TEACHERS HAVE
TAUGHT US THROUGH THE AGES
- THEY ARE WATCHING US NOW - THE COSMOS IS THEIR OCEAN...
Imagine that one day a new city is constructed somewhere on Earth, a
"Universe City", where a spacetime port is established as a
centerpoint of interaction among Earth-dwellers and visitors from
elsewhere.
Imagine a place of learning in such a city where every classroom is
a different world's history book, and every field trip, a voyage to
another planet. What are the kinds of things we would learn at such
a place?
Their Technology
Dr. Hal Puthoff, a respected theoretical physicist, had the
following to say about a book titled Unconventional Flying Objects
by Paul Hill:
"To the degree that the engineering characteristics of UFOs can be
estimated by empirical observation, in my opinion the
above-referenced, recently-published book provides the most
reliable, concise summary of engineering-type data available. The
data were compiled over decades of research by a Chief
Scientist-Manager at NASA's Langley Research Center who acted as an
informal clearinghouse for UFO-related data.
The strength of the
compilation lies in its thoughtful separation of wheat from chaff,
and the analysis of the former into coherent patterns, including
detailed calculations. Perhaps surprising to the casually
interested, under careful examination the observations, rather than
defying the laws of physics as naive interpretation might suggest,
instead appear to be solidly commensurate with them, as the
following discussion shows.
One of the most consistently-observed characteristics of UFO flight
is a ubiquitous pattern in which they tilt to perform all maneuvers.
Specifically, they sit level to hover, tilt forward to move forward,
tilt backward to stop, bank to turn, and descend by "falling-leaf"
or "silver-dollar-wobble" motions.
Detailed analysis by Hill shows
that such motion is inconsistent with aerodynamic requirements, but
totally consistent with some form of repulsive force-field
propulsion. Not satisfied with paper analyses alone, Hill arranged
to have various forms of jet-supported and rotor-supported circular
flying platforms built and tested. Hill himself acted as test pilot
in early, originally-classified, versions, and found the above
motions the most economical for control purposes. Pictures of these
platforms are included in the text.
In an effort to examine the force-field propulsion hypothesis yet
further, Hill analyzed a number of cases involving near-field
interactions with an apparent craft in which some form of force was
in evidence. These include examples in which a person or vehicle was
affected, tree branches were parted or broken, roof tiles were
dislodged, objects were deflected, and ground or water were
disturbed.
Under close analysis the subtleties of these interactions
combine to point unequivocally to a repulsive force field
surrounding the craft, while discriminating against propulsion
mechanisms involving jet action, pure electric or magnetic effects,
or the emission of energetic particles or radiation (although the
latter may accompany the propulsive mechanism as a secondary
effect).
Further detailed investigation indicates that the particular form of
force field propulsion that satisfies observational constraints is
what Hill labels a directed acceleration field; that is, a field
that is, in general, gravitational-like in nature, and, in
particular, gravity-canceling. Such a field acts on all masses in
its sphere of influence as does a gravitational field. Corollary to
this conclusion is that observed accelerations ~100 g's relative to
the environment could be sustained without on-board high-g forces.
One of the consequences of the above identification of field
propulsion type by Hill is his conclusion, supported by detailed
calculation, computer simulation and wind-tunnel studies, that
supersonic flight through the atmosphere without sonic booms is
easily engineered. Manipulation of the acceleration-type force field
would, even at supersonic speeds, result in a constant-pressure,
compression-free zone without shockwave in which the vehicle is
surrounded by a subsonic flow-pattern of streamlines, and subsonic
velocity ratios.
An additional benefit of such field control is that
drops of moisture, rain, dust, insects, or other low-velocity
objects would follow streamline paths around the craft rather than
impact it.
Another puzzle resolved by Hill's analysis is that craft observed to
travel continuously at Mach 4 or 5 do not appear to generate
temperatures sufficiently high to be destructive to known materials.
In other words, UFOs appear to prevent high aerodynamic heating
rates, rather than permitting a heating problem, then surviving it
with heat-resistant materials as is the case of the Shuttle whose
surface temperatures can reach 1300 °C.
The resolution of this
potential problem is shown by Hill to derive from the fact that the
force-field control that results in the prevention of shockwave drag
as discussed above is also effective in preventing aerodynamic
heating. In effect the airflow approaches, then springs away from
the craft, depositing no energy in the process.
A further example of the type of correlation that emerges from
Hill's analytical approach is provided by an analysis of the economy
of various flight-path profiles. It is shown that high-angle,
high-acceleration departures on ballistic-arc trajectories with
high-speed coast segments are more efficient than, for example,
intermediate-level, horizontal-path trips, both in terms of required
impulse-per-unit-mass and time-of-flight parameters. This he
correlates with the observation that UFO departures are of the
dramatically high-angle, high-acceleration type.
Also of interest is Hill's analysis of the spectra and intensity of
an apparent plasma sheath surrounding such craft, the details of
which correlate with what one would expect in terms of it being a
secondary effect associated with the propulsion system, for example,
a blue shift and intensity increase during a "power-up" phase, and
the opposite during hover or landing maneuvers.
An additional fine
point that emerges from this analysis is resolution of the paradox
that observation on a direct line-of-sight to a near part of the
craft can reveal a metallic-like structure while the attempt to
observe the outline of the craft, necessarily by an oblique
line-of-sight, results in an indistinct blur. Analysis shows this to
be a reasonable outcome of an expected re-absorption of reflected
light by the surrounding plasma in the longer-length path associated
with the more oblique view.
Another typical nugget of information is found in Hill's discussion
of the results of the analysis of a possible UFO artifact, the
famous Ubatuba magnesium fragments claimed to have originated from
an exploded unidentified craft near Ubatuba, Brazil. Laboratory
analysis of the samples found the magnesium to be not only of
exceptional purity, and anomalous in its trace composition of other
elements, but 6.7% denser than ordinary pure magnesium, a figure
well beyond the experimental error of the measurement.
Hill's
calculation shows that this observation can be accounted for by
assuming that the sample contained only the pure isotope Mg26,
rather than the naturally-occurring distribution among isotopes
Mg24, Mg25 and Mg26. Since the only isotope separation on a
significant scale in terrestrial manufacture is that of uranium,
such a result must be considered at least anomalous, and possibly as
evidence for extraterrestrial manufacture.
Additional calculations concerning the parameters of interstellar
travel (including relativistic effects), and the energetics of such
travel, have been performed and are included in tabular and
graphical form. The wealth of material in these sections, along with
discussion of the broad implications of this material, reveal the
dedication and thoroughness of Hill's approach to his self-assigned
task.
In the final analysis, one must conclude that Hill has assembled as
good a case as can be made on the basis of presently available data
that the observation of some "unconventional flying objects" is
compatible with the presence of engineered platforms weighing in at
something around 30 tons, which are capable of 100-g accelerations
and 9000-mph speeds in the atmosphere.
Perhaps more important for
the technical reader, however, is Hill's supporting argumentation,
based on solid analysis, that these platforms, although exhibiting
the application of physics and engineering principles clearly beyond
our present-day capabilities, do not appear to defy these principles
in any fundamental way.
Their Science
"Any technology sufficiently advanced is indistinguishable from
magic." --Arthur C. Clarke
What must the sciences be for life forms perhaps millions of years
evolved beyond humanity?
Perhaps their sciences might be blanketed by a new science of
generalist studies called omniscience, defined as a discipline for
and belief in establishing the truth among the experiences of life.
It would qualify as a religion because it demands faith in one tenet
above all, that a love for truth is enshrined as the path towards
betterment. It qualifies as a science, because its hypotheses are
readily and objectively testable.
Omniscientists would test hypotheses made from learning the secrets
of the specialists seeking fact and the studies of the generalists
seeking meaning. Indeed, in such a vision, truth would be the
product of fact and meaning.
Whatever they call their sciences and their faiths, what we will
learn from them will boggle our minds.
The first visitors to our world must have mastered the science of
space-time.
With space-time as their mechanism, whether they be strictly
mechanical or not, the spacecraft of these beings must have the
ability to move by warp propulsion, yielding travel effectively at
arbitrary superluminal velocities. Their craft slip through the
fabric of space-time as if they are gravitationally falling towards
their destination. They travel into the depths of space-time,
leaving the present of their point of origination and voyaging
towards the present of their destination.
They can leave Earth and travel among worlds as we do among cities
on vacations and business trips. At the mid point of their voyages,
if they stop, they witness the literal past of both their source and
destination, in the form of old light just then reaching their point
in space-time. With a sufficiently powerful telescope pointing back
at Earth, they could resolve and record events occurring as they did
hundreds of years ago here. But they probably wouldn't need to,
because there can be little question that at least some visitors to
this world somehow recorded at least several important moments in
Earth history. Is it possible that we could one day watch a
3-dimensional film of a real tyrannosaur on a hunt for food? Or the
crucifixion of Jesus?
But when exploring space, this view of the past of your destination
is useful, for it teaches you about a place before you ever reach
it. Crafts are equipped to examine the light striking them from
their destination, for all kinds of navigation and scientific
processes.
With spacetime machines, these beings have acquired the means to tap
the vacuum of spacetime for unlimited and ecologically cost-free
energy. Basketball-size generators are sufficient to power
gravitational spacecraft, or any other machinery and electronics
requiring energy. Every home is lit, every shower is warm, every
vehicle is fueled, and there are no dangling powerlines, burning
gasolines, or constipating dams.
They may even have developed the ability to employ control of
space-time to accomplish such wonders as teleportation or
replication – essentially through some kind of Xerox machine for
patterns in space-time. Perhaps even the ability to communicate over
cosmic distances instantly and in real time.
Their biological sciences will be even more astounding. They will
have the ability to work DNA as a sculptor forms clay. Imagine
equipping a college biology student with a new kind of
bioengineering tool like "Visual Basic for DNA" and you'll glimpse
the awesome power and responsibility of such knowledge.
If it is ethical to do so, these beings have created all kinds of
new plants, animals, and perhaps even servants, through
bioengineering the double-helix. They may have even done so on this
planet itself in the past.
They have engineered the ability to heal bodies, most likely either
through patterned growth stimulation or temporal biological damage
reversal.
They have engineered the ability to control their home world
environments through managed weather, and form communities in
harmony with balanced ecosystems.
They have very possibly engineered entire worlds, and planned world
histories for promising young species such as we.
The greatest question I have of their science is where the natural
and ethical balance exists between biology and technology.
Back
to Contents
TEACHERS HAVE
TAUGHT US THROUGH THE AGES.
THEY ARE WATCHING US NOW. THE COSMOS IS THEIR OCEAN AND THEY HAVE
BEEN MINDFUL...
If the hypothesis of this work is correct, then at some point in the
foreseeable future the teachers from our faiths will return to Earth
in a formal and open way. The process of actually doing so would be
sophisticated and long ago generally planned. How would it managed?
Earth's recorded history is replete with examples of why it is
absolutely impossible for primitive and advanced intellectual
civilizations to come in contact with one another without damage to
the lesser developed society. Thus, I believe an endoculturization
process would be required to mitigate the otherwise potentially
lethal shock to foundations of human thought and existence built
over thousands of years, confronted with beings from another world.
Such a process could easily require half a century.
But why would the beings above wish to keep even their existence
formally hidden? Their craft have been buzzing around our skies for
years, but they've "never landed on the White House lawn". And how
could such a secret possibly be kept from public view within an open
government like ours?
If my hypothesis is correct, our passage through the kairos is
imminent, and we are advised to look to both science and scripture
for advice on our reaction to the phenomenon we are witnessing.
Keeping A Secret This Big?
How could a secret such this be kept, even by a small group? Let us
review an era during which rose the pinnacle of the institutions of
secrecy, the CIA's Black Operations, from 1945 to 1998
Secrets and the culture of secrecy are the lifeblood of the
intelligence business. For secrecy is the cloak that allows deeds
with the dagger to go unnoticed, and often unchallenged. In wartime,
there is little argument that secrecy is essential to protect the
lives of those going into battle. For the intelligence community,
there is little difference between peace, as the public understands
it, and war, which is what the spies feel they are constantly
waging.
But it was war and not peace that has set the tone for American
intelligence over the past 50 years. Prior to World War II, the
United States had almost no functioning intelligence service of any
kind and while code breaking was in its infancy, spying in the cloak
and dagger sense was largely left to the diplomats, who usually find
the concept of deception and seduction anathema.
The failure of American intelligence at the beginning of World War
!! did not mean that the nation had no appreciation of the value of
intelligence. On the contrary, from the very beginnings of the
Revolutionary War against the British, the colonists showed a keen
appreciation of the value of spies. The Sons of Liberty, what the
British would have described as terrorists, by modern standards,
waged covert war against the Crown before the Revolutionary War.
Thomas Jefferson used a mercenary force under William Eaton to try
to topple the pasha of Tripoli; President Madison used undercover
operations to stir up trouble for the Spanish in Florida. Several
other presidents were to follow suit, including Theodore Roosevelt
when he encouraged the Panamanian revolt against Colombia that
ultimately led to Panama's independence.
Yet by the arrival of World War 2, such episodes had had little
impact on America's military culture. The black arts of espionage
and subversion were viewed with suspicion and disdain by the
military establishment, and formed no part of standard training in
either the Army or the Navy. And while the Navy's codebreakers had
worked wonders in reading Japanese signals traffic in the 1930's in
an operation codenamed Magic, there was no system for analyzing the
product to provide sophisticated assessment of its import. Pearl
Harbor was the result.
As a dismayed British Admiral reported back from Washington to
Winston Churchill in London in 1941: "There is no U.S. Secret
Intelligence Service. Americans are inclined to refer to 'their
SIS', but by this they mean the small and uncoordinated for of
'Special Agents' who travel abroad on behalf of one or another of
the Governmental Departments. These 'Agents' are, for the most part,
amateurs without special qualifications and without training in
Observation. They have no special means of communication or other
facilities and they seldom have a clearer brief than 'to go and have
a look.'"
The bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941 taught Washington and the
Defense Department a painful lesson. If there had been adequate
intelligence and competent analysis, the ships and their sailors
could have been moved from a sheltered and largely defenseless
harbor out to the open sea.
To understand what could be done, the America looked to Britain
which had been leading the fight against the Nazis in Europe. By
1941, the British Special Operations Executive (S.O.E.) was already
running a very effective secret war against the Nazis in Europe and
the Japanese in Asia. Running arms and trainers to guerrilla groups,
taking an active part in sabotage and intelligence operations and
operating extremely sophisticated propaganda and disinformation
campaigns, the SOE became the model for what became the Office of
Strategic Services, or OSS.
When Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the creation of the Office of the
Coordinator of Information (COI) in 1941, he laid the foundation for
America's first truly modern intelligence organization, it was to be
not a creature of the military but of civilians. Its head was
William J. Donovan, a World War One hero, a Wall Street lawyer and a
Republican who happened also to be a Columbia Law school
contemporary, and firm friend, of the Democrat FDR.
He had
demonstrated a flair for intelligence gathering on several informal
missions in Asia and Europe, beginning with his own honeymoon in
Japan in 1919, and seemed the natural choice to lead the COI. He was
also the enthusiastic choice of the British who had been working
hard behind the scenes to try and get a man they considered their
close friend into a position of such power.
Donovan was not a man to make the military chiefs any more
comfortable about the creation of a civilian intelligence agency
beyond their purview. His initial recruits were drawn from the same
East Coast Ivy League establishment that produced him. One of his
first was Archibald MacLeish, the librarian of Congress. Academics
such as historians James Phinney Baxter III, William L. Langer and
Conyers Read, and economist Calvin Hoover formed the initial team at COI.
It was at this point that the divisions, compartmentalization and
competition that have so characterized America's modern intelligence
and military establishments had its roots. Although COI was formed
in the summer of 1941, Donovan was never let in on the existence of
the Magic codebreaking operation.
As he began to work more closely
with British intelligence on joint operations in Europe, and
importing some of their centuries-matured skills in subversion and
deception, military heads started to be suspicious of his growing
power base. Even J. Edgar Hoover at the FBI grew nervous. So while COI was performing a function the military had avoided, and was
operating at the direct behest of the president, moves were made to
kill the infant that was starting to flex its muscles beyond the
oversight of the military brass.
Donovan saw this, and headed off
the challenge by proposing to place COI under the control of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff in June 1942, at which point the outfit
assumed the name of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).
As OSS grew, so did the ranks of Ivy Leaguers who staffed it. OSS
became a mocking acronym for Oh So Social, as senior personnel who
were as comfortable in Wall Street law offices, banks, or genteel
East Coast drawing rooms developed the business of covert warfare.
The men and women generally came from the same background,
understood the same traditions and were outside the traditional
culture of Washington.
They were distrusted by the insiders and,
like many intelligence officers, relished the role of elitist
outsiders and so a culture that continues to this day was born. It
was a culture that produced the future DCI, and president, George
Bush. The DCI under Ronald Reagan, William Casey, was one of the
early members of OSS, so the tone of these early days was to be
perpetuated decades later.
There was another important foundation stone laid at this time too.
The early intelligence community founded and run in wartime, did
whatever was necessary to achieve strategic goals or tactical
missions. There was little regard to the niceties of the law or the
constraints of morality, merely a constant requirement to achieve
the mission and to do so in utmost secrecy.
Wartime is like that, of
course, but peace is a very different world. It would be many years
before the American intelligence community embraced the difference
between peace and war and understood the distinctions between legal
and illegal, moral and immoral. In this, American intelligence was
little different from the Soviets, the British or the French but the
huge growth of American intelligence during the Cold War combined
with its elitist heritage and unchallenged operational ethos created
a remote and unsupervised community that, for a democratic society,
operated with unusual freedom.
Elitist or not, OSS performed well, cooperating closely with
Britain's SOE in running covert operations throughout the war,
harrying the Nazis and the Japanese and contributing significantly
to the Allied victory. As the end of the war approached, and as
Donovan proposed plans for transforming the OSS into a peacetime
intelligence agency, the whole operation was very nearly derailed by
a black propaganda campaign wielded, it is thought, by J. Edgar
Hoover.
Newspaper articles alleging the creation of a US Gestapo
-"Sleuths Would Snoop On U.S." one read, a superb irony if indeed
Hoover was behind the leaks of Donovan's plans -provoked public
outrage, and with FDR now dead, Donovan's fate, and that of the OSS,
was sealed, victims of inter-agency in-fighting and bureaucratic
jealousy.
Donovan's legacy would live on, however. President Harry Truman may
have decided to disband OSS, but he believed in the value of a
functioning intelligence service, and on January 22nd 1946 issued
the directive that created the National Intelligence Authority
(NIA), which would oversee the operation of the Central Intelligence
Group (CIG).
The first head of the CIG was Sidney W. Souers, a
businessman from the Mid West like his friend, President Truman. He
was swiftly succeeded by Air Force General Hoyt S. Vandenburg, a man
whose diplomacy and background Truman felt would help the fledgling
outfit meld gracefully with the military establishment. Vandenburg
proceeded to build the CIG into a reasonably sized outfit numbering
some 800 officers, largely by taking back responsibility for
clandestine operations from the War Department, which had briefly
taken control after the disbanding of OSS.
It was the National Security Act of 1947 that took CIG from being an
agency that operated at the behest of the Presidency into a
fully-fledged, and legitimate, part of the American government under
the new name of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). it was also
this Act that created the loophole through which the CIA has used to
justify a swathe of morally, legally and ethically questionable
operations, underpinned by the same culture of wartime secrecy that
pervaded OSS during the war.
This loophole consisted of a phrase
tacked onto the end of the CIA's laundry list of legislated
responsibilities.
These included,
"advising the NSC (National
Security Council) on intelligence, making recommendations on related
matters, producing intelligence estimates and reports, performing
'additional services of common concern' for the government-wide
intelligence community and performing 'such other functions and
duties related to intelligence affecting the national security as
the National Security Council may from time to time direct.'"
The
phrase "such other functions", turned out to be the perfect cover or
any covert operation the CIA wished to run.
At the time the CIG transmuted into the CIA, both America and the
Soviet Union were trying to consolidate their post-War positions in
the rubble-strewn continent of Europe while at the same time trying
to undermine that of the other. Economies were in a shambles, social
infrastructure virtually non-existent and political systems in
Germany and the now-occupied states of Eastern Europe beholden to
the military administrations of the Four Powers, America, Britain,
France and Russia.
The fear and suspicion of this era, fuelled by
the existence of nuclear weaponry, created the battlefield on which
the new CIA would be waging its covert war for the next forty years.
Whether it was in the Soviet Union, its European satellites or in
countries that actually were, or were perceived to be, Soviet
surrogates the world over, the Cold War defined the CIA.
The transition from the 'Hot War" against Germany and Japan to the
Cold War against the Soviet Union and its allies was virtually
seamless for many in the intelligence community. Fresh from the
defeat of the Nazis, here was a new and just as threatening enemy
who allied leaders, such as Winston Churchill, were warning could
pose a clear and present danger to the democracies in Europe and
America. It was a convenient justification for business as usual.
This is not to deny that in the late 1940's and early 1950's that
there was no reason for fear. The acquisition of nuclear power by
the Soviet Union created the specter of devastation on a scale even
more horrific than that visited on Hiroshima and Nagasaki being
inflicted on the American homeland. Even children talked of the
"Commies" and the "Red Menace", fall out shelters were common and
schoolchildren were taught to hide under their desks in the event of
a nuclear attack.
In Europe, diplomatic hostility between the
Soviets and the other major powers led to increasing isolation of
the Soviet controlled sector of Germany from the west, and the
ultimate blockade of Berlin. In Asia, America was soon to be at war
again, fighting under the flag of the United Nations against North
Korea and the Red Chinese.
The CIA had found its raison d'etre, and in President Dwight D.
Eisenhower it had found a sponsor whose vast battlefield experience
taught him the value of high-grade intelligence. Eisenhower had the
vision to take an area of intelligence operations, such as SIGINT
(signals intelligence) and move it to a significantly higher level.
Under his watch, the National Security Agency, founded on the day of
his election in 1952 (although actually signed into law by President
Truman in one of the last acts of his Presidency), became a huge
organization whose web of listening posts crisscrossed the globe,
pouring unprecedented amounts of intelligence into the US.
The NSA was to grow into the most powerful intelligence agency in
the world with responsibility for all US communications security and
for Signals Intelligence (SIGINT). Some simple statistics give a
measure of its size. Inside the thousand acre headquarters compound
at Fort Meade is around 2 million square feet of office space, seven
acres of main frame computers housed underground, 7,560,000 linear
feet of telephone wire and 70,000 square feet of permanently sealed
windows.
The NSA currently employs more than 20,000 people and has a budget
in excess of $3 billion. Since its inception, tens of thousands of
people have worked at Fort Meade at a cost well in excess of $100
billion and yet such was the culture of secrecy that its very
existence remained a secret until the publication of James Bamford's
book, The Puzzle Palace, in 1982. Even so, inside the intelligence
community, the joke that has lasted through the decades remains
current: NSA actually stands for No Such Agency.
NSA is just one of several striking examples within the American
intelligence community of the culture of secrecy that has inculcated
the democratic process for much of this century. From the day it was
founded until the present time, very little is known about the
detailed workings of the Agency.
Even those with inside knowledge
will rarely, if ever, talk about what they know and the exact
capabilities of the NSA continue to be one of the best kept secrets
of our time. Those who have read the raw intelligence produced by
the NSA talk with awe about its ability to apparently listen to any
telephone conversation anywhere in the world but the details remain
thin.
Eisenhower also accelerated the development of computer technology
through Project Lightning, a $25 million research project overseen
by the NSA at its new HQ in Fort Meade, Maryland, and employing the
brightest brains from corporations such as IBM, RCA, Sperry Rand,
Philco, GE and from educational institutions like MIT.
Project
Lightning was one of the best investments in intelligence ever made.
The sheer telecommunications and computing power it placed in the
hands of the NSA dwarfed anything anyone else in the world could
come up with, and made the United States the pre-eminent gatherer of
electronic intelligence in the world. It was also instrumental in
giving the NSA a dim, but significant picture of the strengths and
weaknesses of Soviet air defenses, through the use of "ferret"
missions flown by airborne reconnaissance units which deliberately
triggered Soviet radar emissions, which were in turn analyzed by the
NSA.
An intelligence official who was connected with these missions
called their achievement "one of the great secrets of the Cold War",
adding, "We could have launched a strategic bomber attack over the
polar icecap and the Russians would never have known".
The CIA had no need to feel blind-sided by the creation of the NSA.
Eisenhower's other pet project was aerial reconnaissance. While the
ferret missions could nibble at the skirts of Soviet airspace, they
could not provide detailed information on what was happening deep
inside the country. Eisenhower was frustrated the ease with which
Soviet officials could easily learn about America's military
geography through publicly available information while he was almost
blind to what was happening there. His frustration was deepened in
August 1953 when the Soviets detonated a hydrogen bomb without the
United States having an inkling that it was about to happen. Out of
this frustration grew the U-2 spy plane program, developed as a
result of a task force led by James R. Killian, president of MIT,
with the input of Dr. Edwin H. Land, the inventor of the Polaroid
camera.
Land immediately saw the possibilities of combining the
newly-developed high-flying U-2 aircraft with the latest in
photographic technology, and suggested to Allen Dulles at the CIA
that the agency pitch for the job of developing a reconnaissance
program based on high-altitude spy photography. Dulles saw the
potential immediately, and he, Land and Killian presented the
concept to Eisenhower in 1954.
The president signed off almost at
once, but with chilling prescience closed the meeting by saying,
"I
believe the country needs this information, and I'm going to approve
it. But I'll tell you one thing. Some day one of these machines is
going to be caught and then we'll have a storm."
From the beginning, the U-2 program outperformed expectations. From
70,000 feet the aircrafts' cameras took pictures of stunning clarity
and detail and Eisenhower rejoiced in the intelligence they
delivered.
His fears about capture were allayed by his faulty
understanding that Soviet air defenses could not reach that high and
by CIA officials who assured him that the flimsy nature of the U-2
would guarantee that even if one was to be hit, or to suffer a
systems failure, it would disintegrate into so many pieces that the
Soviets would not be able to work out what had happened. It was a
classic bit of disinformation by the CIA, who gave the pilots
parachutes and cyanide capsules against the very real possibility
they would survive either an attack or systems failure.
On May 1st 1960, a U-2 piloted by Gary Powers was shot down over the
Ural Mountains. Soviet leader Nikita Kruschev cleverly leaked the
news out in two parts, at first revealing only that an American spy
plane had been shot down inside Soviet territory. The Americans
assumed the plane and pilot were completely lost and developed a
cover story that was immediately blown apart by Kruschev revealing
that not only had the plane been shot down, but it was also still
virtually intact, and that the pilot was alive and in custody. White
House bitterness at being misled by the CIA spilled into outrage.
The president's son, who worked on his father's staff, would later
fume,
"The CIA promised us that the Russians would never get a U-2
pilot alive. And then they gave the SOB a parachute!"
The debacle was the signal for the shifting of responsibility for
secret aerial reconnaissance from the CIA to a new agency that was
brought into creation five days after Gary Powers was sentenced to
ten years in jail by a Soviet court. The National Reconnaissance
Office was handed responsibility for the design, procurement and
operation of all American reconnaissance satellites.
So secret was
the NRO that from the outset its budget was hidden within those of
other agencies, a complete cover organization was established to
disguise its existence and for 13 years even the existence of the
NRO was kept totally secret. It was only a slip in a document
prepared by a Congressional committee that included the acronym NRO
that led reporters from the Washington Post to speculate about the
existence of an organization that employs around 4,000 people with
an annual operating budget of around $5 billion.
That first article did little to lift the veil of secrecy and the
existence of the NRO was not officially acknowledged until 1992.
The culture of secrecy was such that the NRO had been able to
operate with minimal oversight despite the size of its budget and
the thousands of people who worked there and the truly priceless
intelligence its satellites were able to deliver to successive
Presidents. In 1990, the NRO bought 14 acres more than was needed
for a new complex near Dulles airport outside Washington DC.
The
surplus land was intended for two other buildings that the NRO
planned to sell or lease. This piece of property speculation was
done without the authority of the Pentagon or the Director of
Central Intelligence. In addition, congressional investigators
discovered that the $304 million cost of the new building was 30 per
cent higher than was necessary. Finally, they learned that the NRO
had quietly stockpiled $4 billion in surplus cash -more than the
State Department's total annual budget.
The result was the eventual
demise of the NRO and the creation of a new National Imagery and
Mapping Agency.
Like the NSA, the NRO with its huge budget, thousands of employees
and stunning product that was used by thousands of other members of
successive administrations, was able to operate beneath a shroud of
total secrecy. While this undoubtedly helped the NRO do its work
more effectively, it also demonstrated once again just what can
happen when there is little oversight. It also showed how, despite
having one of the most open societies in the world, America is able
to host enormous secrets and keep them.
The brilliance of the technology behind the NRO's satellites,
coupled with the advances being made in SIGINT by the NSA, fostered
an almost evangelical belief in technical intelligence gathering
among those at the highest levels of government that was to pervade
the administration of American secret agencies for years to come. It
would take decades for the United States to realize that not every
picture is worth a thousand words, that cameras can be made to lie
by shrewd opponents and that old-fashioned human intelligence (HUMINT)
should not be totally ignored.
Coincidentally, it was in the field of HUMINT that things were going
nothing like as smoothly as they were at the NSA and NRO, Gary
Powers notwithstanding.
The CIA's first forays into covert operations using human assets
were under the control of Frank Wisner, a veteran of the OSS and
just as much a product of the East Coast Ivy League nexus as was his
OSS boss Bill Donovan. Wisner was appointed to run the Office of
Policy Coordination (OPC), a bland name for an outfit that ran some
of the most daring operations in early CIA history.
Wisner was the
brains behind the establishment of Radio Free Europe and Radio
Liberty, the propaganda front organizations that did so much to feed
western viewpoints to people behind the Iron Curtain. He was also
behind the scheme that floated balloons carrying printed propaganda
into Eastern Europe. Most critically, he negotiated with the Army to
create the first paramilitary training of CIA operatives at Fort Benning, Georgia and established the precedent that his OPC would
coordinate and conduct covert operations behind enemy lines.
He saw
the time as ripe for such operations, as did the British. There was
serious dissent against Soviet rule in the Baltic states and the
Ukraine, and both the British and Americans saw the potential for
operations similar in style and content to the Jedburgh missions
they had both run in France during the war to assist and expand the
efforts of the Resistance.
The operations had very limited success,
and in human terms were a disaster. British and American agents were
lost by the dozen, emigres that they had trained and re-infiltrated
were caught and shot. Of course they could not know at the time that
much of what was being planned was also reported directly back to
Moscow by the British traitor Kim Philby and the Canadian spy Gordon
Lonsdale.
This also led to the debacle in Albania where a British
and American covert operations against the Communist leader Enver
Hoxha, with a view to reestablishing the monarchy under King Zog,
proved abortive and costly.
They were to find more success elsewhere, notably in Iran in 1953
and Guatemala in 1954, where covert action by the CIA led to the
establishment of pro-western, and most notably pro-American
governments. In neither case was paramilitary force used; the
results were achieved through quiet diplomacy, deal-making and
promises of financial aid.
Whatever the moral and ethical
implications of the CIA intervening in this way, they demonstrated
that the global game of chess between the forces of free market
capitalism and the Communists was under way with a vengeance.
Emboldened by these successes, the CIA came to believe that it could
run world events according to its own set of rules and make large
portions of the world unattainable to Communism; the exact reverse,
in other words, of the game being played from Moscow. (Of course
winning the game in Iran was crucial not just for that reason.
Potential oil revenues were tremendous, and by undercutting similar
efforts by the British, the CIA did much to expand American
influence in the Middle East.)
After Iran and Guatemala, the CIA's covert plans went badly awry.
The Bay of Pigs was the greatest fiasco of all, probably of all
time, not only for the ham fisted manner of its execution but also
because it demonstrated that the glamorous young president John F.
Kennedy was not infallible. JFK was a firm believer in paramilitary
covert ops from the start of his presidency, and on February 1st
1961 had ordered the NSC to concentrate more effort on the
development of "counter guerrilla forces". By this time he was well
briefed on the Bay of Pigs invasion, which took place, calamitously,
on April 17th.
The debacle was the end of Allen Dulles, the
legendary spymaster, who appeared broken by the failure. After a
reasonable grace period JFK sacked him. The most important fallout
was that Kennedy shifted responsibility for paramilitary operations
from the CIA to the Defense Department, and on October 1st 1961
approved the creation of the Defense Intelligence Agency, another
set of initials to add to the growing panoply of three letter
agencies adorning the American national intelligence landscape.
The DIA's main task was to coordinate the intelligence and
paramilitary activities of the various branches of the armed
services. It was crippled from the start by too many conflicting
demands; the top brass wanted a broad strategic intelligence
service, commanders on the ground wanted tactical intelligence. A
Defense Department review panel reported in 1970, "The principal
problems of the DIA can be summarized as too many jobs and too many
masters."
At the CIA, the air of failure deepened as campaigns in Indonesia
and Vietnam failed; so did attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro and
the Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba. Operations started to spiral
into fantasy land with the fabled plots of Operation Mongoose to
make Castro's beard fall out, poison him with a diving suit exposed
to a bacteriological agent and provoke uprisings against him by
declaring him the Anti-Christ.
The diving suit fiasco was especially
bizarre. James A. Donovan, the lawyer who had negotiated the spy
swap of KGB agent Rudolf Abel for Gary Powers, had also managed to
secure the release of 1,179 paramilitaries who had taken part in the
Bay of Pigs operation. The CIA arranged for Donovan to give Fidel
Castro a new diving suit, but not before the CIA Technical Services
Division had impregnated the lining of the suit with a fungus that
would cause an extremely unpleasant skin condition, and laced the
breathing tubes with the germ that causes tuberculosis.
It was a
stunning bit of treachery, given that Donovan had negotiated in good
faith. For whatever reason, the Donovan assistant assigned to carry
the diving suit replaced it with one he had himself bought. Whether
he knew, or instinctively mistrusted any gifts the CIA might bring,
the lawyer disrupted one of the Cold War's strangest operations.
While the overall picture of CIA operations during this period is
one of incompetence, there is an argument, certainly endorsed by the
CIA, that use of covert action to influence political events, as
opposed to achieving intelligence gathering, was successful beyond
Iran and Guatemala.
They point to influencing the election of
moderates in Portugal in the 1970's and the support for the mujahadeen in Afghanistan with Stinger missiles, a vital part of a
campaign that eventually led to the Soviet withdrawal in 1988. Not
so worthy was the orchestration of President Allende of Chile in
1973, a democratically elected leader whose policies just happened
not to coincide with the CIA's.
In 1975, the Church Committee dragged all these events under the
microscope of Senate hearings, in one of the most embarrassing 12
month periods (The Year Of Intelligence) that the Agency has ever
lived through. The next year, Senator Frank Church was to wonder
that the CIA was directing covert action against "leaders of weak
countries that could not possibly threaten the United States....(N)o
country was too small, no foreign leader too trifling, to escape our
attention." This did the CIA become the scapegoat for subversive
actions real or imagined the world over.
Intelligence gathering operations fared somewhat better. After
seeing the success of a British operation in Vienna in 1949 code
name Silver, in which a tunnel was built under Soviet military
headquarters and the phones tapped, the Americans decided to do the
same in Berlin, giving it the code name Gold. It was a brilliant
scheme in conception, flawed in execution, dotted with near-farcical
mistakes and doomed from the start by treachery.
As a feat of
engineering, it was a marvel that engineers could clandestinely get
so close to their target and tap into the enemy's phone wires. It
was farcical that the heaters in the tunnel would melt the snow on
the road above, causing near heart failure among the operatives, who
switched off the heaters and rushed refrigeration units into the
tunnel.
And it was doomed because from the start of the intelligence
gathering in February 1955 to when it ended in April 1956, because
the Soviets knew exactly what was going on thanks to the treachery
of the British spy George Blake.
Where the Soviets made a mistake was in thinking the Americans could
not decipher any of the coded traffic intercepted by Gold. There was
so much of it, that planeloads of tapes were flown from Berlin to
Washington to be decrypted by a team of CIA analysts, and it was not
until 1958, two years after the Soviets shut the tunnel down by
pretending to trip over it by accident that the last of the tapes
was processed.
The intelligence haul was impressive, and provided a
key piece of intelligence, almost by omission, that indicated the
Soviets did not intend to launch an aggressive attack on Europe. No
other indicator of the degree to which secrets are kept hidden from
public view is needed than to report that all of the data mined by
Gold in the 1950's remained classified well into the 1990's, and
much remains secret to this day.
Operation Gold was the model for a similar, but much more
sophisticated operation, that took place in the Soviet Union itself
in 1979. In an operation code named TAW, the CIA planted a bug on
underground telecommunications cables at Trpoitsk, which lies 25
miles southwest of Moscow. A CIA asset had managed to join the
construction team that was laying cables for the KGB First
Directorate's new HQ at Yasenevo.
These cables connected the
building with the heart of the communist party power base in Moscow
itself. For six years, until the operation was exposed by US spy
Edward Lee Howard, the CIA mined real gold from TAW.
Former KGB
general Oleg Kalugin called it,
"The CIA's greatest coup. They heard
every conversation. Everything."
Two other illustrations might be helpful to understand the degree to
which operational intelligence can be kept secret over long periods.
In 1952, the American Navy began deploying the first of a complex
worldwide undersea surveillance system known as SOSUS or Sound
Surveillance System.
Acoustic sensors linked to miles of cables were
able to detect Soviet submarines hundreds of miles away. The network
of sensors stretched from the Atlantic, to the Pacific and the
Mediterranean and involved NATO submarines and surface ships,
thousands of civilian contractors and thousands more analysts who
delivered intelligence assessments on the SOSUS products. Although
the system was officially acknowledged in 1960 virtually nothing is
known about it today even though it remains active and two new
systems are being deployed to improve the detection capabilities.
In the mid-1970s, the CIA ran an operation codenamed IvyBells which
involved the laying of a waterproof pod on top of a Soviet
communications cable in the Sea of Okhotsk. The pod was able to
intercept all the top secret communications between the Soviet
submarine and naval bases on the Kamchatka peninsula and other
Soviet commands.
The pod was serviced by special nuclear submarines
that picked up the tapes and replaced them. Ivy Bells worked
perfectly for six years until the operation was betrayed by Ronald Pelton, a Soviet spy. Once again, it was an example of hundreds,
perhaps thousands, of people intimately involved in a top secret
intelligence operation for several years without any compromises.
Keeping secret the intelligence gathered in old wars is a hallmark
of both British and American attitudes towards secrecy. The
operation at Bletchley Park where during World War 2 British
scientists cracked the Nazis' Enigma code was not revealed until
over 25 years later, and even then details were not complete.
To understand just how closed American thinking on secrecy remains,
one need only examine the historic meeting between CIA Director Bob
Gates and his KGB counterpart Yevgeni Primakov in Moscow on October
15th 1992. In a post-Cold War gesture of goodwill, Gates had
accepted (at the encouragement of President George Bush) Primakov's
invitation to meet and discuss a more cooperative future
relationship.
Gates was in no mood to fall for any Soviet romancing,
and cautioned against any undue openness.
"The problem with our
people is that they want to say too much," he later recalled. "At
the slightest prompting they want to show off how much they know and
how they know it. So I had agreed a very limited agenda and a clear
structure to the meeting so that we would give a little and if they
responded then we would give a little more. But if we gave a little
and got nothing, then we would leave."
On the face of it, that was
reasonable caution. The "little" that Gates chose to offer involved
intelligence findings about the North Korean nuclear program. It was
bound to be more than the Russians knew, he reasoned, but did not
involve anything really sensitive. In other words, it was a pretty
thin offering. In return, he was handed a bounty of intelligence on
the North Korean chemical and biological weapons program,
demonstrating it to be far more advanced than the CIA's own
intelligence had suggested.
To illustrate further Gates' state of mind as he approached this
historic, and highly secret meeting: he asked his staff to come up
with a nugget of intelligence that he could offer the Russians as a
gesture of goodwill. What they gave him was Project Jennifer, the
1974 operation to lift a sunken Soviet nuclear Golf-2 submarine from
the Pacific seabed.
With the help of Howard Hughes who leased the
specialist salvage vessel Glomar Explorer to the Agency, they
attempted to lift the vessel. It broke in half on the way up, but
the bit they were able to keep held two nuclear torpedoes and a
wealth of intelligence. Gates thought that by revealing details of
this operation, describing how the bodies of six dead Soviet sailors
had been buried at sea with full honors and that the submarine's
flag would be handed over to President Boris Yeltsin, he would
somehow be demonstrating a new commitment to openness.
The trouble
was his news was as stale as could be. Not only had Operation
Jennifer's cover been broken by columnist Jack Anderson, requiring
the bid to retrieve the broken half from the seabed to be called
off, but former DCI William Colby had written and spoken about it
extensively. Yet still the CIA thought that this was an historic
admission.
The defeat of the Soviets should have created a new culture of
openness. Secrets have been spilling out, flooding out even, from
Russia and the former Eastern Bloc. The history of the recent past
is being rewritten on the basis of the actual documents relating to
some of the greatest moments of the post-war years. But the American
side of the story remains to be told.
Because the United States still considers itself to be at war -or at
least the country's intelligence agencies do -the deeply-ingrained
culture of secrecy remains in place, ensuring that secrets relating
to events that happened many years ago will remain secrets for many
years to come. As recently as July this year the CIA broke a long
standing promise to make public secret documents relating to 11
paramilitary operations that took place during the Truman,
Eisenhower and Kennedy presidencies, involving anti-Communist
efforts in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Caribbean.
The promise had
been made by two former DCI's, Robert Gates and James Woolsey, but
even so, when it came down to it, the CIA reneged, citing budget
constraints, a significant irony for an agency that takes a large
slice of the $26.6 billion annual intelligence budget.
DCI George Tenet said the CIA had "a responsibility to the American
people, and to history, to account for our actions and the quality
of our work." But, he added, the agency did not have the money or
the personnel to do the job. He said that the CIA had, a requirement
of law, released 227,000 pages on the Kennedy assassination and a
stack of files to be used in compiling the State Department's
official history of foreign relations in the 1950's and 1960's.
The
150 strong CIA unit, made up mainly of retired CIA personnel, tasked
with sifting these documents for sensitive data, was simply
overwhelmed. When asked how much the sifting operation costs, a
spokeswoman said she could not reveal that; it is a secret.
What did emerge in July was a smattering of documents relating to
the Bay of Pigs and the overthrow of the Guatemalan government in
1954, but in the case of the latter they accounted for less than 2
per cent of the available files. This is not the first time in
recent years that the CIA has promised to release important
historical data then failed. In 1992 the agency promised to release
the files on the 1954 coup in Iran. Then last year it was revealed
that someone had burned most of those files in the early 1960's and
even kept that a secret.
When he discovered it, then DCI James
Woolsey called it,
"a terrible breach of faith with the American
people and their ability to understand their own history."
Woolsey's words are a fitting epitaph for the culture of secrecy
which has so permeated the intelligence industry since World War 2.
But there is a broader lesson to be drawn from America's
intelligence history in the second half of the twentieth century. A
nation that prides itself on its openness, on the accountability of
its institutions and its strong democratic foundations has a dark
love affair with secrecy.
No nation in the world has protected its
secrets as well as the United States as the history of the NSA and
the NRO demonstrate, Despite congressional oversight of other
agencies, there have been remarkably few leaks and a bounty of very
well kept secrets. The culture of Need to Know, the
institutionalizing of compartmentalization of information combined
with an acceptance in successive governments of the overriding need
for secrecy has ensured that large parts of the most open society in
the world have remained firmly closed.
Little has changed in this culture since the end of the Cold World.
Where the files of the Stasi, East Germany's secret police, have
been opened for all to see, where many of the KGB's files have
spilled out of dark corners, very little of substance has surfaced
from American intelligence.
Even now, as intelligence moves into
cyberspace to create a new generation of offensive and defensive
weapons, the billions of dollars being spent are hidden from public
view. As we move forward into the new century, America seems certain
to carry with it the culture of secrecy that has been so much a part
of the present century.
With that culture comes secrets we shall
never know, secrets we should know and secrets the intelligence
community will work very hard to ensure we have no need to know.
Back
to Contents
TEACHERS HAVE
TAUGHT US THROUGH THE AGES
- THEY ARE
WATCHING US NOW - THE COSMOS IS THEIR OCEAN AND THEY HAVE BEEN
MINDFUL OF OUR NEED TO DEVELOP...
At what moment in the history of a young, blue world would teachers
choose to openly reveal themselves to a brash, adolescent race? One
thing seems certain: it has happened many times before across the
reaches of time, and the knowledge of how to make open contact work
well is likely to be found in the history books of the gods.
All factors considered, the most plausible scenario is probably akin
to the popularly termed "Prime Directive" in Gene Roddenberry's
space science fiction legacy, Star Trek.
The Prime Directive demands
of spacefaring beings that emerging civilizations be given the
opportunity to grow on their own, continually learning at a
visceral, species level the fundamental lessons of responsible
consciousness. Without such species-wide childhood, the ethical
judgment simply cannot exist to deserve empowerment with the fire of
the heavens – the ability to travel anywhere with whatever good or
ill you bear. No one would argue that a neanderthal should be
equipped with a nuclear weapon.
So why should humanity be equipped
with the power of space-time itself, unless we are good and ready?
In the vision of Star Trek, its Prime Directive accommodates no
contact between those traveling in space and life forms developing
below on new worlds. But, clearly in our case, we see significant
evidence of highly controlled interaction with our species, over
many thousands of years. In my view, it is probable that the concept
of religion is a fundamental part of the process that underlies the
process of contact within the whatever real Prime Directive is out
there. And is it possible that the real Prime Directive does allow
for an intentional or accommodating seeding of "alien" technology at
just the right moment, to help give budding science a push, and to
evaluate how the civilization responds?
If the hypothesis of this book is correct, would beings as
sophisticated as those planning and implementing our seminal
religious events be so clumsy as to allow their technology to
"accidentally" fall into our hands? Perhaps, and perhaps not.
Nature has a way of keeping her secrets just outside the reach of
those who completely lack the ability to employ them wisely, or no
life would exist in the Cosmos. But nature also provides guidance
and a vision of the future for developing beings. So must be the
situation facing humanity: a controlled process of education, and
increasing exposure in response to our successful absorption of the
most important lessons of advanced life.
If the hypothesis of this book is correct, then there is a threshold
of advancement beyond which a young species may earn the right to
membership in a cosmic civilization. Because of the high risks of
civil disintegration to an immature culture as described in previous
sections, open contact between human civilization and visitors from
other worlds could only plausibly occur after several cornerstones
of civilization were in place.
What are these cornerstones most likely to be?
I believe there are at least seven key graduation requirements, all
of them based upon the presumption that cosmic civilizations are
generally founded upon principles of peaceful and harmonious
coexistence.
A first test must be the ability of the species to think and act as
a group coherently, so that community and order is maintainable as
colonization of space is initiated.
A second test must be the ability to interact with more advanced
beings without experiencing paralyzing fear, and without projecting
the hatreds and paranoia from our primitive and clouded view of
reality upon them.
A third test must be the advancement of knowledge to the point of
comprehending the science and implications of a new technology as
seminal as fire: the use of spacetime itself, even if such knowledge
was prompted through "seeding" from above. The new technologies
we're dealing with will include gravitational propulsion, overunity
"vacuum" energy sources, and a new appreciation of the physical
power of conscious thought.
A fourth test must be acknowledgement and action respecting the
total power and majesty of life --understanding that biology and
natural evolution are forces of wondrous growth to employ
peacefully, never to be fought or used with hostility.
A fifth test must be the ability to preserve historical knowledge
with fidelity and permanence, ensuring that the cumulative
experience and wisdom of the species is perpetuated for all
generations that follow, and enabling a connection into a universal
system of knowledge.
A sixth test must be a scientific comprehension of the vital role of
religion in human history, and vice versa. Perhaps this book can
play one small part in bringing the two closer together.
A seventh test must be a deep comprehension of the importance and
sacred nature of truth, love, wisdom, knowledge, and the awesome
creative power of intent.
Whatever the ultimate graduation exam may be, we know that we have
now crossed one key hurdle: a growing number of us know how the
major facts of the human saga can plausibly fit together. To go the
rest of the distance and learn the rest of the answers, we must
realize, learn, and live in the absolute conviction that truth
simply must be an essential principle of highly evolved beings.
As you will find in the utterly fascinating pages that follow, in
the past 10 years humanity has come upon discoveries, made
inventions, and reached levels of intellectual maturity that strike
to the heart of each of the seven tests I propose.
Back
to Contents
|