Someone's Watching Over Us
by Maj. Donald E. Keyhoe, USMC (Ret.)

TRUE Magazine, 1967
Since January 1950, when TRUE published my
first article on UFO's (see page 6), there has been a tremendous change
in the public attitude toward Unidentified Flying Objects. Before, the
"flying saucers" were ridiculed by most Americans. Only a small number
knew the dramatic evidence - confirmed reports by veteran pilots and other
competent witnesses. Even fewer knew of the Air Force Top Secret Estimate
of the Situation - that the Flying Saucers - officially Unidentified Flying
Objects - were interplanetary vehicles engaged in a long observation of
the earth.
Today, according to national polls, half of our
population is convinced that the UFO's are real (see page 52). Over five
million people claim to have seen strange flying objects. Some newly convinced
Americans, reluctant to believe we are being observed by a technically
superior race, first ask if the UFO's aren't highly secret devices - American
or Russian. But the massive documented evidence of tremendous speeds and
maneuvers far beyond any earth made craft has proved this answer impossible.
More and more millions now accept the long-hidden AF explanation: The UFO's
are interplanetary probes from another world.
This great switch in public belief did not come
about quickly. The January 1950 TRUE article put the first strong spotlight
on UFO's, and hundreds of witnesses reported sightings they had withheld
for fear of ridicule.
In 1952, a sudden outbreak of UFO sightings made
front-page news, with hundreds of verified reports by military and airline
pilots, control tower operators, expert radar trackers, and other reliable
observers.
Early in 1953, one group of AF Intelligence officers
connected with the UFO project planned to release their most baffling cases,
also unexplained photographs of UFO's. No final conclusion was to be stated,
though the released evidence would strongly point to the interplanetary
answer. But at the last moment, fears of high-level officials caused the
plan to be killed. Withholding of UFO reports and "explanations" to prevent
public excitement steadily increased.
Despite this, many military reports leaked out
because the pilots and others involved opposed this cover-up as a bad policy.
In addition to UFO operations over the United States, thousands of similar
reports came to light in foreign countries.
In November 1957, another outbreak of sightings
further strained official withholding efforts, as a number of "touchdown"
landings occurred in this country and abroad.
That same year, investigations were begun by NICAP
- the National Investigations Committee On Aerial Phenomena - a private
fact-finding group with headquarters in Washington D.C. As Director of
NICAP, I have seen it grow to a powerful organization, recognized as the
largest scientific UFO research group in the world, with over 12,000 members.
NICAP has nearly 300 scientific and technical advisers and special consultants
on space operations, astronomy, communications, and other fields bearing
on UFO investigations.
Because of its serious and thorough evaluations,
and its determined efforts to expose the numerous frauds, opportunists,
and deluded persons spreading wild tales about UFO's, NICAP is now accepted
as the highest private UFO authority in the world. Our documented reports
to Congress and the press have played a major part in making hidden facts
public.
After the "marsh gas" fiasco in the spring of
1966, millions of citizens began to reject the AF UFO explanations. High
officials, still honestly believing that explaining away the sightings
was the safest policy for the country, were caught in an unenviable spot.
The result was a decision to have an independent
scientific investigation made - with officials agreeing to a "hands off"
policy. The University of Colorado was selected, and a number of recent
sightings has already had on-the-scene investigations by one or more scientists
from the Colorado project.
Even before the project began operations, NICAP
played a vital part, at the request of Dr. Edward Condon, the project head,
and his scientific colleagues. In addition to advice on field investigations
and evaluations, NICAP has made available several hundred verified reports,
including many duplications of cases in AF files.
As a result, the Colorado Project has added to
NICAP hopes for a fair and impartial report to the public. Although this
is not due until late spring of 1968 - and more time may be requested -
public pressure for all possible answers is rapidly increasing.
With at least half the country now strongly interested,
it is now more important than ever to re-examine the strongest earlier
cases, to search for possibly overlooked clues. It is also extremely important
that witnesses to sightings put their reports on record, to help complete
the picture and also to help the already lessening ridicule. I urge everyone
with factual UFO sighting information to report the details to me at NICAP,
1536 Connecticut Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20036. If you wish, we shall
keep your name confidential.
Silhouetted clearly against the
evening sky is this unknown disc,
which was photographed by Eddie
Watkins near his Hampton, Va., home.
Project Blue Book - USAF photo.
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