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UFOs and the Media
What Air Force Secrecy?
From
the TRUE Report On Flying Saucers, 1967
by Lloyd Mallan
An expert in the field of astronomy, satellites and missles, Mr. Mallan is the
author of 18 books, including Space Science, Men, Rockets and Space Rats, Man
Into Space, Amateur Astronomy Handbook, and Peace Is a Three-Edged Sword. In
preparation are Evolution of the Space Suit (John Day) and Exploring Space With
Astronomy (Fawcett).
For a number of years
now, the American public has been led to believe that the U.S. Air Force is
knee-deep in a conspiracy to hide from them the real facts behind the nature of
Unidentified Flying Objects, or UFO's. At one time, long ago, I believed this
myself. The reason why the Air Force was selected as a whipping boy by
"Ufologists," as they call themselves, and by certain writers on the subject is
simple: the only one-hundred-percent, full-time official project in the world to
investigate UFO's is managed by the U.S. Air Force. In this country, there is a
strong tendency to criticize anything official. And that tendency becomes even
stronger when an official agency is assigned by the Government to deal with a
controversial subject.
Today, it would be hard to find
a subject more controversial than the UFO's. The reason, again, is that most of
those authors who write about the mysterious UFO's are neither wholly scientific
nor objective in their approach to the subject. They may be entirely sincere,
but they want to believe that "flying saucers" are visiting the Earth from
another stellar system, manned by crewman of a super race. So more than not,
they mix rumor and imagination with fact in order to make their point. In every
case, their point is presented as fact.
One fact that I know with
certainty is false, is that the U.S. Air Force engages in a conspiracy to hide
the truth about UFO's from the American public. Proof of my certainty is the
preponderance of photographs in this book that came directly from the files of
Project Blue Book, the present designation for the official UFO-investigation
organization of the Air Force.
When I was asked to gather photos for illustrations of this book, I got in touch
with the Pentagon liaison officer of Project Blue Book. He sent a message down
to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, where Blue Book
Headquarters are located. I was given permission to go through the files there.
There was only one restriction: that I manage my schedule so that I would not
arrive during a period when Blue Book personnel would be over-weighted with
other visitors or extra work. They wanted to be free enough to help me as much
as possible.
And help me they did, as the
Project Blue Book - USAF credit lines to many of the photos in this book will
testify. As I stood by their big automated filing system, they pressed the
buttons and stopped the file-shelves at any case that I desired to see. They let
me make my own choice of photos. They even made Xerox copies of written
technical-evaluation reports so that I would have caption information for the
photos. They were hiding nothing.
The current widespread belief
among the American public that the Air Force is hiding everything stems mainly
from the writings of three men who have published best-sellers on this theme.
Not one of those men has ever visited Project Blue Book. Two of them have not
even requested permission to make such a visit. One of them made a request, but
wrote it in such an insulting way and attached so many strings to it (all
preposterous) that it was turned down at the Pentagon - before it ever got to
Blue Book Headquarters. Yet one of these writers - one, by the way, who had not
even bothered to request permission to visit Blue Book - had the guts to inform
a friend of mine that I was being "taken in" by the Air Force. "They'll never
show Mallan the real files," he said, "the ones they have hidden down in the
cellar."
And this is another myth that
has been built from the written word and the published imaginings of UFO authors
who are less than responsible. There is no cellar under the offices of Project
Blue Book - and if there's a back room somewhere in the building with
super-secret files, I couldn't find it. Nor was anyone guarding my movements to
prevent me from going wherever I wanted.
The personnel of Project Blue Book would simply love to see a UFO land at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and watch its crew announce themselves. "That
would be one of the greatest moments in history!" the Blue Book Project Chief
told me. "It would save our Government untold billions of dollars in
research-and-development funds."
Besides, it would save the Blue
Book people a lot of headaches: not a day passes without some harassment or
another in the form of insulting letters from the public, interrogations by the
press (including radio and TV newsmen) and frontal attacks by authors such as
the ones I have anonymously mentioned. The staff at Blue Book hardly have time
to accomplish their routine work because of outside pressures. The phone usually
starts ringing from the moment they arrive at the office - at 7:30 in the
morning. The Chief of the project often gets routed out of bed in the middle of
the night because of a new UFO sighting or an arrogantly suspicious newsman.
The whole thing is really
ludicrous. Project Blue Book people are all courteous and friendly, just
overworked individuals trying to do a thankless job. But I, for one, would like
to thank them publicly for their dedication and cooperation. This book has been
helped immeasurably by Lt. Colonel George Freeman, who is Pentagon liaison
officer with Project Blue Book; Major Hector Quintanilla, Jr., Chief of the
project; 1st Lieutenant William Marley, his Deputy; Staff Sergeant Harold Jones
and Airman George Reyes, staff members; Mrs. Marilyn Stancombe, Girl Friday and
Jill of all tasks; and Mrs. Virgina Phelps, secretary.
A final, but not
inconsiderable, point: to this day, no clearly indisputable photo of a bonafide
UFO has ever been made or released by any source, official or unofficial. Most
photos that pass (and are publicized) as genuine are the result of the unwitting
photographing of natural phenomena, camera-lens flares, and distortions and
film-processing defects or outright hoaxes. A few UFO photos are truly
mystifying and defy precise scientific analysis. But for this same reason,
because of their vagueness, they contribute nothing to a knowledge of what UFO's
really are. The photos here were culled from 11,000 file-cases, starting with
the year 1947 - a span of 20 years.

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