Coppens 09
Coppens 09
Coppens 09
htm#Coppens note: because important web-sites are frequently "here today but gone tomorrow", the following was archived from http://www.philipcoppens.com/majestic12.html on 03/03/2008. This is NOT an attempt to divert readers from the aforementioned website. Indeed, the reader should only read this back-up copy if the updated original cannot be found at the original author's site.
Though Menzel was indeed a UFO skeptic, in 1949 he reported a UFO encounter to the U.S. Air Force. That he did was not known for more than 3 decades. But if he truly was privy to secret UFO information since 1947, Menzel would have no reason to log a UFO report with the Air Force, seeing he had above top-secret access to everything about UFOs via his MJ-12 membership. 4 other members of the list had reliably documented activities related to UFOs. Hillenkoetter was a member of NICAP and made public statements to Congress about the UFO reality. Twining and Vandenberg oversaw early U.S. Air Force UFO investigations like "Project Sign" and "Project Blue Book" and made some public statements on UFOs. Twining had previously written a famous secret memo on September 23, 1947 (the day before Truman allegedly set up MJ-12) stating that flying saucers were real and urged formal investigation by multiple government organizations such as the AEC, NACA, NEPA, Vannevar Bushs JRDB, and the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board. This led directly to the creation of "Project Sign" at the end of 1947. Finally, Berkner was on the 1953 CIA-organized Robertson Panel that debunked the UFO phenomenon. A major problem of the MJ-12 story is that the recipient of the papers (Shandera) was cooperating at the time with Bill Moore, a famous UFO investigator who had co-authored a pioneering book on Roswell with Charles Berlitz (one of the leading lights of the alternative field following the publication of The Bermuda Triangle). Ominously in 1989, Moore confessed that he had been involved with a government disinformation campaign directed against Paul Bennewitz in which Moore had fed his fellow UFO researcher falsified UFO material. The question that had to be asked was whether this material was disinformation as well either circulated with the help of Moore or against Moore? For never think that you may not be an agent in one campaignand a victim in another. The biggest problem was this: in February 1981, Moore had given Bennewitz a pre-Majestic 12 document known as the Project Aquarius Telex which was a communication from AFOSI (Air Force Office of Special Investigations) headquarters in Washington to Kirtland AFB office. One sentence stated The official U.S. Government policy and results of Project Aquarius is still classified and with restricted access to MJ Twelve. It was the first mention of MJ-12 made in the middle of a disinformation campaign, sent to the person who was the target of that campaign. (Research has since established that the National Security Agency did have a highly-classified 'Project Aquarius'. But that this was concerned with the tracking of sea-launched missiles and low-flying aircraft. However, the very fact that the creators of the MJ-12 documents knew of the existence of a Project Aquarius and wove it into their myth suggests once again that they are working within the intelligence field -- e.g. AFOSI.) Secondly, a 9-page presidential Executive Briefing stating This document was prepared by MJ-12 was shown to another UFO researcher -- Linda Moulton Howe -- who stated she saw this document on April 9, 1983 (18 months before Shandera found it in his letterbox). Howe identified the man that showed it to her as Richard Doty -- an AFOSI agent who had been cooperating with Moore in the disinformation campaign direct against Bennewitz. At this moment in time, the rat was not only smelling -- it began to stink. Furthermore when the Aquarius telex was shown to the Air Force, you would expect to hear a denial, claiming the telex was a forgery. And indeed: the Air Force did claim it was a forgery, based flaws in style and format. But then Moore admitted that he had in fact retyped the document and added a date stamp -- providing evidence that Moore had faked the document.
Later, he claimed that it was based on an original which -- as far as we are aware of -- no-one had or has ever seen. This is coincidentally the same ploy used by Ray Santilli when he admitted that the 1995 alien autopsy footage was a forgery, but only because the original footage had become useless for public broadcasting and hence why he and his associates had recreated the autopsy footage. In short, there was little to be said in favor of MJ-12 as a genuine "smoking gun". But then in 1985, during a visit to the National Archives by Moore and Shandera, they claimed that they found an unsigned carbon copy of a memo to Gen. Nathan Twining from President Eisenhowers special assistant Robert Cutler. Dated July 14, 1954, the memos subject was NSC/MJ-12 Special Studies Project. Of course, the confirmation would have been far more impressive if it had not come from Moore himself, even though in 1985 the world was unaware of his double life as a disinformation agent. Nevertheless, the stakes were high and if the documents were genuine, it was indeed the smoking gun UFOlogy had been searching for over the past 4 decades. Hence, the Fund For UFO Research (FUFOR) headed by U.S. Navy physicist Dr. Bruce Maccabee paid researcher Stanton Friedman $16,000 to investigate the initial MJ-12 documents who had also received MJ-12 material also anonymously and also on a roll of 35mm film. After Moores fall from grace and Shandera moving on to other projects, Friedman became UFOlogys resident MJ-12 expert. He and others quickly pointed the finger to Richard Doty -- the AFOSI agent with whom Moore had worked together on the Bennewitz case and the man who had shown Linda Moulton Howe the material. Friedman commented: Some have assumed that Doty provided the briefing document in the first place. Moore and Shandera have claimed that nobody has admitted sending the document, although the postmark on the brown envelope was Albuquerque. It is clear from their conversations with Doty that he knows about the document. But so far as I know, he has never admitted sending it. I doubt that he did. This conclusion shows the gullibility of UFO researchers. It looks like a fake, it was posted from the town where the man who was involved in a disinformation campaign worked, posted to someone who was involved in the same disinformation campaign at a time when the disinformation campaign was running, with a man in charge of the disinformation campaign claiming he knew of the document yet UFO researchers conclude it is not part of this disinformation campaign! Still, we can agree with Friedman that Whether the documents are valid or not, they must have been created by an insider. Indeed. And we wholeheartedly agree with Carl Sagans assessment: Where the MJ-12 documents are most vulnerable and suspect is exactly on the question of provenance the evidence miraculously dropped on a doorstep like something out of a fairy story, perhaps The Shoemaker and the Elves. Leaked or seeded in 1984, MJ-12 did not make an immediate impact on the UFO community. Everyone involved had kept the documents under wraps, afraid to go public with what could make someone an instant hero or totally discredit ones credibility if proven to be false. It seemed the UFO researchers needed some prodding in the back. Thus, in the spring of 1987, Moore and Shandera were told that the story of MJ-12 would come out in Europe. Leaking false stories in the foreign press is a standard intelligence disinformation technique and seeing Moore learned it from their AFOSI handlers And indeed on May 31, 1987 the London Observer ran a story, from where it was picked up by the news agency Reuters. The article was by Martin Bailey. But the man behind the story was musician and UFOlogist Timothy Good.
3
The process by which the documents emerged in Britain makes it clear that a concerted attempt was being made to disseminate this material to the public. After a slow reception in the U.S., in 1986 the best-known British UFO writer of the time -- Jenny Randles -- was working on a new book about the official UFO cover-up. Coincidentally, she was approached by an anonymous deep throat contact who offered her a collection of documents detailing the U.S. Governments clandestine activity relating to UFOs -- a "smoking gun" that could make her into the Woodward & Bernstein of the UFO community, the person who cracked the UFO conspiracy. However, like her American colleagues, Randles showed caution in accepting the material and the informant broke contact. When the MJ-12 documents were released a year later, Randles realized that the material that she had been offered was part of these papers. Within weeks of the abortive attempt to pass the documents to Randles, Timothy Good -- who was also working on a book about the UFO conspiracy (Above Top Secret, 1987) -- was offered another part of the MJ-12 material. Unlike Randles, Good accepted and this led to the article in The Observer in May 1987. The article then persuaded the American researchers to finally release their documents. Another modern myth had been created and the goal of a 3-year long disinformation campaign had finally bore fruit. Good went on to write a series of international bestsellers about contact between aliens and world governments, which raised the public profile of UFOs and extraterrestrials and opened the way for other mainstream books on the subject. The result has been a greater acceptance of the Contact scenario in Britain and the belief in extraterrestrial lifeforms. What is less known is that in later years, more MJ-12 documents were disseminated. In late 1992, 3 new MJ-12 documents were received by Timothy Cooper who would later end up writing a book with Richard Doty. In his discussion of these documents, even Friedman admits that these papers are reproductions -- retyped and slightly changed versions of old memos or letters. In short, forgeries in which a standard classified memo is altered to make it appear as if it originated from the fictional MJ12 group whereby references to aliens and UFOs have been inserted in the memo. In March 1994, Don Berliner -- a member of the board of FUFOR -- received another MJ-12 document. It was once again on a roll of film, this time mailed from Wisconsin. It purported to be the Majestic 12 Group Special Operations Manual: Extraterrestrial Entities and Technology, Recovery, and Disposal, dated April 1954. Indeed, FUFOR -- under the leadership of Maccabee -- was the UFO authority that had adopted the documents and through Friedman promoted them. A former U.S. Navy physicist, Dr. Bruce Maccabee is a leading and influential advocate of the Extraterrestrial Hypothesis and the Contact Scenario. Maccabee became prominent in the UFO field in the mid-1970s. And his rise was due to his claim that he had evidence that the CIA were withholding thousands of files relating to UFOs -- a claim that has greatly encouraged the belief in a cover-up and, by extension, that there is something to be covered up. While supporting many of the more sensational UFO cases, Maccabee has also used his influence to down-play evidence that supports a more conventional explanation. For example, when the declassified CIA documents relating to the use of UFOs as a cover for spyplane sightings were released in 1997, he argued vociferously and successfully that these were of no significance. Maccabee worked closely with William Moore (for example, on the alleged UFO landing near Kirtland AFB in 1980) using information supplied by Sergeant Richard Doty.
4
When Moore made his confession in 1989, he stated that 4 other very prominent American UFO researchers were also working for AFOSI but refused to name them. In 1993, fellow UFO researchers discovered that Maccabee maintained closer links with the CIA than he had publicly revealed. When challenged, he admitted that since 1979, he indeed had regularly briefed the CIA at their Langley, Virginia headquarters on developments in the UFO field but denied that his involvement went any deeper than that. What Maccabee failed to explain is why he kept this secret for 14 years. It is ironic that a leading member of an organization that is pledged to challenge official secrecy about UFOs -- and one of the main proponents of the idea that the CIA are withholding thousands of documents on the subject -- should have such a long-standing, secret relationship with that very agency. Maccabees reassurances failed to convince many including his close friend and fellow FUFOR board member, Richard Hall. But if anyone should be seen as Mister MJ-12, it is Richard Doty. When Doty approached Moore, the latter stated that his reason for cooperating with AFOSI was the promise that in return for passing that agency information about his fellow researchers and for disseminating disinformation to throw certain researchers off the track, he would be given privileged information about the U.S. Governments knowledge of UFOs. Somewhat naively, Moore accepted this story although the evidence is that the information that he was given, and on which he based his books, was the actual disinformation. It was Doty who told Moore that a live extraterrestrial had been captured after another crash in New Mexico, and had lived until 1952. Since then, a series of other extraterrestrials had allegedly been sent as ambassadors. Doty also spoke of a treaty between the U.S. Government and the aliens. It was Doty who showed Linda Moulton Howe the classified document in 1983. Like Shandera, Howe was contacted by Doty and Jerry Miller (a former researcher on Project Blue Book) in 1982 after she had made a TV documentary on cattle mutilations that argued in favor of a link with UFOs. Doty promised Howe film footage of the aliens which, needless to say, failed to materialize. Why did Doty approach documentary producers? Why not leading academics? Or politicians? As is well-known, documentary makers are out to get sensational angles in which whether or not the story is factual, is often of secondary importance. The MJ-12 papers were, of course, the right stuff to dangle in front of television producers noses. And Doty did precisely that. It seems, however, that none took the bait and instead -- 3 years later -- the British waters were tested where the search for a person who would go public with the documents was successful. In the 1980s, Doty had focused on television documentary makers in his efforts to spread the word of the MJ-12 documents. In the 1990s, UFOs went mainstream, largely with the help of Hollywood and The X-Files. The similar Dark Skies was a somewhat popular but not long-lived series about MJ-12, showing the success of MJ-12 within the context of Hollywood and television. But what is perhaps less known is that Doty resigned from the Air Force to become a consultant for The X Files and Spielbergs Taken, probably the most notorious fictional promotions of MJ-12 and a government conspiracy aimed to keep the alien truth hidden. Hollywood helped cement the idea of a government UFO cover-up and the existence of MJ-12, whereas within the UFO community, the MJ-12 documents remained extremely controversial. Remarkably, books that promoted the idea of a government UFO cover-up were able to win massive contracts, whereas dissenting voices, or more technical analyses such as Friedmans review of the MJ-12 papers, received a much smaller distribution. If there was a massive UFO cover-up in place, why did the government allow so many books arguing for this cover-up to be published? Why were they not debunked, for many contained errors, exaggerations and often plain lies.
5
In 2005, Robert Collins and Richard Doty wrote Exempt from Disclosure with additional material provided by Timothy Cooper. In the book, Doty claims to be part of the group within the U.S. Government that wanted the existence of aliens and aliens in the captivity of the U.S. Government to become known. Unfortunately, the book (though a "collection of writings" is perhaps a better word) reads more like disinformation. The spine of the book is of course MJ-12. Doty has woven together a string of various UFO reports into a theory that makes sense but only to a UFO believer. It involves crashes such as Socorro, Roswell, etc., each of whom has individually been shown to be exaggerated, erroneous, or false. As to the evidence they present for their claims? Contact us or my co-author. Indeed! Still, amongst the sadder highlights of the book is the inclusion of Carl Sagan as a member of MJ-12 (no doubt for making disparaging comments about the documents). There is this jewel. The Hebrew Bible was confirmed as the long sought after key to understanding extraterrestrial UFO sightings. And this information was shared with the Vatican as early as 1949. Or that JFK was briefed on MJ-12 too, but that he wanted disclosure. DCI Allen Dulles and CIAs Counter-Intelligence officer James Angleton were unwilling to cooperate as allegedly Kennedy was going to share UFO data with the Russians. In short, the book is -- willfully or coincidentally -- following the lines of well-practiced disinformation. State a fact then speculate then add on a lie. And it is either Doty and Collins style of writing. But this sequence is repeated ad infinitum if not ad nauseam throughout the book. One example is the statement that the atomic build-up was to prepare against an alien attack which is the conclusion of a previous sequence. Then they add: Of course, this decision coincided with the Soviet build up of atomic weapons to make it seem as if that the American build-up of atomic weapons at a time of Soviet escalation was actually coincidental, rather than the true cause. Amongst the evidence presented is Doty stating that his uncle Ed Doty was a fellow UFO investigator for the military, too. And that he and Richard spoke about UFOs and their knowledge of visiting aliens and more. You might think that Ed Doty would confirm this is true. But when asked -as written down in the book -- Ed Doty actually denies in the friendliest of ways. So even his uncle is not acknowledging what his nephew is saying! The book also includes classic statements that the aliens specifically like strawberry ice cream. But specifically that they communicated with the aliens in sign language as if sign language is a universally understood language rather than a purely human and rather recent fabricated mechanism to aide human communication. No alien would be expected to know or understand sign language upon their arrival on Earth. It has left the MJ-12 documents as one of the best-known and most important leaked documents. Documents which are widely believed by many (largely through Hollywood and Dotys efforts) as genuine and evidence of the U.S. Governments 50-year long successful cover-up of extraterrestrial life on this planet. In truth, it is a disinformation campaign, largely carried out by one man but no doubt not acting alone with someone pulling the strings further up the chain of command. The central question that
6
should really trouble the UFO community (if not the U.S. population as a whole) is who within the U.S. Government wants to portray that government as possessing aliens on ice? And if it is not a lone individual, then that group might be the real Majestic 12.
About the author (http://www.philipcoppens.com/bio.html ): Philip Coppens is an author and investigative journalist, ranging from the world of politics to ancient history and mystery. He is the editor-in-chief of the Dutch magazine Frontier and the online REAL NEWSpaper and a frequent contributor to Nexus magazine. Since 1995, he has lectured extensively across the World. He is the author of "The Stone Puzzle of Rosslyn Chapel", "The Canopus Revelation", "Land of the Gods", and "The New Pyramid Age". Philip Coppens (1971-) started his career as an investigative journalist with specialist subject the world of politics and intelligence agencies. As a result, material uncovered on the life of President John F. Kennedys alleged assassin -- Lee Harvey Oswald -- was used by a U.S. government enquiry in 1994. In 1995, he established Frontier magazine (formerly Frontier 2000) together with Herman Hegge (a newsstand magazine in the Netherlands and Belgium), creating a series of scoops such as confirmation of the existence of pyramids in China. These and other often groundbreaking articles have resulted in a series of articles appearing in various magazines (Fortean Times, Nexus, Hera, Mysterien, New Dawn, etc.) across the World as well as appearances on radio and television (Belgium's Kanaal 2, Voyager (RaiDue - Italy), Swiss International Radio, Dreamland Radio, The X-Zone (Talkstar Radio), Eye on the Future, etc.). Since 1995, Frontier Sciences Foundation has grown to incorporate -- amongst others -Frontier Bookshop and Frontier Publishing. In 1999, he was the principal researcher for Lynn Picknett and Clive Princes The Stargate Conspiracy which investigated current politicians apparent obsession with ancient Egypt. He is the author of The Stone Puzzle of Rosslyn Chapel (2002) on the enigmatic Scottish chapel and its relationship with freemasonry and the Knights Templar; The Canopus Revelation (2004) on the lore of the star Canopus in ancient cultures; Land of the Gods (2007) on the prehistory of Southern Scotland and the myth of King Arthur; and The New Pyramid Age (2007) detailing the most recent discoveries that have changed our understanding of pyramids. He has edited Saunires Model and the Secret of Rennes-le-Chteau (2001) by Andr Douzet, detailing the existence of a scale model of a landscape that might unveil the true secret of the enigmatic priest. Together, they have written The Secret Vault (2006) on the existence of an underground complex in Notre-Dame-de-Marceille, first discovered by Jos Bertaulet, a friend of Philip until Jos death in 1995. He is president of the English branch of the Socit Perillos and vice-president of the French Socit Perillos. In 2007, he started The Conspiracy Times -- home of the weekly "REAL NEWSpaper" of which he is editor-in-chief. The year also saw the start of Radio Rennessence -- an Internet-based radio and news station on the mystery of Rennes-le-Chteau -- available in both English and French -- where he is one of 3 hosts interviewing the likes of Patrice Chaplin, Steve Berry, Jean-Luc Chaumeil, and Kate Mosse. He is the author of 3 Dutch-language books. One was published in 1994 on the megalithic civilisation of Western Europe -- a synopsis of which was worked into a German 1996 publication (Sind wir allein? Ulrich Dopatka, editor). In 2004, he wrote De Da Vinci Code Ontcijferd -- a high-level
7
introduction to the mysteries incorporated in Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code. 2005 saw the publication of De Stenen Puzzel van Rosslyn Chapel --the Dutch edition of the Rosslyn book which also has an Italian edition (2005). He lives in North Berwick. website: http://www.philipcoppens.com Contact info: [email protected]
if on the Internet, Press <BACK> on your browser to return to the previous page (or go to www.stealthskater.com)
else if accessing these files from the CD in a MS-Word session, simply <CLOSE> this file's window-session; the previous window-session should still remain 'active'