230 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
230 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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NUMBER 8 JUST CAUSE JUNE 1986
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PROJECT MOON DUST
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(In our last issue, we alluded to one of those many project code names
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which turn up from time to time in released government documents. Few
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of these are ever identified in more than brief detail. However,
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Project Moon Dust, as named in recently-released DIA files is an ex-
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ception. We have several documents which do seem to link UFOs with
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this colorfully named project. Our thanks to Robert Todd for providing
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us with the backround information on his several-years-old research
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into Moon Dust.)
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We have heard of stories, or more accurately -- rumors, of crashed UFOs
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and alien bodies recovered. Dozens of them are presently on file. Often in
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these accounts, military personnel respond quickly to a developing situation,
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enact a carefully-planned set of procedures (like photography, mapping,
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interviews, etc.); then, usually, the evidence is carted away to an unknown
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location for further study. That's what the rumors tell us.
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You must have thought at times, while digesting these rumors, that such
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step-by-step action must have been scripted; that there muct have been guide-
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lines to follow for everuthing to have been done so thoroughly and properly
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that not a stick of residue was left. You know how the military does everything
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by the book, as they tell us! If all this is so, then these procedures must be
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available for consultation when needed.
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It's possible that we now have been pointed in the right direction to
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verify whether or not these procedures are on the record.
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Salted through out some recent document releases, mainly from the Defense
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Intelligence Agency (DIA) and State Department, are references to "Project Moon
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Dust." The context of this codename to the rest of the published data was
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unclear, but the fact that it repeatedly turned up in documents dealing with
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UFOs told us that is was worth checking. A feeler was put into the March 1986
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issue of Just Cause, requesting that anyone who had knowledge of Project Moon
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Dust to please contact us.
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Not long afterwards, Robert Todd, a well-known CAUS researcher, informed
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us that he had researched Moon Dust in the late l970's. What he had found was
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quite revealing.
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As a result of inquiries by Todd about Moon Dust, and other matters, the
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Air Force released a letter on August 20, 1979. It was identified as "AFCIN-1E-
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O", dated 3 November 1961. The letter was partly deleted, but enough was left
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to open the door on Moon Dust: (emphasis added where necessary--ed.)
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Extract, page 1: "c. In addition to their staff duty assignments,
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intelligence team personnel have peacetime duty functions in support of such
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Air Force projects as Moondust, Bluefly, and UFO, and other AFCIN directed
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quick reaction projects which require intelligence team operational
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capabilitied (see Definitions)."
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Extract, page 2: "f. Blue Fly: Operation Blue Fly has been established
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to facilitate expeditious delivery to FTD of Moon Dust or other items of great
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technical intelligence interest. ACIN SOP for Blue Fly operations, February
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1960 provides for 1127th participation."
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"g. Moon Dust: As a specialized aspect of it's
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over-all material exploitation program, Headquarters USAF has established
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Project Moon Dust to locate, recover and deliver descended foreign space
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vehicles. ICGL #4, 25 April, l961, delineates collection responsibilities."
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Extract, page 3: "c. Peacetime employment of AFCIN intelligence team
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capability is provided for in UFO investigation (AFR 200-2) and in support of
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Air Force Systems Command (AFCS) Foreign Technology Division (FTD) Projects
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Moon Dust and Blue Fly. These three peacetime ptojects all involve a poten-
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tial for employment of qualified field intelligence personnel on a quick
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reaction basis to recover or perform field exploitation of unidentified flying
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objects, or known Soviet/Bloc aerospace vehicles, weapons sustems, and/or
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residual components of such equipment. The intelligence team capability to
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gain rapid access, regardless of location, to recover or perform field
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exploita- tion, to communicate and provide intelligence reports is the only
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such collec- tion capability available to AFCIN, and it is vitally necessary
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in view of current intelligence gaps concerning Soviet/Bloc technological
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capabilities."
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Let's pause a moment to absorb this.
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The letter immediately indicates that Moon Dust, "Blue Fly", and "UFO"
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are among A.F. Intelligence's quick reaction projects. It is probable here that
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"UFO" refers to Blue Book.
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We have pointed out in CLEAR INTENT (pg. 9) that often the prefix word
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"Blue" has been used in connection with high-altitude vehicles, and it appears
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in several fact, and rumor, UFO projects. Here we see it again in "Blue Fly,"
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which provided for transportation of Moon Dust material. And what did Moon
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Dust material include? Among other things, it included things acquired from
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the recovery and/or field exploitation of UFOs! Note how UFOs are set apart
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from Soviet/Bloc aerospace vehicles. Since the Soviets were the only other
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real space power in the world at the time, besides the U.S., what could have
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been meant by setting off UFOs as a separate subject of investigation? If they
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were British, or another nation's space vehicle, why not say this, as it was
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said for the Soviets?
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Note that Moon Dust and "other items of great technical intelligence
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interest" were sent to the Foreign Technology Division at Wright-Patterson
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AFB in Ohio, under Project Blue Fly. FTD was the parent group for Project
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Blue Book. Coincidence?
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Originally, Blue Book's investigative functions were partly aided by
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personnel of the 4602nd Air Intelligence Service Squadron (AISS). Part of it's
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mission during WW2, and later in peacetime, was to "exploit downed people,
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paper and hardware" for intelligence information. The 4602nd's operations were
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trans- ferred to AFCIN in July 1957, which then assigned the 1006th AISS most
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of the 4602nd's operations. The 1006th was re-designated the 1127th Field
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Activities Group in 1960. These units all performed UFO investigations for
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Blue Book, but were trained for and capable of additional activities in the
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event that one of these UFOs had crashed somewhere.
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We discuss the operations of a possible "quick response unit" in CLEAR
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INTENT, pg 111. Our point in that discussion was that such a unit would come
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under the highest security classification. Any admission that a UFO phenomenon
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was real and unexplainable would not be in the government's best interest to
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state, considering the still-existent debunking policy. Certainly here we see
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UFO investigation linked to the highest levels of the U.S. Air Force.
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When did Moon Dust begin? We aren't sure but it likely dates from the
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beginnings of Blue Book at least, i.e. the early 1950s. It's entirely possible
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that the 1952 crashed disc incident reported in letters by Rear Admiral
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Herbert Knowles (see Just Cause, March 1986) could have been investigated
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under Moon Dust, if it were called that then. It certainly fits the criteria
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for attention, as described in the Air Force's 1961 letter.
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Compelling evidence for the Moon Dust/ crash retrieval link and its
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early origins appears in Donald Keyhoe's 1955 book, THE FLYING SAUCER CONSPIR-
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ACY. Note these extracts:
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[Pages 214-15]
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Two days after this Lou Corbin called me to report another develop-
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ment.
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"Do you know anything about a `crashed-object' program?" he asked me.
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"No. Whose project is it?"
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"It's an Air Force deal, unless somebody's trying to trick me. You've
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heard of the 4602nd Air Intelligence Service Squadron, of course?"
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"Yes. It's a hush-hush unit. They have investigators in all Air
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Defense Squadrons."
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"Well, I've been contacted by one of them. First I thought it might
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be some kind of hoax. But I've double-checked, He actually is with the
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4602nd."
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"Sounds queer, Lou. They're not supposed to talk to anyone outside of
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intelligence."
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"I know. But he may be under special orders. Anyway, he's against the
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secrecy policy. He told me the 4602nd has a special program called the
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`investigation of unidentified crashed objects.'"
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"If it's true, that IS big." I said. "It could mean theyve actually
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got their hands on some flying saucers."
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"He wouldn't admit that," said Corbin. "But I got the impression they'
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they'd recovered some kind of `objects'--probably something dropped from
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a saucer."
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At 2:00 P.M. on November 30 [1954?] a mysterious bright flash in the
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sky was reported simultaneously in Atlanta, Newman, and Columbus,
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Georgia; in Sylacauga and Birmingham, Alabama; and as far away as
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Greenville, Mississippi. This brilliant light was immediately followed
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by a series of strange explosions, apparently centered high in the sky
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above Sylacauga.
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Moments later a black object, six inches in diameter, crashed into
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the home of Mrs. Hewlett Hodges.
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Smashing a three-foot-wide hole in the roof, the shining black object
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tore through the living-room ceiling. Striking the radio, it bounced
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off and gashed Mrs. Hodges' arm.
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Meanwhile, the mysterious explosions had caused a hurried Air Defense
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alert. A three-state search for fallen objects was immediately begun by
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squadrons of Air Force planes.
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When word of the "Sylacauga object" reached the Air Force, Intelli-
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gence officers flew to the scene from Maxwell Air Force Base at Mont-
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gomery . Explaining that "the Air Force is required to examine such
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strange objects," they whisked it away to Maxwell Field, from which it
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was flown immediately to ATIC.
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An hour or two later the object was labeled a meteorite.
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As soon as this appeared in the papers, I received a call from Lou
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Corbin. "It's plain that this is part of the Air Force `unidentified
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crashed-objects' investigation. They must believe the thing is linked
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with the saucers."
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"It doesn't look like a coincidence," I said, "that this object fell
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fell just after those explosions. If it had been a meteor exploding, it
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wouldn't have made such a bright flash in the daytime."
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"In the first news story," Corbin told me, "it was called an uniden-
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tified flying ovject. At least that's the way the Maxwell Field
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officers explained why they had started the search."
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"This reminds me of that East New Haven signboard case," I commented.
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"On that occasion the object wasn't recovered. Judging from the size of
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the hole it made, however, it was probably about the same size."
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Later FOIA requests have indicated that the DIA is currently the res-
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ponsible agency for Moon Dust documentation. However, access is not being
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allowed because such access would reveal intelligence methods and are thus
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exempt from FOIA.
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NASA has been involved as wall, as this extract from a Jan. 13, 1969,
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memo indicates:
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"The undersigned {Richard M. Schulherr} visited the Foreign Technology
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Division of the Air Force Systems Command, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio,
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9 Jan. 1969. The purpose of this trip was to identify specific items of
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space debris which had been forwarded to NASA and to re-establish per-
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sonal liason with newly-assigned FTD Moondust personnel."
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The Air Force's Moon Dust activity, as well as Blue Fly, is, in their
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words "no longer active." Perhaps the projects no longer go by these names but
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surely the procedures have not become obsolete. There is still a need to react
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to unknown vehicles landing on our soil. At the very least, national defense is
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served by such reaction.
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One last thought. Could an MJ12-type committee have begun Moon Dust as
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a reaction to early UFO events like Roswell? It would be of interest to see
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exactly when Moon Dust began its operations.
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The Editor
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