• ParaNet File Number: 00038

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    (C) 1991 ParaNet(sm) Information Service. All Rights Reserved. ****************************************************************
    ParaNet File Number: 00038
    DATE OF UPLOAD: December 4, 1989
    ORIGIN OF UPLOAD: International UFO Reporter/CUFOS
    CONTRIBUTED BY: Jerome Clark ========================================================

    (C) 1989 J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies
    (Reprinted with exclusive rights to ParaNet Information Service)

    Editorial

    Wild Goose

    Two and a half years ago, the MJ-12 briefing document,
    allegedly written in November 1952 to inform President-elect
    Eisenhower of two UFO crashes (Roswell, 1947, and the Texas-
    Mexico border, 1950) and of a supersecret project called
    Majestic-12, was unleashed on the world, by Bill Moore in
    California and Timothy Good in England. Today the issue remains
    unsettled, though at the moment the skeptics seem to have the
    upper hand. (They argue that the signature of President Truman
    on another alleged MJ-12 document, which arrived on the same roll
    of 35mm film that the briefing document did, is identical to
    Truman's signature on another, undisputed, non-UFO document from
    the same period, the implication being that a hoaxer appended a
    real signature to a bogus document.) Within a few weeks Stanton
    Friedman will have submitted his report on his investigation to
    the Fund for UFO Research, which gave him $16,000 with which to
    conduct the inquiry.
    At that time perhaps we will be able to come to a fully-
    informed judgment. And perhaps then, too, we will have a chance
    to reflect on whether it would have been wiser to spend that
    money on further investigation of the Roswell incident, next to
    which MJ-12 (for which so far evidence barely exists) is a
    distinctly secondary issue. It is sadly true that the MJ-12
    uproar, for all the paper it has generated, has produced not much
    of substance (and not a single serious researcher, even Friedman,
    willing to identify himself as a "proponent" of the document).
    Certainly the MJ-12 affair has done little to enhance any real
    understanding of how the United States government dealt with the
    UFO phenomenon, including the presumed hard evidence from the
    Roswell crash.
    This is not to say that the briefing paper is unworthy of investigation; it certainly ought to have been, and to be looked
    into, at lease as time and resources permit. But in retrospect
    it seems clear that Roswell, not MJ-12, should have remained the
    primary focus. It is too bad that the issue of the cover-up was
    allowed to drift from something substantive (just how substantive
    will become clear next year when IUR reports in full on what
    CUFOS' Roswell investigation has uncovered) to a document sent
    anonymously and presumably by individuals already implicated in
    what everyone now acknowledges to be the spread of disinformation. It must also be noted that it was out of the MJ-
    12 swamp that the lurid pulp fantasies of John Lear, Bill Cooper
    and Bill English bubbled to the surface. According to Bill
    Moore, himself a central figure in the MJ-12 controversy, those
    tall tales about man-eating aliens were cooked up (so to speak)
    by intelligence-agency people seeking further to confuse an
    already deluded UFO buff. Moore acknowledges that he helped the
    process along. As he told an audience at this year's MUFON
    conference, "The entire story of a secret treaty between the U.S.
    government and the aliens, of exchanges of technology between us
    and the aliens, of battles between aliens and American armed
    forces, and of aliens allegedly having implanted human
    beings...came about as a result of this process. I know because
    I was in a position to observe much of this process as it
    unfolded and I was providing regular reports on its effectiveness
    to some of the very people who were 'doing it'..."
    It requires neither imagination nor paranoia to conclude
    that it was also done to Moore, who over a period of years (and
    continuing even now) has been the recipient -- not the only one
    -- of astonishing but unverifiable tales about Extraterrestrial
    Biological Entities, including live ones in government custody.
    Moore's informants, said to be military-intelligence people,
    produced (despite promises) no documentations for any of these
    claims, which had at least the advantage of being less
    insultingly illogical than Lear-Cooper-English's brainless
    scenario. As I remarked in an earlier editorial (IUR, September/October 1988), these sorts of claims "make a certain
    hypothetical sense," given what might have followed from a
    Roswell incident (such as an attempt to contact the controlling
    intelligences behind the attempt to contact the controlling
    intelligences behind the UFO phenomenon to learn what their
    purpose is), but "the evidence supporting them is all but
    nonexistent."
    One of the interesting features of the MJ-12 paper, not
    often remarked on, is that it is not in concordance with the EBE
    story. As the EBE story (or at least a part of it) goes, in 1949
    one EBE survived a UFO crash and spent the next three years at
    Los Alamos before expiring in 1952. Supposedly EBE was blabbing
    the full story of the ET visitation to his captors -- a detail
    curiously absent from the Eisenhower briefing document. At the
    same time, as IUR readers will learn in future issues, the
    briefing paper's account of the Roswell event is essentially
    accurate. That is, I suppose, of some small comfort to whoever
    still harbors hope for the briefing paper's authenticity.
    Another small source of comfort has been the absence of any truly
    compelling arguments against the briefing document itself, though
    plenty of arguments pretending to be that have been advanced.
    (As already noted, an MJ-12-related document, part of the
    briefing paper's appendix, Truman's supposed September 24, 1947,
    order bringing Majestic-12 into being, does appear vulnerable.)
    Friedman and Moore have done a good job of showing where the
    critics are mistaken, but even they concede this is not an
    argument for the briefing paper's authenticity. It is always
    possible, and in this case maybe even probable, that the critics
    are right even if their reasons are wrong.
    Perhaps the most surprising claim the briefing paper makes
    is that Donald Menzel, Harvard astronomer and archdebunker of UFO
    reports, was a member of Majestic-12, thus making him a conscious
    agent of an anti-UFO disinformation campaign. This remarkable
    assertion led Friedman to conduct the sorts of inquiries into
    Menzel's background that no one had done before. Friedman
    learned ("the Secret Life of Donald H. Menzel," IUR, January/February 1988) that Menzel possessed the highest security
    clearances and was well-placed within the U.S. intelligence
    community -- just as he would have had to be to be privy to the
    Ultimate Secret. This amounts to a finding of the consistent- with-the-hypothesis variety, but nothing more. No hint that
    Menzel secretly took UFOs seriously has come to light, and those
    who knew him best, including his wife, reject the idea out of
    hand. To this Friedman rejoins, reasonably enough, that Menzel
    would not have breathed a word of this even to family members.
    Yet Menzel's ferocious UFOobia was far in excess of what he would
    have had to exhibit to lead the press and fellow scientists away
    from the scent (not that most even knew there was a scent),
    suggesting that he was not acting under orders but out of the
    sort of manic obsession that has fueled other sincere if
    misguided debunkers.
    Nonetheless Menzel's appearance on the MJ-12 list is
    undeniably curious. Presumably it means something. It may
    indicate, since practically nothing of Menzel's secret life in
    intelligence was known before Friedman's investigation, that the
    hoax (if hoax it was) was perpetrated by individuals privy to
    classified information. In other words, this is no ordinary
    hoax; it had a serious purpose connected with national-security
    concerns. On the other hand, the hoaxer may have erred in making
    one extraordinary claim too many. Amusingly, it is not the
    briefing document's claim of a UFO crash that is the most
    difficult to believe; it is the claim that Menzel knew about it.
    The evidence for the crash is substantial, that for Menzel's
    knowledge of it is nil. A friend of mine once suggested that
    perhaps Menzel's name was put on the list for a reason: to
    assure any knowledgeable person within the intelligence community
    that the briefing paper was not, after all, a real leak of real
    information.
    None of this is to say, of course, that the MJ-12 briefing
    document has been proven to be bogus, or that no such project
    (whether called MJ-12 or something else) could have existed. But
    it is to say that, despite the enormous, even heroic, research
    efforts of Stan Friedman, the issue is as unresolved -- and
    probably unresolvable -- as ever. It could be true. It could be
    one of those exceedingly rare instances in human history when
    diamonds are found floating in cesspools. That doesn't happen
    often. More conceivably (though also unprovably), the briefing
    paper was hatched as part of a scheme to distract investigators
    form pursuits truly threatening to the cover-up.
    To all present appearances (though future events may
    radically alter our perception), the MJ-12 controversy has gotten
    us nowhere, maybe less than nowhere, since it has consumed
    valuable time that might have been spent more productively on
    other matters, not the least of them Roswell. From the
    beginning, it is true, CUFOS encouraged the MJ-12 investigation
    and IUR has reported, and will continue to report, new
    developments. But ufology's resources are limited and I think
    most would agree, after 2 1/2 years, that MJ-12 has eaten up too
    many of them already. Unless Friedman's Fund report brings forth
    major new evidence, all of us would be well-advised to move on to
    something else. If an answer to the MJ-12 puzzle is to be found,
    perhaps we'll get to it one day, while we're looking for
    something else. But as a whole new chapter in the Roswell saga
    begins to unfold, we have better things to do than to pursue a
    wild goose across a barren landscape. -- Jerome Clark

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