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USAF and UFOs:

CAPTAIN RUPPELT'S WHO IS WHO:

Captain Edward J. Ruppelt wrote some notes where he gave his impressions on several officers who were in relation with Project Blue Book in 1952-1953.

Since not every reader is necessarily updated on the context, I have added some further information, and also some personal comments (on white background).

For information on Captain Ruppelt, see his book.

Ackerman, Brig. Gen. John B.

General Ackerman was Chief of the Collection Division of the D/I all during the big UFO Flap of 1952. He had no direct connection with the project but he was very much interested. I used to stop in to see him and he always had definite ideas as to what we had and what we should be doing. He would tend to get all excited about individual sightings. He got copies of the UFO reports and several times he was on the phone wanting to know what I planned to do even before I had time to digest what was in the report. Ackerman had a "direct channel" to the top, to the Secretary of the Air Force and people in the Department of Defense, and every once in a while he would quote some top dog in the government and what he thought that I should be doing.

Ackerman was chief of the Collection Division, Directorate of Air Intelligence, also referred to as the Collection Branch of the Air Intelligence Requirement Division of the USAF Directorate of Intelligence. He succeeded at this job to Major General Robert Taylor, who was well aware of Project Sign, the first study of UFOs amidst Air Intelligence.

Adams, Col. W.A.

Col. Adams was the chief of the Topical Intelligence Branch of the D/I and Col. (Weldon H.S.) Smith and Major Dewey Fournet worked for him. He was pretty much sold on the whole thing. I think that Dewey Fournet influenced his thinking to a great extent and he really went to bat for all of Dewey's ideas. He pushed Fournet's study of the motions of the UFO's and he is the one who used to be the most vocal in briefings and at meetings in regard to Blue Book's taking a "negative" attitude. He is the one who became irked in one briefing and asked me if it wasn't true that if we made a few positive assumptions we could prove that the UFO's were real.

Colonel William A. Adams was indeed convinced that UFOs were real and extraterrestrial. He wanted UFOs to be studied with a more opened mind and more seriously. He was Chief of the Topical Intelligence Division for the Deputy Director for Estimates at the Directorate of Intelligence, and also deputy of the Evaluation Division (AFOIN-2B3.)

The reference to the irked Colonel relates to this paragraph of Ruppelt's book, Chapter 11:

Alvarez, Louis Dr.

Dr. Louis Alvarez, a physics professor from the University of California in Berkeley, developer of MEW radar at the beginning of World War II and one of the "fathers" of the H-bomb. He sat on the panel that met in Washington in January 1953. Alvarez was only lukewarm to the idea that the UFO's might be real.

Dr. Louis Alvarez had been the heat of MIT's radiation laboratory in 1941, worked on the cyclotron in the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory at Berkeley, and on the Manhattan Project - the atom bomb - at Los Alamos National Laboratories, New Mexico. He later developed the use of ray probes to find hidden chambers in the Egyptian pyramids. He investigated a theory that comets may come for a tiny distant second star on the edge of our solar system. It is him, with his father Walter, also a physicist, that discovered the thin layer of iridium in the ancient soil and proposed that it is evidence that the Earth was hit by an asteroid which caused the extinction of the dinosaurs. Interestingly Dr. Thornton Page, also a Robertson Panel member, worked with him on this theory. Alvarez was also on the National Academy of Sciences panel involved in investigating the Kennedy assassination.

He was awarded a Nobel Prize in physics.

The panel refrered to here is the 1953 Robertson panel gathered by the CIA and which is responsible for the halt of any serious UFO research in the Air Force from then on, and the CIA new objective to make ufology appear ridiculous in the eyes of the public.

Burgess, Brig. Gen. Woodbury

General Burgess was the D/I of the Air Defense Command under General Chidlaw. He wasn't a believer in UFOs but he was firmly convinced that we, meaning the Air Force, should make every effort to find out what they were, even if they were all explainable. He bent over backwards to give us all the cooperation that we needed. I would say that his ideas reflected those of General Chidlaw.

Born 1905, died March 9, 1981, Burgess graduated from Staunton Military Academy, Va., in 1923, and from the U.S. Military Academy, 1927, and was commissioned a second lieutenant assigned to the 14th Cavalry at Fort Sheridan, Ill., in 1930, entered the Cavalry School at Fort Riley, Kan., and graduated from the troop officers course in June 1932. Going to Fort Stotsenburg, Philippine Islands, he served with the 26th Cavalry. Appointed a mathematics instructor at the U.S. Military Academy in June 1935, four years later was assigned to the Fifth Cavalry at Fort Bliss, Texas. Transferred to Air Corps headquarters in November 1941, General Burgess was executive of the Operations Section, Office of the Assistant Chief of Air Staff for Intelligence. The following March he was appointed chief of the Informational Intelligence Division in that office, and in July 1942 he was designated deputy assistant chief of air staff for intelligence.

The following March General Burgess was named deputy chief of staff for administration of the 20th Bomber Command in the Asiatic Pacific Theater, and that July he joined the Far East Air Forces in that capacity. Transferred to the Pacific Air Command in December 1945, he was assistant chief of staff for intelligence. Joining the Far East Command in January 1947, he served as deputy chief of the Air Division, Joint Strategic Plans and Operations Group, and on April 2, 1947, he was transferred to the Air Force, where in August he became assistant director of the Intelligence Division, Armed Forces Staff College, at Norfolk, Va., and in February 1949 he was named director. Reassigned to Air Force headquarters in August 1950, he was deputy chief of the Evaluation Division in the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, and the following February he was named chief of the Policy Division.

He joined the Air Defense Command at Ent Air Force Base, Colorado, in November 1951, where he was deputy for intelligence, assuming additional duty as deputy chief of staff for intelligence of the Continental Air Defense Command on Sept. 1, 1954. Returning to Washington, D.C., on Aug. 15, 1955, he was named deputy director for production of the National Security Agency. He had the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star Medal and the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. He was rated as an aircraft observer.

Major General John B. Cabell

General Cabell was the Director of Intelligence for the Air Force during the 1947-1951 UFO era. He is the one who ordered Project Grudge reorganized in the summer of 1951. I didn't know him too well because he left to become number two man in the CIA shortly after I got on the project. He is the man who held the initial meeting in the Pentagon that Lt. Jerry Cummings and Col. Rosengarten attended. He raised all kinds of hell when he found out that Col. Watson and ATIC hadn't been doing anything about the UFO project in 1950. According to what Cummings said, he was pretty much a believer in the UFOs. General Samford replaced Cabell in the summer of 1951.

There seems to be a problem there. The director of the Pentagon's Office of Air Force Intelligence was not a Maj. Gen. John B. Cabell, but a Maj. Gen. Charles Pearre Cabell. FOIA documentation indicates that on several occasions in the 1948-51 period Cabell personally ordered the staff of Project Sign at Wright Field to make immediate on-site studies of particularly intriguing cases.

In November 1947, Major General Cabell becomes Chief of the Resource Division of Air Intelligence at the Directorate of Intelligence. In May 1948, he is Commander in Chief of the Air Intelligence. On November 1951, Cabell is promoted Joint Staff Director at the Headquarters.

On September 11, 1951, Cabell reads the report on the UFO observation in Fort Monmouth and is not happy at all with the poor investigation. He notifies Jerry Cummings who is the all new head of Project Grudge. Both Cumming and Cabell quickly discover that Project Grudge did not investigate UFO reports seriously anymore and did nothing more than armchair research.

When Cummings exposes this sorry situation in a Washington D.C. Pentagon meeting, saying "everyone laughs at the Grudge investigators. They systematically ridicule the reports they receive. They are only interested in promoting new or original "explanations" to please Washington," Cabell enters in a rage: "I've been lied to!" and "I do not want prejudices. I forbid prejudices. Those who have prejudices better leave this meeting right now." After that, it was decided to set up the New Project Grudge, soon named Blue Book, which responsibility was given to Ruppelt.

Chapman, ?

This man was in charge of one of the photo labs at Wright Air Development Center and he did all of our work on UFO photos. He was a firm believer. He did do a good job of making unbiased analyses of our photos, however.

I have been unable to locate any information on Chapman.

Deyarmond, Col. Albert B.

Al Deyarnond was an old hand with the UFO's, he'd been in on the first of Project Sign. From the old memo's I found, signed by him, he was once a firm believer along with Al Loeding, "Red" Honnacker and the rest of the veterans or Project Sign. But by the time I got into the picture was, at least on the surface, lined up with the scoffers. But once, when I began to knock the UFO's, he raised the devil and chewed me out for "not keeping an open mind." I would guess that he was a "scoffer" because he was a disciple of Col. Watson's. Deyarmond is now chief of structures at Ryan Aircraft Company.

Col. Deyarmond, with Alfred Loeding, as Project Sign investigators, investigated the Chiles and Whitted classic sighting, one of the most significant early UFO reports, and a number of other cases. This investigation was totally thorough, leaving no stone unturned, and in the end there was no alternative explanation: the pilots saw an extraterrestrial spaceship. The conclusion was included in the famous "estimate of the situation" which General Vandenberg then destroyed, arguing that "there is no hard evidence." After that, the scoffers in Project Sign could scoff openly and most of the Sign members who were convinced that UFOs are indeed sometimes extraterrestrial devices were ridiculed. Most of them decided to join the scoffers, at least on the surface.

Erickson, Col. J.G.

Col Erickson was head of the Policy and Management Branch of the Directorate of Intelligence and in some way he got in on all of the UFO business. He was sort of power behind the throne on what the official policy would be. I gave him quite a few briefings and he seemed to be a "lone wolf" in that he wanted to get the picture for himself. He got a little hacked at Fournet quite often, because he thought that Fournet was pushing his ideas, that the UFOs were real, too hard. I think that Erickson tended to put a lot of faith in the UFO's but he was one of those who was afraid to stick his neck out.

No information found on Col. Erickson.

Fournet, Dewey J., Major, USAF

Dewey was Blue Book's liaison man in the D.I. He took over in early 1952 or late 1951 from a Lt. Col. whose name I've forgotten. The Lt. Col. was a completely worthless jerk. Dewey got hot on the subject right away and helped us a great deal in getting things straightened out in the Pentagon. His job was just supposed to be part time, but within a matter of months he was working on it full time. Fournet was the most confirmed believer that I ran into in the Pentagon. He had access to all of our reports, read them all over very carefully, and he was still absolutely convinced. He and I used to argue by the hour and I must say that he had some good arguments. All of his conclusions were based on the "face value" of the reports. If a person said that they saw something and had a good description of it, Dewey took this as the last word. He and I disagreed when I didn't buy the reports lock, stock and barrel. I didn't think that the person was using or having hallucinations, I was sure that they reported what they saw, but I wasn't convinced that what they saw was actually what happened. In other words I played it heavy on the "optical illusion" side and I backed this up with experience. I'd investigated too many reports and found that something that starts out to seem real mysterious can many times prove to be something very simple. No matter how much I talked, however, I never convinced Fournet that I had a point. Dewey is now (1955) a civilian engineer with the Ethyl Corporation in Baton Rouge, La.

A key character in USAF's UFO investigation then, but contrarily to Ruppelt's idea, his main argument was not the "face value" of the reports. Fournet was also behind the radar PPI when UFOs flew over Washington D.C in summer 1952, he knew that UFOs are not mere visual sightings. He worked on the notion that descriptions of UFO manoeuvers point at their intelligent control. (the Fukuoka case for example).

Garland, Brig. Gen., W. M.

General Garland was my boss at ATIC from the Fall of 1952 until I left. He was a moderately confirmed believer. He had seen a UFO while he was stationed in Sacramento, California. He was Gen. Samford's assistant in the Pentagon before he came to ATIC and he was the inspiration behind the Life article by Ginna. He gave Ginna his ideas and prompted Life to stick their necks out. Gen. Garland is now out of the Air Force and is a consultant to Rand.

Brig. Gen William M. Garland was the Chief of ATIC at that time and joined the meeting of the Robertson Panel and expressed his support of the Panel's efforts. He stated three personal opinions there:

Alas the CIA who acted behind the Panel did not at all act to declassify as many of the reports as possible, but on the opposite, they acted as to ridicule as many reports, reporters, and private investigators as possible.

In his book, Ruppelt states that Garland agreed with Ruppelt's idea that the Tremonton UFO footage should be made available to the Press. The Robertson Panel decided the movie was of seagulls, an opinion elaborated without much consideration of the previous analysis by the Navy and USAF. Ruppelt wrote: "When the Pentagon got the draft of the release [the Press release prepared by Ruppelt for the Press to introduce the Tremonton movie] they screamed, "No!" No movie for the press and no press release. The sea gull theory was too weak, and we had a new publicity policy as of now — don't say anything.""

On the contrary, Ruppelt quickly realized that the Panel's conclusions were used by the CIA to kill the Air Force UFO investigation and he left. Afterwards Blue Book did generally nothing more than promote "explanations" without any investigation.

Gittings, Homer

Homer Gittings was my contact in Los Alamos. He was a charter member of the group that was trying to correlate recorded radiation from an unknown source with UFO reports. He worked closely with a Ph.D. but I've forgotten the Ph.D.'s name. Gittings, the Ph.D. and several other scientists would fly down to Albuquerque and we'd meet with Col Methaney at Air Defense Headquarters. If I remember correctly, Gittings had an MS degree in Physics and was an instrumentation specialist.

For the complete story of the "radiations affair" read Chapter 15 of Ruppelt's book. Ruppelt gives no names in the book.

Goudsmidt, Samuel

This man, from AEC's Brookhaven Lab on Long Island, sat on the Panel that met in Washington in January 1953. Goudsmidt was probably the most violent anti-saucer man at the panel meeting. Everything was a big joke to him which brought down the wrath of the other panel members on numerous occasions.

Young physics student at Leiden in the Netherlands, Goudsmidt with Pr. George Uhlenbeck discovers the spin of the electron. They both enter Michigan University soon afterward where they start a physics class, which became crucial for atomic research in the US. As a specialist of atom weaponry he also contributed Project Alsos who was to investigate if the Nazis had an atom bomb already. After the war he enters AEC and is laboratory head at Brookhaven National Laboratories, and becomes close to A. Einstein. Although he knew nothing on the subject, he was violently "anti-UFO."

Hardin, Capt. Charles

Chuck Hardin is running Project Blue Book at the present time. Since the operation of the project has changed and the 4602nd has taken over the leg work, he doesn't have much to do. By his own admission, he has a good deal at ATIC and is playing it for all it is worth. General Watson doesn't like UFO's so Hardin is keeping things just as quiet as possible and staying out from under everyone's feet. In other words, being a regular Air Force, he is just doing as little as possible because he knows how controversial the subject is and his philosophy is that if you don't do anything you won't get hurt. He definitely doesn't believe in UFO's, in fact he thinks that anyone who is even interested is crazy. They bore him. He has been the one big bottleneck in my getting anything from the Air Force because he is afraid that my book will stir things up too much.

Indeed after Ruppelt understood that the Robertson Panel promises of more means to study UFO who never materialize and that CIA decided to put down the whole subject, Ruppelt left the USAF. The project survived for years without doing any real work.

The 4602th was a group which in wartime dealt with picking up debris of downed ennemy planes for intelligence purpose. In peace time they were well indicated to assist Blue Book in field investigation. But Blue Book did nothing anymore so that help was without effect.

Hayden, Father

Father Hayden was head of the astronomy department at Georgetown University. I never met him but Dr. Steve Possony was always going to him with our UFO problems. Father Hayden seemed to be very much interested in our problems and couldn't at all be classed as a scoffer.

Ruppelt has misspelled the name, which is Father Francis J. Heyden. Father Heyden (1907-1991) came to Georgetown in 1945 from the Manila Observatory in the Philippines and was awarded for outstanding accomplishments and contributions to the popularization or advancement of the science of astronomy there. In 1948 he assumed directorship of the Georgetown Observatory. He was awarded as a Regular Member of the Society for Imaging Science and Technology for outstanding achievement in imaging science or engineering in 1967.

Besides is keen interest in UFOs, he also studied the famous Piri Reis ancient maps. He knew astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh and his famous UFO observation.

Hynek, Dr. J. Allen

Dr. Hynek has been the consultant astronomer to Projects Sign, Grudge and Blue Book. I won't say that he's a "believer" but he's darn interested. He has devoted a great deal of his valuable time to the project. He has read almost every UFO report in the Air Force files. In the summer of 1952 he debated with Menzel at the American Optical Society meeting in Boston and blasted Menzel right out of the hall. He sat on the panel in Washington in January 1952 and was very much pro-UFO. Dr. Hynek is Head of the Ohio State Univ. Astronomy Department, Director of the Perkins Observatory and Assistant Dean of the USU Graduate School. He is still working for Blue Book.

Hynek told about his involvement with the Robertson Panel: