saw an employment with like an aerospace company or something, the Air Force would have
The night there was ever a Robert Jacobs in the Air Force.
UFO investigations program out of the Air Force.
The meeting included the Air Force's Office of Special Investigations, the Office of Naval
for the Air Force, captain Edward J. Ruppelt has quoted saying many of the sightings reported
The denied there was ever a Robert Jacobs in the Air Force and in another inquiry they
And the Air Force did.
The FBI and the Air Force's project Blue Book were kept in the dark.
And you were in the Air Force?
Yes, I was in the Air Force.
the Air Force, sack would not do that.
the Air Force.
The official policy to this day, as my understanding is that the Air Force will neither confirm or deny the exact location of stored nuclear weapons.
The Air Force tried to downplay the incident, blaming it on a faulty circuit card. In fact, they claimed they only lost communication for mere 59 minutes, but Robert Hastings, being Robert Hastings, did some back-channel.
They were told on each occasion during their exit interview from the Air Force that a flag was being put in their folders citing them as a security risk.
So that if they sought employment with like an aerospace company or something in the future, they would, you know, if someone checked the Air Force file, they would be, the Air Force would have designated them to be security risks.
I was a counterintelligence officer for the Air Force Office Special Investigation.
The study got published. The content of the study is at odds with the conclusions, but the Air Force cancelled Project Bluewick anyway.
The Condon Commission was a supposedly independent UFO review panel, paid for, but not influenced by the Air Force.