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- The level to which ufological debates can sink is at times discouraging. Character assasination and ridicule are no substitute for
- reasoned inquiry. Many skeptics point to the report prepared in 1969 at the University of Colorado by the now infamous "Condon Committee" a
- s the final word on UFOs - the matter is considered by these persons as a dead issue because it is widely (and incorrectly) presumed that th
- is panel of respected scientists performed an unbiased examination of the subject and found nothing to support the reality of the phenomena
- reported. However, any unbiased reading of the final report will confirm that what the Condon Committee really performed was a "hatchet job
- " and no scientifically adequate UFO investigation has yet been conducted in the 40+ years since the Kenneth Arnold sighting first populariz
- ed the subject, including the Condon Report, which coincidentally was relied on by the Air Force, in 1969, as justification to terminate its
- official PUBLIC investigation of UFO reports, known as "Project Bluebook." One case cited by James E. McDonald, Phd., in his article
- "Science in Default," UFO'S A SCIENTIFIC DEBATE, Carl Sagan and Thornton Page, eds.(1972), as an illustration of the "serious shortcomings"
- of the Condon Report, occurred at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, on November 4, 1957, and is summarized by Dr. McDonald as follows:
- Two CAA control operators observed a lighted egg-shaped object descend to and cross obliquely the runway area at Kirtland
- AFB (Albuquerque), hover near the ground for tens of seconds, then climb at unprecedented speed into the overcast. On radar,
- it was then followed south some miles where it orbited a number of minutes before returning to the airfield to follow an Air
- Force aircraft outbound from Kirtland. This case is discussed at page 141 of the Condon Report and had been in Bluebook files f
- or years without serious investigation. The Condon Report states that on the night in question, with a "light rain over the airfield,"
- ...Observers in the CAA (now FAA) control tower saw an unidentified dark object with a white light underneath, about the "sh
- ape of an automobile on end," that crossed the field at about 1500 ft. and circled as if to come in for a landing on the E-W r
- unway. This unidentified object appeared to reverse direction at low altitude, while out of sight of the observers behind som
- e buildings, and climbed suddenly to about 200-300 ft., heading away from the field on a 120 deg. course. Then it went
- into a steep climb and disappeared into the overcast. The Air Force view is that this UFO was a small, powerful private
- aircraft, flying without flight plan, that became confused and attempted a landing at the wrong airport. The pilot apparentl
- y realized his error when he saw a brightly lit restricted area, which was at the point where the object reversed direction...
- The Condon Report concludes by commenting that the radar return obtained from this object was a "perfectly normal aircraft return," a
- nd that the radar track "showed no characteristics that would have been beyond the capabilities of the more powerful private aircraft availa
- ble at the time...There seems to be no reason to doubt the accuracy of this analysis." Dr. McDonald was suspicious of this "analysis,"
- since, among other things, airport control towers are not located in such a manner that "buildings" obscure so much airfield airspace that
- an aircraft can perform a dangerous 180 deg. low altitude turn while hidden from the tower behind them, then climb suddenly. He conducted a
- n independent investigation of the case, along with several dozen more cases used in the Condon Report. Although on-duty flight contro
- llers would have appeared to have the most credible evidence to provide, the Condon Committee never interviewed or contacted the two tower c
- ontrollers, R.M. Kaser and E.G. Brink, prior to evaluating the case. These men had never even heard of the Condon Project. They later stat
- ed that the object was so unlike an aircraft and exhibited such unusual performance characteristics that the "aircraft" explanation was amus
- ing to them. Apparently, by 1969, Dr. McDonald was the first person to contact them about the case since their original interview by t
- he Air Force immediately after the incident. The Bluebook file indictaes that the object descended in a steep dive at the east end of Runwa
- y 26, left the flight line, crossed runways, taxiways and unpaved areas at about a 30 deg. angle, and proceeded southwesterly toward the con
- trol tower at an altitude of a few tens of feet. Observing through 7X binoculars, they saw that the object had no wings, tail or fuselage,
- was elongated vertically and had an egg-like shape. It appeared about 15-20 feet tall, with a single white light at its base. It appr
- oached them until reaching a B-58 service pad in a restricted area. There it stopped for several seconds to a minute and moved off slowly s
- till at low altitude. At that point, the object climbed away at an extremely fast rate, which the controllers estmated to be far in excess
- of the capabilities of then current military jet aircraft. Brink stated, "There is no doubt in my mind that no aircraft I knew of then, or
- even operating since then, would compare with it. Both stated that at no time was the object hidden by buildings. Further, the FAA confirm
- ed that no buildings had ever existed in the area. As observed on surveillance radar, the object moved away at a high rate of speed an
- d proceeded a number of miles south, where it orbited the Albuquerque Low Frequency Range Station for several minutes, came back north to Ki
- rtland and followed a half mile behind a USAF C-46 just leaving Kirtland, before moving behind the aircraft out of range of the radar.
- The Bluebook 21-page report on this case lists it as "possible aircraft," citing the following analysis: The opinion of the preparing
- officer is that this object may possibly have been an unidentified aircraft, possibly confused by the runways at Kirtland AFB
- . The reasons for this opinion are: (a) The observers are considered competent and reliable sources, and in the opinion of
- this interviewer actually saw an object they could not identify, (b) The object was tracked on a radar scope by a compete
- nt operator, and (c) The object does not meet identification criteria for any other phenomena. The Condon Report devotes only t
- wo paragraphs to this case, cites the Air Force conclusion and adds that the private aircraft was "powerful" and was flying without a flight
- plan. As Dr. McDonald indicates, two phone calls to the principal witnesses would have rendered the "powerful private aircraft" explanatio
- n "untenable." Those calls were never made by the Condon Committee. By not contacting important witnesses in this and other cases summariz
- ed in the Condon Report, relied upon by many as "the most exhaustive scientific examination" of the UFO evidence ever conducted, many such d
- ramatic cases are listed now (and forgotten) as "explained." This is just a sampling of the poorly conducted scientific inquiry the Condon
- Committee performed. Contrary to the widley held opinion, the Condon(m?) Report is far from the "final word" on ufology which the professi
- onal skeptics claim.