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-
- Air Force Press Release
-
- The following was posted to alt.paranet.ufo by Steven Kaeser
- (skaeser@hr.house.gov) on September 9, 1994.
-
- Here is the text of one of the AP stories regarding this announcement:
-
- Air Force Rejects UFO Theory in 1947 `Roswell Incident'
-
- By JOHN DIAMOND, Associated Press Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) A supposed alien spacecraft discovered near Roswell, N.M.,
- 47 years ago likely was a secret Army Air Force balloon designed to monitor
- Soviet nuclear testing, the Air Force concluded Thursday.
-
- The Air Force in a report on the ``Roswell Incident'' said contrary claims
- in a wave of sensational books and television specials are ``undocumented,
- taken out of context, self-serving or otherwise dubious.''
-
- The July 1947 discovery of wreckage on a ranch near Roswell has been at the
- center of longstanding disputes between UFO advocates and the government
- over whether the Air Force has been hiding evidence about alien spacecraft
- discoveries.
-
- The Air Force began its investigation earlier this year amid charges that
- it was covering up the truth.
-
- The material found near Roswell consisted of foil-wrapped fabric, wooden
- sticks, rubber pieces, and small I-beams with strange markings on them. A
- local newspaper at the time reported: Air Force Captures Flying Saucer On
- Ranch.
-
- ``The Air Force research did not locate or develop any information that the
- `Roswell Incident' was a UFO event,'' wrote Col. Richard Weaver, author of
- the report. ``The most likely source of the wreckage ... was from Project
- Mogul balloon trains.'' Although it rejects UFO and alien theories, the
- report, nevertheless, suggests an interesting ancestry to the Roswell
- wreckage.
-
- Project Mogul was a top-secret venture to develop balloons that would carry
- sensing devices aloft and alert the U.S. military of any Soviet nuclear
- tests. It was a high priority at a time when the government was concerned
- that its monopoly on nuclear weapons might be threatened.
-
- The Roswell Incident also occurred in the midst of the so-called UFO wave,
- the surge of interest in unidentified flying saucers, presumably from other
- galaxies. Shortly after the incident, officials in what was then the Army
- Air Force dismissed the flying saucer speculation saying that the wreckage
- found near Roswell was a weather balloon.
-
- There the matter stood until 1978 when the supermarket tabloid National
- Inquirer reported that Maj. Jesse Marcel, the Army Air Force intelligence
- officer who brought in the wreckage, claimed he had discovered UFO debris.
-
- A series of books followed advancing the UFO theory and accusing the Air
- Force of coverup. The Robert Stack-hosted television show, ``Unsolved
- Mysteries,'' aired a recreation of the Roswell incident and other
- television shows followed suit. According to the Air Force, a made-for-TV
- movie is in the works.
-
- ``From the rather benign description of the `event' and the recovery of
- some material as described in the original newspaper accounts, the `Roswell
- Incident' has since grown to mythical, if not mystical, proportions,''
- Weaver wrote in the Air Force report. Weaver conceded that debunking
- conspiracy theories is a no-win business because ``pro-UFO'' elements would
- simply dismiss the report as part of the coverup.
-
- Rep. Steven Schiff, R-N.M., began pressing the Pentagon last year to
- declassify documents relating to Roswell. The Air Force appears to have
- expended considerable energy on the report.
-
- Dozens of people, including several who were in Roswell and involved in the
- discovery of the wreckage, as well as veterans of Project Mogul, were
- interviewed. Investigators also combed archives for material relating to
- UFOs.
-
- In one example of the extent of the effort, the Air Force tracked down the
- original photo negatives of newspaper pictures showing the wreckage and
- sent them to ``a national level organization'' for digital analysis. This
- probably refers to the National Ph Interpretation Center, a super-secret
- branch of the CIA. The analysis found that the photos were of
- ``insufficient quality'' to produce substantive results.
-
- Walter Haut, a volunteer at the UFO Museum at Roswell, a center devoted to
- gathering information on this and other UFO incidents, rejected the Air
- Force conclusions.
-
- ``I feel very strongly about it,'' Haut said. Referring to those who made
- the original UFO claim, he said, ``We're not talking about flaky people.''
-
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