ANOTHER BOOK BY RANDLE DISCUSSING ‘OFFICAL’ REPORTS ON UFOs
Author and UFO researcher Kevin Randle wrote in the Introduction to this 1998 book, “We have been told that the Air Force investigated UFOs for more than twenty years and never found any information to suggest that they were real, that they posed a threat to the United States, or that they were from other solar systems. That is what we’ve been told, but as we’ll see, such is not the case. Arguments at the highest levels suggest that the information that flying saucers are real has been found, that they might pose a threat, and that they ARE from other worlds. What I have tried to do here is provide the information that I have found during my investigations of UFOs during the last decade.” (Pg. 3)
He adds, “This book will examine a body of evidence and learn that the truth, as always, lies between two extremes. We will see that there has been government manipulation of the facts, but that is not all. UFO researchers and investigators are as guilty of manipulation as any government agency or agent. When you have finished reading this book, I hope that some of the confusion will have vanished. Remember one thing: I have a definite point of view. My work is colored by my thinking, just as everyone’s work is biased. Remember that well.” (Pg. 5)
In the first chapter he explains, “There is a long history of secret studies that have concluded that there IS something to the UFO phenomenon. Oh, they can weasel out of it because most of the studies have NOT concluded that UFOs are extraterrestrial, but that doesn’t change the facts. Secret studies have been conducted and they have concluded that something real was happening.” (Pg. 7)
He states, “To fully understand what happened to the UFO investigations conducted by the United States government and the U.S. Air Force, it is necessary to understand the motivations behind it. The situation in the world of UFOs changed radically in1952, and the outgrowth of that change was a policy that has prevented us from seeing the whole truth. It was all the result of a situation that developed during the middle of the summer of 1952 when flying saucers again exploded on the scene.” (Pg. 31) Later, he adds, “What they wave of sightings during the summer of 1952 demonstrated to everyone was that flying saucers were not going away.” (Pg. 65)
He says, “It is a matter of faith with those who believe UFOs are nothing more than illusion, misidentification, and hoax that scientists do not see flying saucers. Scientists are trained to tell the difference between what is and what is not. They are not easily fooled. But the truth is, and according to the government’s own UFO studies, scientists DO see flying saucers. There are many good sightings by scientists, many of which have not been satisfactorily explained.” (Pg. 97)
He reports, “If Air Force Colonel George M. Mattingly Jr. is to be believed, Project Moon Dust began in 1957, probably as a response to the Soviet launch of Sputnik and the wave of UFO reports… Of course, that point can be debated simply because we have evidence that the Air Force has lied about Project Moon Dust and admitted the truth only after being caught.” (Pg. 135)
He explains, “We are told that flying saucers are not real and that they pose no threat to national security. We are told that the few ‘scientific’ studies that have been completed that suggest there is no evidence that UFOs are real. Flying saucers are no more real than the pools of water seen in the distance on the desert at high noon. Flying saucers simply do not exist. Yet, when we study the history of the phenomenon we learn that a number of aircraft have vanished when flying saucers were near. In some cases these were Air Force fighters that were sent up to intercept strange things seen on radar, but that never return.” (Pg. 163)
In the last chapter, he states, “We have examined a great deal of information in our search for the truth. We have seen how the Air Force and the government have concealed information, lied about the situation, and tried to cover their tracks with false information. We have seen, through the documentation available to us and the witness testimony we have gathered, that UFOs have been considered real and not some illusion, delusion, hallucination, or outright fraud. There is something going on and the government has attempted to conceal it from us. What we’ve seen is that, from the very beginning, we have not been told the truth.” (Pg. 231)
He argues, “the two public studies made by ‘independent’ scientists and sponsored by federal tax dollars were apparently nothing more than propaganda designed to convince the public that there was nothing to reports of flying saucers… The Air Force has provided us with [an] example of this. In September 1994, they released a report on their investigation into the events outside of Roswell… [which] suggested that the event could be explained by a balloon from the 1947 top secret Project Mogul… The report implies that Mogul was highly classified, and that those stationed at the Roswell Army Air Field … wouldn’t have been aware of it… [The report] forgets to point out that some of the officers at Roswell were, in fact, briefed on Project Mogul… But more importantly, while the project WAS highly classified, the balloons and equipment WERE NOT… and they should have been easily identifiable to the officers and men… even if they knew nothing about Project Mogul..” (Pg. 235)
He suggests, “We don’t need another government-sponsored investigation that is supposed to be objective and scientific. We don’t need another research paper, document, or briefing filled with the same things that have filled all the rest. What we need is a single, solid investigation, in which the conclusions are not drawn BEFORE the evidence is examined and the research had been completed.” (Pg. 237)
He says, “because I, like the other private investigators, have a ‘financial’ interest in UFOs in general… our investigations are dismissed as flawed. We’re just a ‘bunch of UFO nuts’ who want to believe and who are making a buck at it. Of course, the argument can be turned around on the Air Force. It can be said that the Air Force has a financial stake in proving UFOs don’t exist. After all, their mission is to keep American skies clear of foreign invader… If flying saucers are real, then it is clear the Air Force has failed in their mission.” (Pg. 240-241)
He concludes, “Carl Sagan liked to say, ‘Where is the evidence? Where is the physical evidence?’ The answer is: The evidence is all around for those who want to see it. The only real question is if UFOs are extraterrestrial. The evidence presented here suggests that it might be true. It suggests that the situation isn’t as we have been led to believe. Now is the time to try to learn the truth rather than pretend that we know it.” (Pg. 242)
This book will be of keen interest to those studying UFOs.