by Matthew Ehret, Activist Post:
“If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is because everything would be what it isn’t. And contrary-wise; what it is it wouldn’t be, and what it wouldn’t be, it would. You see?” – Alice, Through the Looking Glass
Click here for part one of this series and click here to watch episode 1-3 of the ‘Hidden Hand Behind UFOs’.
At this point in the story, a policy of contradictory messaging which remains consistent over the ensuing 70 years takes over all public relations and government narratives on UFOs.
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
While Project Grudge, and Project Sign officially denied the existence of alien encounters, even threatening a $10,000 fine on military personnel reporting their sightings to the press… another simultaneous policy promoting ET narratives began to occur.
In an April 1952 edition of Henry Luce’s Life Magazine titled ‘Have We Visitors from Space’? an official message from the highest offices of the US Air Force was delivered to a credulous American audience saying:
1. Disks, cylinders and similar objects of geometrical form, luminous quality and solid nature for several years have been, and may be now, actually present in the atmosphere of the earth.
2. Globes of green fire also, of a brightness more intense than the full moon’s, have frequently passed through the skies.
3. These objects cannot be explained by present science as natural phenomena — but solely as artificial devices, created and operated by a high intelligence.
4. Finally, no power plant known or projected on earth could account for the performance of these devices.”
One must wonder how the Air Force’s policy of publicizing “artificial devices, operated by a high intelligence… not made from this earth” existed on the one hand while fanatically suppressing all discussion of UFOs on the other hand? Could it be that these apparently contradictory policies were simply two sides of one psychological warfare experiment on the minds of Americans?
In 1952, CIA director Walter Bedell Smith wrote to the director of the Psychology Strategy Board of the CIA saying:
“I am today transmitting to the National Security Council a proposal in which it is concluded that the problems associated with unidentified flying objects appear to have implications for psychological warfare as well as for intelligence and operations. I suggest that we discuss at an early board meeting the possible offensive and defensive utilization of these phenomena for psychological warfare purposes.”
The population and un-vetted military officials were clearly seeing something in the skies of America and Britain, but instead of shutting down the conversation as had been done under Project Sign or Project Grudge, a new tool was created to nurture a new folklore made for the scientific age with profound geopolitical consequences. The value for psychological warfare was immense.
It was here that the CIA entered the scene with the launch of the ‘Robertson Panel’ in order to begin to influence the narrative on flying saucer phenomena.
The Robertson Panel was created under the chairmanship of a quantum mechanist named Howard P Robertson. During the war Robertson was technical consultant to the Secretary of War, the OSRD Liaison Officer in London, and the Chief of the Scientific Intelligence Advisory Section at Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force. After the war, he became a classified CIA employee at the Weapons System Evaluation Group in the Office of the Secretary of Defense and scientific advisor in 1954 and 1955 to the NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR).