The Flying Saucers are Real by Donald Keyhoe (fun to read txt) đ
- Author: Donald Keyhoe
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âYou know what they said about the Mantell saucer,â I reminded him. âSome of the Godman Field people said it was at least three hundred feet in diameter.â
âIâve heard it was twice that,â said Pete.
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âYou know any Kentucky National Guard pilots?â I asked.
âOne or two,â said Pete. âBut they couldnât tell me anything. It was hushed up too fast.â
That evening I talked with the airline official, whom I knew well enough to call by his first name. I put it to him bluntly.
âDick, if youâre under orders not to talk, just tell me. Fm trying to find out whether Project âSaucerâ has muzzled airline pilots.â
âYou mean the ones whoâve sighted things? Perhaps, in a few cases. But most of the pilots know what happened to Captain Emil Smith, on United, and those Eastern pilots. They keep still so they wonât be laughed at. Also the airlines donât like their pilots to talk for publication.â
âIâve heard of several cases,â I said, âwhere Air Force Intelligence is supposed to have warned pilots to keep mum. Two of the reports come pretty straight.â
He made a gesture. âThat could be. Iâm not denying that airline pilotsâand that includes oursâsee these things all the time. Theyâve been sighted on the Seattle-Alaska route, and between Anchorage and Japan. I know of several saucers that pilots have seen between Honolulu and the mainland. Check with Pan-Americanâyouâll find their pilots have seen them, too.â
âWhat happens to those reports?â
âThey go to Operations,â said Dick. âOf course, if something really important happens, the pilot may radio the tower before he lands. Then the C.A.A. gets word to the Air Force, and they rush some Intelligence officers to quiz the pilots. if itâs not too hot, theyâd come from Wright Fieldâregular Project âSaucerâ teams. Otherwise, theyâd send the nearest Intelligence officers to take over temporarily.â
I asked him if he had ever been in on one of thee sessions. Dick said he hadnât.
âBut a couple of pilots talked to me later. They said these Air Force men seemed quite upset about it; they pounced on everything these boys said about the thingâs appearanceâhow it maneuvered and so on.â
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âWhat do your pilots think the saucers are?â
Dick gave me a slightly ironic grin. âWhy ask me? Captain Blake says youâve been getting it firsthand.â
âI wasnât pulling a fast one,â I protested. âWeâre not going to quote actual names or sources, unless people. O.K. it.â
âSure, I know that,â said Dick. âBut youâve got thc answer already. Some pilots say interplanetary, some say guided missiles. A fewâa very fewâstill think itâs all nonsense, because they havenât seen any.â
âWhat do you think?â
âI donât know the answer,â said Dick, âbut Iâm positive of one thing. Either the Air Force is sitting on a big secret, or theyâre badly scared because they donât know the answer.â
During the next week or so, I covered several northwest and mountain states. Although I was chiefly trying to find out about Project âSaucer,â I ran onto two sightings that were not on my list.
One of these had occurred in California, at Fairfield Suisan Air Force Base. A Seattle man who had been stationed there gave me the details. It was on the night of December 1918, with unusually high winds sweeping across the airfield. At times the gusts reached almost seventy miles an hour. Suddenly a weird ball of light flashed into view, at a height of a thousand feet. As the men on the base watched it, astonished, the mysterious light abruptly shot skyward. In an incredibly short time, it reached an altitude of twenty thousand feet and vanished.
âWas there any shape outlined behind the light?â I asked the Seattle man.
âNobody saw any,â he replied. âIt looked just like I saidâa ball of light, going like a streak.â
âDid it leave any smoke behind it?â
âYou mean like an engine, or a jet?â He shook his head. âNot a thing. And it didnât make a soundâeven when it shot up like that.â
âDid you hear any guesses about it, or reports later on?â
âSome major who didnât see it said it must have been
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a balloon. Anybody with brains could see that was screwy. No balloon ever went up that fastâand besides, the thing was going against the wind.â
The second incident occurred at Salmon Dam, Idaho, on August 13, 1947. When I heard the date, it sounded familiar. I checked my sightings file and saw it was the same day as the strange affair at Twin Falls, Idaho.
In the Twin Falls case, the disk was sighted by observers in a canyon. There was one interesting difference from the usual description. This disk was sky-blue, or else its gleaming surface somehow reflected the sky because of the angle of vision. Although it was not close to the treetops, the observers were amazed to see the trees whip violently when the disk raced overhead, as though the air was boiling from the objectâs swift passage.
At Salmon Dam, that same day, two miners heard an odd roaring sound and stared into the sky. Several miles away, two brightly gleaming disks were circling at high speed.
âIt was like two round mirrors whirling around the sky,â one of the men was later quoted as saying. âThey couldnât have been any ordinary planes; not round like that. And they were going too fast.â
During this part of my trip, I also was told that one saucer had fallen into a mountain lake. This came to me secondhand. The lone witness was said to have rushed over to his car to get his camera as the disk approached. When it plunged toward the lake, he was so startled that he failed to snap the picture until the moment it struck. This story sounded so flimsy that I didnât bother to list it.
Months later, a Washington newsman confirmed at least part of the lake story. When he first related it, I thought he had fallen for a gag.
âI heard that yarn,â I said. âDonât tell me you believe it?â
âI come from Idaho,â he told me. âAnd I happen to know the fellow who took the picture. Maybe it wasnât a disk, but something fell into that lake.â
âDid you see the picture?â
âYes, at the Pentagon.â At my surprised look, he added,
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âThat was long before they clamped down. I was talking to an Air Force officer about this lake thing, and he showed me the picture.â
âWhat did it look like?â
âYou couldnât tell much about it-just a big splash and a blur where something went under. Maybe a magnifying glass would bring it out, but I didnât get a chance to try it.â
It was early in 1950 when he told me this. I asked at the Pentagon if this picture was in the Wright Field files, and if so whether I could see it. My inquiries drew blank looks. No one remembered such a photograph. And even if it were in the Project âSaucerâ files, I couldnât see it.
This was more than two months after Project âSaucerâ had been officially closed and its secrets presumably all revealed.
The rest of my interviews during this 1949 trip helped to round out my picture of Project âSaucerâ operations.
Some witnesses seemed afraid to talk; a few flatly refused. I found no proof of official pressure, but I frequently had the feeling that strong hints had been dropped.
Though one or two witnesses showed resentment at investigatorsâ methods, most of them seemed more annoyed at the loss of time involved. One man had been checked first by the police, then by the sheriffâs office; an Air Force team had spent hours questioning him, returning the next day, and finally the F.B.I. had made a character check. What he told me about the Air Force interrogation confirmed one of Art Greenâs statements.
âOne Intelligence captain tried to tell me Iâd seen a weather balloon. I called up the airport and had them check on release schedules. They said next day it didnât fit any schedules around this area. Anyway, the wind wasnât right, because the thing I saw was cutting into the wind at a forty-five-degree angle.â
Other witnesses told me that investigators had suggested birds, meteors, reflections on clouds, shooting stars, and starshells as probable explanations of what they had seen. I learned of one pilot who had been
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startled by seeing a group of disks racing past his plane. Air Force investigators later suggested that he had flown through a flock of birds, or perhaps a cluster of balloons,
On the flight back to Washington, I reread all the information the Air Force had released on Project âSaucer.â Suddenly a familiar phrase caught my eye. I read over the paragraph again:
âPreliminary study of the more than 240 domestic and thirty foreign incidents by AstroPhysicist Hynek indicates that an over-all total of about 30% can probably be explained away as astronomical phenomena.â
Explained away
.
I went through the report line by line. On page 17 I found this:
âAvailable preliminary reports now indicate that a great number of sightings can be explained away as ordinary occurrences which have been misrepresented as a result of human errors.â
On page 22 I ran onto another use of the phrase:
âThe obvious explanation for most of the spherical-shaped objects reported, as already mentioned, is that they are meteorological or similar type balloons. This, however, does not explain reports that they travel at high speed or maneuver rapidly. But âSaucerâ men point out that the movement could be explained away as an optical illusion or actual acceleration of the balloon caused by a gas leak and later exaggerated by observers⊠. There are scores of possible explanations for the scores of different type sightings reported.â
Explained away ⊠It might not mean anything. It could be just an unfortunate choice of words. But suppose that the real mission of Project âSaucerâ was to cover up something. Or that its purpose was to investigate something serious, at the same time covering it up, step by step. The Project âSaucerâ teams, then, would check on reports and simultaneously try to divert attention from the truth, suggesting various answers to explain the sightings. Back at Wright Field, analysts and Intelligence officers would go over the general picture and try to work up plausible explanations, which, if necessary, could even be published.
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âExplaining awayâ would be one of the main purposes of Project personnel. These words would probably be used in discussions of ways and means; they would undoubtedly would be used in secret official papers. And since this published preliminary report had been made up from censored secret files, the use of those familiar words might have been overlooked, since, read casually, they would appear harmless. If the report had been thrown together hastily, the use of these telltale words could be easily understood, and so could the reportâs strange contradictions.
As an experiment, I fixed the idea firmly in mind that Project âSaucerâ was a cover-up unit. Then I went back once more and read the items quoted above. The effect was almost startling.
It was as though I were reading confidential suggestions for diverting attention and explaining away the sightings; suggestions made by Project members and probably circulated for comment.
âNow, wait a minute,â I said to myself. âYou may be dreaming up this whole thing.â
Trying to get back to a neutral viewpoint, I skimmed through the other details of Project operations, as described in the report.
The order creating Project âSaucerâ was signed on December 30, 1947. (The
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