After China Sightings, No UFO Disclosure

Gary S. Bekkum
(STARpod.org) -- I have bad news for the UFO disclosure crowd.

If the alleged extraterrestrial presence is real, the odds are against disclosure.

Among members of the American Intelligence Community, the tale of the alien presence is known as the "core story" of contact between the aliens and the government.

The strong rumor is there is a "disturbing" aspect to this "core story," something so dire

it leaves battle-hardened military types shaking in their boots.

An example of a real government program so secret that revealing its very existence endangers the national security involves martial law plans and preparations in the event of first strike use of nuclear weapons.

A 1992 cover story for TIME Magazine called "The Doomsday Blueprints" pieces together early cold war preparations intended to enable the survival of the government following a catastrophic nuclear exchange.

"What they envisioned was an America darkened not only by nuclear war but also by the imposition of martial law, food rationing, censorship and the suspension of many civil liberties," explains the article's author, who adds, "while preparations for rescuing the nation's leaders and cultural treasures remain in place, efforts to shield the civilian population were virtually abandoned decades ago."

In my book Spies, Lies, and Polygraph Tape -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games, I examined the methods and sources of confirmed members of the Intelligence Community as they tracked and investigated UFO-related technology and "persons of interest."

According to one of the intelligence officials who pursue the UFO topic (and many are at the highest levels of the government), the "core story" may fall outside of the President of the United States' "need to know."

Perhaps that explains the failure of previous efforts to seek out help from the Clinton White House for UFO disclosure, like the mid-1990s Rockefeller disclosure initiative.

Although it remains difficult to determine where official business ends and personal interests take over, there is solid evidence of high ranking intelligence involvement with the UFO and alien contact topic.

For more than twenty-five years, real American spies and their civilian associates have been playing spy games concerning rumors of an otherworldly intelligence.

It sounds crazy but it's true: the United States government spent decades mired in the most extreme psychological intelligence gathering schemes imaginable. At the core of the story are tales of intelligence activities involving a non-human source. How the international Intelligence Community responded to this apparent craziness is even stranger, and establishes an historical precedent for current activities.

The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) has resulted in the release of officially declassified "Real-life X-files" documents.

Now available by request from the Central Intelligence Agency are previously secret files that provide independent researchers tantalizing glimpses into paranormal diamonds-in-the-rough. Lost among tens of thousands of pages of notes, classified reports, countless "Memorandums for the Record," letters and emails are the obscure clues needed to illuminate the government insanity.

Among the collected works are psychic reports conducted by the Department of Defense to monitor the activities of extraterrestrials and, warnings that New York City and Washington, D.C. would simultaneously be attacked by terrorists using aircraft as missiles to collapse buildings.

Tens of millions of U.S. dollars were spent on the efforts revealed by the FOIA documents; other programs may have existed or perhaps continue today at America's spy agencies. The British government conducted one of their own psychic spy studies as recently as post-9/11.

And the psychic program is merely the tip of the paranormal government iceberg.


Today, the rumors of "Real-life X-files" continue to spread.

Personal messages passed over the Internet point to on-going covert intelligence gathering among the believers, due in part to their contact with foreign scientists, tales of bizarre research programs, and encounters with otherworldly beings.

If you examine the archive of government files, you'll find it's all there: teleportation studies, antigravity devices, spacetime wormholes, fantastic starships from other worlds, time machines, and extraterrestrial telepathy.

According to declassified government documents, it was a Congressionally Directed Action that initiated the sharing of "Real-life X-files" between nations.

Meanwhile, reports of anomalous objects detected on radar and psychic surveillance of alien activity attracted the government's core of believers into "Working Groups" where unexplained phenomena were discussed under a thin veil of secrecy.

The former government secrecy, the open exchange of alternative ideas, and recent covert actions of some members of the Intelligence Community provide a minor glimpse into a dark labyrinth of Orwellian mind-games which have been exposed, in part, only recently.

The strange world of 21st Century parapsychological paranoia as "cold-war replacement therapy" is inhabited by deep background "deep throat" contacts who offer "not for attribution" information. Often, their identities and their professional reputations are trampled under foot by less than ethical Internet amateurs who seem to act as "useful idiots" for some members of the Intelligence Community.

Exposed for all to see on the World Wide Web, the "Real-life X-files" act as "flypaper" to attract spies interested in new technologies. Flies emerge from tiny cracks in the wall of cyberspace, where much of the modern-day "Real-life X-filing" takes place.

Among the various species attracted to the virtual flypaper, weaving in and out amongst hoaxers and confused laymen, are sticky offers to share scientific knowledge, clues to help track down terrorist activities, and other cloak-and-dagger inspired spy games.

Some participants, notable for their current positions in the government, or for their presence on committees alongside former high-ranking officials from CIA and the Department of Homeland Security, are actively pursuing Chinese activities involving new or unusual theoretical developments. Recent Chinese efforts include so-called High Frequency Gravity Waves (HFGW) and possible quantum aspects of human consciousness.

Digging deeper, it appears that the present-day "Real-life X-file" has more to do with smoke-and-mirrors cover for intelligence collection on foreign activities than STAR TREK inspired reverse-engineering of alien technology.

According to one source, who remains unidentified by request, "Several prominent scientists have talked openly about moving overseas because they can't get any funding here -- a few of them have talked about China, despite acknowledging that anything they develop over there would likely be used against us."

In the end, the Intelligence Community "X-Filers" remain focused on their core mission: stay ahead of your nemesis, whether he sits at a desk in Beijing or greets you in a trench coat on a cold dark street in Budapest.

We can also be certain the other side is playing a similar role in the "X-files" spy game.

As for the oft alleged extraterrestrial presence, in a universe filled with countless possibilities for developing intelligent life, only time will tell.

For more of the story, see Spies, Lies, and Polygraph Tape -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games. To read more about the book, click here.

For additional information, please visit STARpod.org
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Gary S. Bekkum

Gary S. Bekkum is an independent 'occasional' rogue journalist, author, and researcher of material that blurs the distinction between fiction and reality.

He is the author of SPIES LIES and POLYGRAPH TAPE -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games Book. To read more about the book, click here.

In 2004 Bekkum initiated STARstream Research, as an informal survey of exotic physics and consciousness concepts related to the survival or otherwise of the human race. Building from an international network of contacts in science and the defense industry, some of the STARstream Research material is available to the public at STARpod.org.

As a result of his efforts, Bekkum has reported numerous contacts with past and present intelligence officials interested in the application of exotic phenomena, ranging from antigravity to mind-to-mind communication.