The Dawning of Project Aquarius
A Working Group
Surveillance Center Box Nine. Cheyenne Mountain. NORAD.
According to Howard Blum's book Out There, Surveillance Center Box Nine tracks all known objects in space. An encounter with a UFO, tracked at NORAD'S Cheyenne Mountain facility, led to the creation of the Defense Intelligence Agency's UFO Working Group. A winter's day in the mid 1980s, six orbital analysts, dubbed "knob turners", tracked a UFO performing aerial stunts whose only purpose seemed to be to get noticed by ground trackers, or else represented a space alien top gun pilot showing off.
"He's joyriding", is how one person present that day summed up its antics.
The alert began when the "Fence" was tripped in Lake Kickapoo, TX. The Fence, an energy field, is the US Naval Space Surveillance System, which extends 3 000 miles across the southern US and almost 15,000 miles into space.
This intruder was recorded performing a "Double helix-like pattern of loops and backtracks, then... crash dives followed by sudden climbs at astonishing speeds. The object was going through a series of complex maneuvers and rapid changes of inclination at speeds and altitudes that were impossible." Blum.
After a time, the object disappeared from their screens as mysteriously as it appeared.
NORAD ordered a Teal Amber search, which uses computer linked telescopes, but the object was not seen again.
Two theories gained prominence inside NORAD:
1. A "ferret", a solid-fuel, motor-powered homing vehicle jettisoned from a Soviet Cosmos satellite, or
2. An ASAT, a Soviet anti-satellite vehicle, fired from a Soviet fighter jet, thereby masking its launch.
"All that money and all these machines and they still don't know what the hell is happening out there."
Blum
This event was included in President Reagan's Daily Brief.
A report went to the Defense Intelligence Agency's Directorate for Management and Operations.
In the fall of 1985, in the Old Executive Office Building directly across from the White House, Stanford Research Institute scientists unveiled coordinate remote viewing to President Reagan's Office of Science and Technology. CRV utilized a phenomena termed "scannate."
While attempting to "dial in" information concerning locations of Soviet submarines, the remote viewer present "saw" a wingless aircraft that had been shadowing one of the subs.
A classified report of this experiment went to the DIA.
Project Aquarius was begun by DIA six months after the CRV experiment. Aquarius utilized remote viewers to track Soviet submarines.
Over the next 14 months at least 17 "hovering unidentified flying objects" were viewed.
Project Aquarius, run by DIA's Directorate for Management and Operations, utilized three remote viewers who drew a craft resembling that which tripped the fence in Lake Kickapoo. From these humble beginnings, DIA's Working Group for UFOs was formed.
A MAJESTIC 12 DOCUMENT CONFIRMED AUTHENTIC?
UFO Working Group
Are There Authentic Documents That Deal With Crash Retrievals?
So far, all we have are stories. Until we get to see an intact craft or a large piece of one, the jury will still be out for most people on whether any of this is true. A legitimate government document discussing crashed UFOs would help a lot.
On the January 28th, 2018, Coast to Coast AM show with George Knapp, Dr. Hal Puthoff gave us a major clue.
Dr. Hal Puthoff : "There has been one leaked document - how it got leaked, I'll never know - which is out there, that talks about some crashes that we were able to verify what was a real document."
During Dr. Puthoff 's lecture on February 8th, 2020, in West Virginia, a member of the audience tried to get more information.
Q: Back in early 2018, you had done an interview with George Knapp. And it was just an hour interview so I know time was really short. And in it, you really, briefly discussed - and I'm gonna have to paraphrase - that there was a document that was leaked that pertained to crashes or crash retrievals. And I think you'd said something like... you didn't know or you would never know how this got released. For some of us that
are like, keenly interested in that area, can you give us any hints that point to that document, or where to look, since it is leaked and it is out? I
wouldn't ask you to reveal anything that is still classified.
HP: "This is a question about a discussion, in fact, I guess I even mentioned it on an interview with George Knapp, about a document leaking... that verified that there were in fact crash retrievals. I know it's out there on the Internet some place. I'm not sure where. And so, I don't know where you could go look for it" UFOJoe.net. The Wilson/Davis documents
A private, anonymous source (are there any other kind in this business?), has stated that the original government UFO working group had been unsuccessful in efforts to back-engineer a flying saucer, leading it to be transferred to the private sector sometime in the 1980s.
Obviously, if these efforts had been successful a new era of powered flight and space exploration would be upon us.
Pandolfi: "O.K. Yeah, and it talked about like a Working Group. You know, I was a member of that Working Group, ah, when it started."
Caller: "Uh huh. In DIA?"
Pandolfi: "Well, it was a ... Yeah, it started out that way, I was a member of it, but I, I resigned I guess after the first meeting." Caller: "Who, who were the other members?"
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