National Security Advisor and Secretary of State under President Nixon and Ford, the Harvard Academic, nuclear strategist, the man who won a Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating the end of the Vietnam War, but who is also considered by many, a war criminal. That, Henry Kissinger.
He was on the staff of Eisenhower's National Security Council and eventually became the chief of the Pentagon's Foreign Technology Desk in Army Research and Development.
And in Corsa's case, how we went from the Army's CIC to a National Security position in government to knowledge of the UFO program.
One memo involving CIA director Walter B. Smith highlights the National Security Risk posed by flying saucers, not just as unknown aerial threats, but as tools that could be exploited by the Soviets to spread hysteria or disrupt air defense systems.
The memo states the flying saucer situation contains two elements of danger, which in a situation of international tension have national security implications.
He also served as National Security Advisor under Eisenhower.
Nobody in conventional national security circles disputes this report. It steamed valid as a very real document.
Others suggest that MJ-12 and PI-40 were interchangeable names for the same group, which evolved over decades but remained embedded in the US national security structure.
Despite once calling Nixon the most dangerous candidate, Kissinger accepted the role of national security adviser, marking the start of his most infamous chapter.
Kissinger's time in the White House is National Security Advisor from 1969 to 1975.
Officially, these groups members typically included the National Security Advisor, senior officials from the CIA, and representatives from the State and Defense Departments.
Journalist William Shawcross described how Kissinger controlled the National Security Council's processes, funneling decisions through layers of analysis he personally managed.