Last
Saturday night, (January 18) NewsNation aired a segment that featured Jake
Barber who claimed that he had seen a “nonhuman” egg-shaped aircraft and had
been recruited for a top-secret government UFO crash/retrieval program. Unlike
David Grusch who talked of hearing of such things from credible but unnamed
sources, Barber said that he had participated in retrievals.
I
probably should point out here that neither of these “whistleblowers” was the
first to make claims of an involvement in some sort of government UFO crash
retrieval program. Among the first was Clifford Stone, a mid-level Army NCO,
who claimed to have been involved in several such operations and had even seen
the “alien autopsy file,” not long after he had joined the Army. I mention this
because Stones’ revelations were little more than invention that was not backed
up by any sort of independent evidence.
The late Cliff Stone, who claimed to be on the inside of a secret program involved with crash retrievals. |
According
to NewsNation, which had checked Barber’s records, he was a talented airplane
mechanic who was deployed on several presidential support missions. He had been
recruited into the Air Force’s Elite Combat Control unit suggesting he was a
helicopter pilot (though it is unclear if he had been a military pilot),
freefall parachutist, expert marksman and the recipient of a NATO top-secret
security clearance, known as Cosmic Top Secret and service in Bosnia, for which
he earned an unidentified valor award. They don’t reveal what award that might
be. Stones’ records provided no corroboration for his tales.
To
indicate the off-world nature of the retrievals, Barber said, “Just visually
looking at the object on the ground, you could tell that it was extraordinary
and anomalous. It was not human.” The craft was metallic, pearly white, and
about the size of an SUV.
Normally,
I am skeptical of these sorts of claims and I believe we all should be as well.
However, my own experiences in both Air Force and Army intelligence suggests
there might be some truth to it.
Because
of my status in the military, that is as an intelligence officer, and because
some knew of my interest in UFOs, I occasionally received nuggets of
information about UFO cases that haven’t been reported or that have had little
military interest. Bob Cornett and I might have been among the first to gain
access to the Project Blue Book records while they were still housed as Maxwell
Air Force Base and had not been redacted, taking out the names of the
witnesses.
Bob Cornett reviewing UFO records while on assignment from a magazine in the 1970s. |
One
of the first cases we wanted to see was from November 1953 that involved the
disappearance of an Air Force fighter. The Blue Book file was just two pages
and it was noted that it was an aircraft accident rather than a UFO report.
According to an Air Force colonel who was stationed at Kinross Air Force Base
said that in November 1953, a jet fighter was scrambled to intercept an unknown
target, meaning a UFO, over the Soo Locks on Lake Superior. The intercept was
watched on radar, the two blips, that is the UFO and the jet, merged but never
separated. That single blip flew off the scope and disappeared in the distance.
From the point of the merge, there had been no further communication with the
fighter. The jet was never found. The colonel told me that there had been two
schools of thought. One was that the UFO abducted the jet and the second was
that it had crashed into the lake.
That
is the sort of thing that I believe David Grusch heard when he talked about UFO
crashes. People who were at the right place at the right time to know something
more than the public provided that information. The colonel believed that the
jet had been abducted, or in his words, the UFO took it. I wasn’t there, but
the source had been. I knew him and he was credible but then where do you go
with such a tale. If it is highly classified, how do I, as a civilian now,
break through that barrier. Besides, attempts to learn more about it, other
than the mundane and unclassified, have failed. I’m pointed back to the
information and documentation that I already had.
In
a somewhat similar vein, Don Schmitt and I interviewed a general at the
Pentagon. Well, interviewed might be an over statement. He agreed to meet us in
a snack bar on one of the lowest levels. The tables were about waist high or
higher, so that people had a place to set a plate, but there were no stools. It
was a get in, get your food, eat it and get out place.
We
wanted to talk about the Roswell case. Don had apparently chatted with him at
some point, explaining what we were after which is information about Roswell.
By this time, we had talked to many witnesses to the crash and knew more about
it. We had rejected the balloon answer and had even interviewed three of those
who had been in General Ramey’s office on July 8, 1947.
We
were inside the Pentagon for about fifteen or twenty minutes. The general
didn’t look nervous. He just told us that there was an area in the Pentagon to
which he had no access. He said that our Roswell information was there. He
didn’t elaborate. Just hinted that highly classified information about Roswell was
in that area, and those entering had to have a specific request and their time
in that area was limited. I would later talk to another man who had said he had
seen the classified version Project Blue Book and described for me. He said he
saw some of the pictures of crashed UFOs and the recovery operations that had
been conducted. I don’t know if these classified Blue Book files were part of
that section of the Pentagon to which the general had referred.
I
have also talked with another general who said he knew the photographer who
photographed Roswell bodies, but didn’t provide very much information about
that. I need to point out that by the time the information got to me, it was
third-hand. The general hadn’t seen the pictures, he had just talked to one of
those men who took them.
I
suppose I should mention the retired MSGT who said that he’d provided the rawin
target for the Roswell explanation. What he had said to Cornett and me, was
that he had taken a balloon into an area to show the witnesses what they had
seen. This was before I had talked with Irving Newton, the weather officer who
identified the wreckage in Fort Worth. He said they didn’t have rawin targets
on the FWAAF, but did know where to get one if it was needed.
The
MSGT was careful about what he told us, but the implication was that he had
taken the balloon around the Roswell area. I have assumed that it was part it
was part of the 1947 cover up, but when Bob and I talked to him, neither of us
knew much about the Roswell case. I had read Frank Edward’s laughable
description of the Roswell case in his Flying Saucers – Serious Business,
but that didn’t contain much information other than it happened near Roswell
and the Air Force had explained it, in Edward’s words, as a pie tin hooked to a
kite.
All these are incidents, in which I was involved to some extent. Like those being talked about today, they suggest that these retrievals do happen. Sometimes the information is limited and we must deduce where it is going. Sometimes it is more explicit. What it does confirm is there was a cover up then and it remains in place now.