|||
|
People who have encountered the visitors know the very real fear that comes
|
|||
|
from confronting the unknown. There is no reason why they should have to en-
|
|||
|
dure the additional terror of being inundated by sensationalized rumors about
|
|||
|
aliens that began ten years ago with a government disinformation campaign a-
|
|||
|
aginst one individual.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
D A R K S I D E BBS / UFO RESEARCH NETWORK / ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 19744
|
|||
|
St. Louis, Mo. 63144
|
|||
|
314-862-2009
|
|||
|
BBS: 314-298-7486
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|