The Roswell Report |
The Center For UFO Studies Response ToThe Air Forces 1997 ReportThe Roswell Report: Case Closedby Mark RodeghierOVERVIEW In June of this year, the Air Force released their second massive report on the now wellknown Roswell incident that occurred in and near Roswell, New Mexico in early July, 1947. The first Air Force report in September 1994 concluded that the debris found by rancher Mac Brazel was from an Army Air Forces balloonborne research project code named MOGUL. Despite the seeming finality of that first report, the Air Force clearly felt the need to release a new report that discusses the claims of alien bodies that were found at a second location in New Mexico in 1947. The new report concludes that: 1) The witnesses to the reports of alien bodies are generally telling the truth;
As with the 1994 report, the new report is clumsily padded to make it appear to be lengthy and impressive. This is done by using a large font, many irrelevant photos, and wide margins. A great deal of research was done by the Air Force to gather information about balloon projects in New Mexico, including interviews with surviving members of the balloon teams. But as was the case in the 1994 report, no effort was devoted to interviewing stillliving witnesses of the events from 1947. This makes a mockery of the claim by Secretary of the Air Force Sheila E. Widnall in the Foreword that "Our objective throughout this inquiry has been simple and consistent: to find all the facts and bring them to light." In the statements below, we detail the errors, omissions and faulty reasoning in the Air Force report. These defects are so egregious in some instances that we wonder whether the report was even reviewed at the Pentagon. The general flaw in the Air Force report is clear: if the testimony is taken at face value, then the Roswell events occurred in 1947, and the Air Force could find no explanation for tales of alien bodies from its activities in that year. Accordingly, the Air Force, with no supporting rationale, simply assumed that the witnesses were mistaken about the date of the incident. In other words, if the Air Force, in good faith, treated the events as occurring in 1947, they would have been stuck without an explanation. The result is the preposterous report they just produced. SPECIFIC ERRORS, FLAWS, AND PROBLEMS IN THE REPORT
As a final point, consider this bit of Air Force "reasoning." The report claims that Glenn Denniss testimony combines several disparate events, plus military and civilian personnel from different eras at Roswell. The Air Force claims that Dennis conglomerated all these events or persons into one coherent memory: 1) Autopsies of dead crewmen from a KC97 accident on June 26, 1956. 2) A balloon mishap that occurred west of Roswell on May 21, 1959, and Capt. Joseph W. Kittinger, who had red hair, and who was present at the base hospital after the accident. 3) Colonel Lee F. Ferrell, who was at the base hospital from October 1954 to June 1960. 4) Nurse Lucille C. Slattery, who was Chief Nurse at the hospital in 1947. 5) Nurse Idabelle Wilson, stationed at the base from February 1956 to May 1960. 6) Nurse Eileen M. Fanton, stationed at the base from December 1946 to September 1947. The reader is left to judge the likelihood of all these unconsciously being combined into one event by a sane, competent witness, one who cannot even be proved to have been at the hospital in 1959, or to have known or met any of these military personnel. SUMMARY In summary then, examination of this latest report demonstrates beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was NOT an objective inquiry. Regardless of one's personal opinion of UFOs, it is plain to see that SOMETHING occurred that has resulted in two "final" AF reports within three years. One can only conclude that it is simply another government whitewash attempt, or worse, a clear case of incompetence and waste of taxpayer money. We look forward in eager anticipation to the next "final" Air Force report on the Roswell event. REFERENCE MATERIALThe Roswell Report: Case Closed, James McAndrew, Headquarters United States Air Force, Washington, DC, 1997. OTHER REFERENCE MATERIAL Several articles have been published in International UFO Reporter, the magazine of the Center for UFO Studies, on the first Air Force report or matters relevant to this second report. These include: The Continuing Search for the Roswell Archaeologists: Closing the Circle, by Thomas Carey (January/February 1994) When and Where did the Roswell Object Crash?, by Kevin Randle and Donald Schmitt (January/February 1994) The Air Force Report on Roswell: An Absence of Evidence, by Mark Rodeghier and Mark Chesney (September/October 1994) The Project Mogul Flights and Roswell, Kevin Randle, (November/December 1994) The Roswell Debris: A Quantitative Evaluation of the Project Mogul Hypothesis, by Robert Galganski (March/April 1995) Project Mogul and the Roswell Crash, an exchange with Charles B. Moore, Robert G. Todd, Mark Rodeghier and Kevin Randle (March/April 1995) What the GAO Found: Nothing About Much Ado, by Mark Rodeghier and Mark Chesney (July/August 1995) The Final(?) Air Force Report on Roswell, by Mark Rodeghier and Mark Chesney, (Winter 1995) FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Mark Rodeghier at the Center for UFO Studies, 2457 W. Peterson Ave., Chicago, IL 60659, phone 773-271-3611 (e-mail: hynek@cufos.org ). |
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