By Major Donald E. Keyhoe, USMC Ret., 1950.
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In 1950, Donald E. Keyhoe wrote an article for TRUE magazine titled "The Flying Saucers are Real." The article was so successful that Keyhoe expanded his researches into book length. The result, The Flying Saucers are Real, was published as a paperback and had as much success as the article. Keyhoe wrote several more UFO books, including "Flying Saucers: Top Secret," each clearly focussed on examining the Air Force cover up of the most puzzling UFO reports. Keyhoe, as founder and director of the National Investigations Committee on Ariel Phenomena (NICAP), campaigned tirelessly to end government secrecy on UFO matters.
This book was written more than half a century ago. It contains many of the facts of the UFO phenomenon that are still ignored. The lively tone of the book and the out-of-date vocabulary should not be perceived wrongly: from Ed Ruppelt, later head of Project Blue Book, to Dr. James McDonald, the famous scientist and ufologist, people seriously involved in UFO research all acknowledged that the facts presented in Keyhoe's writings are correct, even when they disagreed on his opinion on a US Air Force cover-up of the matter. I note that doubts cast nowadays on the reality of the UFO phenomenon (crackpot witnesses? secret weapon? science fiction inspired hoaxes? etc...) were already addressed by Keyhoe. Keyhoe worked, other laughed, flying saucers were real, and they still are. If some people chose to work rather than scoff, much credit for that goes to Major Donald E. Keyhoe.
Chapter IIt was a strange assignment. I picked up the telegram from my desk and read it a third time. NEW YORK, N.Y., MAY 9, 1949 I glanced out at the Potomac, recalling the first saucer story. As a pilot, I'd been skeptical of flying disks. Then reports had begun to pour in from Air Force and airline pilots. Apparently alarmed, the Air Force had ordered fighters to pursue the fast-flying saucers. In one mysterious chase, a pilot had been killed, and his death was unexplained. That had been seventeen months ago. Since then, the whole flying-saucer riddle had been hidden behind a curtain of Air Force secrecy. And now, an assignment from True magazine on flying saucers. Twenty-four hours later, I was in Ken Purdy's office. "I've had men on this for two months," he told me. "I might as well warn you, it's a tough story to crack." "You think it's a Russian missile?" I asked him. "Or an Air Force secret?" "We've had several answers. None of them stacks up. But I'm positive one was deliberately planted when they found we were checking." He told me the whole story of the work that had been done by the staff of True and of the reports sent in by competent writers. The deeper he dwelved into the mystery, the tougher the assignment got. The more I learned about flying saucers, the less I knew. "There's one angle I want rechecked," Purdy said. "You've heard of the Mantell case?" I nodded. "O.K. Try to get the details of Mantell's radio report to Godman Tower. Before he was killed, he described the thing he was chasing - we know that much. Project 'Saucer' gave out a hint, but they've never released the transcript. Here's another lead. See if you can find anything about a secret picture, taken at Harmon Field, Newfoundland - it was around July 1947. I'll send you other ideas as I get them." Before I left, Purdy wished me luck and told me that he would work in closest harmony with me. "But watch out for fake tips," he said. "You'll probably run into some people at the Pentagon who'll talk to you 'off the record.' That handcuffs a writer. Look out they don't lead you into a blind alley. Even the Air Force statements and the Project 'Saucer' report contradict each other." For six months, I worked with other investigators to solve the mystery of the disks. We checked a hundred sighting reports, frequently crossing the trail of Project "Saucer" teams and F.B.I. agents. Old records gave us fantastic leads. So did Air Force plans for exploring space. Rocket experts, astronomers, Air Force officials and pilots gave us clues pointing to a startling solution. Many intelligent persons - including scientists - believe that the saucers contain spies from another planet. When this first phase was ended, we were faced with a hard decision. We had uncovered important facts. We knew the saucers were real. If it was handled carefully we believed the story would be in line with a secret Air Force policy. It was finally decided to publish certain alternate conclusions. The Air Force was informed of True's intentions, no attempt was made to block publication. In the January 1950 issue of True, I reported that we had reached the following conclusions:
"The only other possible explanation," I wrote, "is that the saucers are extremely high-speed, long-range devices developed here on earth. Such an advance (which the Air Force has denied) would require an almost incredible leap in technical progress even for American scientists and designers." Nation-wide press and radio comment followed the appearance of the article. This publicity was obviously greater than the Air Force had expected. Within twenty-four hours the Pentagon was deluged with telegrams, letters and long-distance calls. Apparently fearing a panic, the Air Force hastily stated that flying-saucer reports - even those made by its own pilots and high-ranking officers - were mistakes or were caused by hysteria. Insert 1: Air Force press release 629-49, December 27. 1949. But three days later, when it was plain that many Americans calmly accepted True's disclosures, the Air Force released a secret Project "Saucer" file containing this significant statement: "It will never be possible to say with certainty that any individual did not see a space ship, an enemy missile or other object." In this same document there appears a confidential analysis of Air Intelligence reports [2]. It is this summary that contains the official suggestion of space visitors' motives. After stating that such a civilization would obviously be far ahead of our own, the report adds: Insert 2: Air Force Project "Saucer" Report, December 30, 1949. "Since the acts of mankind most easily observed from a distance are A-bomb explosions, we should expect some relation to obtain between the time of the A-bomb explosions, the time at which the space ships are seen, and the time required for such ships to arrive from and return to home base." (In a previous report, which alternately warned and reassured the public, the Air Force stated that space travel outside the solar system is almost a certainty.) Insert 3: Air Force report M-26-49, Preliminary Studies on Flying Saucers, April 27, 1949. Since 1949 there has been a steady increase in saucer sightings. Most of them have been authentic reports, which Air Force denials cannot disprove. In January, mystery disks were reported over Kentucky, Indiana, Texas, Pennsylvania, and several other states. On the Seattle Anchorage route, an air freighter was paced for five minutes by a night-flying saucer. When the pilots tried to close in, the strange craft zoomed at terrific speed. Later, the airline head reported that Intelligence officers had quizzed the pilots for hours. "From their questions," he said, "I could tell they had a good idea of what the saucers are. One officer admitted they did, but he wouldn't say any more." Another peculiar incident occurred at Tucson, Arizona, on February 1. Just at dusk, a weird, fiery object raced westward over the city, astonishing hundreds in the streets below. The Tucson Daily Citizen ran the story next day with a double-banner headline: FLYING SAUCER OVER TUCSON?
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Chapter I (This page)
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter IIX