TOP SECRET:
Science Fiction
by John Vincent Sanders
UFO researcher and author John Keels column in the
November, 1998 issue of FATE magazine dealt in part with the
increasingly lucrative business of UFOs (movies,
television shows, books, videos, etc.) As interesting as that
article was, I was even more intrigued by the sidebar that
accompanied it. Although it was un-attributed, an Associate
Editor at FATE told me privately that columnists there frequently
write the sidebars accompanying their articles. This one offered
a rather provocative statement, Movies have had a huge
influence on UFO lore. Often the plots of old sci-fi movies from
the 1950s have been adapted by UFO buffs 20 or 30 years
later.
As a lifelong fan of both science fiction and the UFO
phenomenon, I was not particularly shocked by that charge. For
many, the relationship between ufology and science fiction has
always contained an element of the chicken-or-the-egg
conundrum. In his 1991 book Watch The Skies! aviation
historian and UFO skeptic Curtis Peebles made his own position
clear in the books sub-title: A Chronicle Of The UFO
Myth. A very good argument can - and has - been made to
support the proposition that the UFO phenomenon represents a
latter-day expression of humanitys propensity for
myth-making. I tend to agree with the idea that in the centuries
prior to organized science, mythologization was the only way for
the human mind to apprehend those aspects of the universe which
denied easy explanation.
Ever since Kenneth Arnolds historic UFO sighting of June
24, 1947, ufology has become entrenched within the popular
consciousness and culture. Over the course of the last fifty-two
years, this great body of knowledge has been revisited,
reinterpreted and expanded upon countless times. Considering the
fact that the very idea of UFOs is an intriguing one, the
creators and purveyors of popular fiction have addressed it
repeatedly in search of new ways and means of self-expression and
mass-entertainment. One consequence of all this has been an
increasing difficulty on the part of individuals to perceive the
dividing line between palpable fiction and ostensible
fact.
How much of a connection is there between science fiction and
ufology? One way to find out may be to explore the ways in which
the two have been linked during the second half of the 20th
century. Our first stop on this journey will be the medium of
Television; specifically, three highly regarded science fiction
T.V. programs of the 1960s. 5. The legendary series The
Twilight Zone featured an interesting episode titled
The Odyssey of Flight 33, which dealt with the eerie
fate of a New York-bound jetliner. While over the Atlantic, the
aircraft enters a mysterious, glowing cloud. Immediately, the
planes instruments malfunction and the doomed aircraft
begins a one-way trip back in time. Upon reaching New York, the
crew and passengers are horrified to see below them not the
thriving metropolis, but a sprawling swampland teeming with
dinosaurs. The story-line here seems to be a composite of various
strange incidents involving aircraft that were alleged to have
occurred in the Bermuda Triangle and elsewhere. One
such real-life incident comes easily to mind: the mysterious loss
of Flight 19 in December of 1945. The disappearance
without trace of five U.S. Navy torpedo-bombers - and the large
seaplane sent in search of them - remains as perhaps the great
unsolved mystery of The Triangle.
Star Trek fans will remember the original-series
episode Tomorrow is Yesterday. Here, the starship
Enterprise is accidentally catapulted back in time to
the mid-1960s. In the opening sequence, a U.S. Air Force jet is
sent to intercept a UFO over the American Midwest: which turns
out to be the Enterprise. Fearful of the planes
air-to-air missiles, Captain Kirk orders that an
energy-beam be used to hold the plane off until the starship can
climb back into outer space. However, the plane proves too flimsy
to withstand the beams energy and starts to break apart. As
its pilot is beamed aboard the Enterprise
the planes wreckage crashes to earth. UFO savants will
easily recognize in this episode the tragic Mantell
Incident of 1947. On January 7th of that year, U.S. Air
Force pilot Captain Thomas Mantell died when his F-51 fighter
plane crashed after chasing a UFO over the state of Kentucky. UFO
debunkers maintain that the accident was caused by a
non-functioning oxygen mask, while ufologists cite the hundreds
of mysterious small holes allegedly found in the wreckage of
Mantells plane.
The Outer Limits was the third sci-fi television
program of the 1960s to deal intelligently with the idea of UFOs
and extra-terrestrials. In his book Hollywood Versus The
Aliens, author Bruce Rux noted that the Executive Producer
of The Outer Limits was a former U.S. Intelligence
Officer named Leslie Stevens. Rux has also wondered if Mr.
Stevens experience within the American intelligence
community might have allowed him access to tightly held
information about UFOs and their alien occupants.
Here we have intriguing evidence that ufology has had a
profound influence on science fiction. In the case of the
Twilight Zone and Star Trek episodes, it
should be noted that the episodes themselves were
written,produced and broadcast in the 1960s; while the incidents
they were based on occurred in the 1940s. In the case of
Outer Limits participant Leslie Stevens, he had left
government service by 1960. At least publicly.
The manner in which science fiction material is sometimes
presented may explain some of the difficulty people have in
differentiating fact from fiction. This
point can be illustrated by referring to a best-selling science
fiction novel of the late 1960s.
The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton was
published in 1969 and dealt with a fictitious U.S.
satellite program to harvest micro-organisms in near-earth orbit
for use in biological warfare experiments. In chapter one, two
military men sent to retrieve one of these satellites enter the
fictitious town of Piedmont. To their horror, they
soon discover that all of the inhabitants appear to be dead. Soon
thereafter, they themselves die mysteriously. The rest of the
book deals with the life-or-death efforts of a small team of
scientists. Toiling in a secret, underground government
laboratory, they race against time to destroy the alien germ
before it can eradicate all life on Earth.
The Andromeda Strain was a seminal work on more
than one level. It introduced the world to such emerging
technologies as fiber-optics and computerized medical, biological
and genetic research. It also focused public-awareness on the
unsettling reality of Black Ops: highly classified
government projects conducted at Top Secret locations; many of
which are situated in the most remote and inaccessible parts of
the United States. In many ways, this book was a product of the
anti-Vietnam War/anti-Establishment mood of the 1960s. Prior to
that decade, most people were unaware of the hidden machinations
of the Military-Industrial Complex and very few
suspected that vast, secret and hugely expensive research
programs were being developed.
Michael Crichton presented The Andromeda Strain -
a novel - in a manner that would tempt readers to believe that it
was actually a work of non-fiction. The text is full of
authentic-looking documents and official-sounding
terminology. He also makes repeated references to real people,
places and things; and the careers and accomplishments of his
scientist-heroes are skillfully interwoven with those of
real-life researchers. He even goes so far as to include a
bibliography at the end of the book where actual scientific
papers and publications are listed; along with those of his
fictional characters. Thirty-years after its publication, there
are still those who believe that Crichton did indeed have access
to Top Secret information - and that the story behind The
Andromeda Strain was a true one.
In 1971, a movie-version of The Andromeda Strain
was released in theaters. Critics and movie-goers alike applauded
it; not only for its efforts to pierce the veil of government
secrecy, but also for the fact that it was an informative,
suspenseful and entertaining film. Turning a best-selling novel
into a successful motion picture usually requires a considerable
amount of cinematic license. The story-line of a book is usually
too lengthy and complex; and in order to craft a workable
screenplay, elements within the text are often condensed or
deleted. In the case of The Andromeda Strain however,
two subtle changes were made which bear close scrutiny.
In the book-version, author Michael Crichton placed the
fictitious town of Piedmont in the state of Arizona.
However, Producer/Director Robert Wise and Screenwriter Nelson
Gidding chose to place the doomed town in New Mexico. In one of
the movies opening scenes, the two men searching for the
deadly satellite consult a map - which gives the location of
Piedmont as the northwest corner of New Mexico. Why
might this be significant? To address that question, we must turn
briefly to the late ufologist and conspiracy researcher Phillip
Schneider.
Mr. Schneider told an amazing - and horrifying - story during
his lecture at the 1995 Global Sciences Conference in Denver,
Colorado. Schneider claimed to have been a structural engineer in
the employ of a construction company in 1979 that had just won a
government contract. The contract called for work to expand an
existing underground military installation. During the course of
the excavation, workers accidentally discovered a large,
seemingly man-made cavern near the underground base. To their
surprise, they found that it was occupied by small, alien beings
which ufologists refer to as Grays. To their horror,
the Grays attacked them using some form of high-energy weapon.
Mr. Schneider said that he had been struck and almost killed by a
blast from this weapon. Although U.S. military personnel were
able to kill a few of the creatures, only three people survived
the attack which claimed almost seventy human lives.
One of those in attendance at that Global Sciences Conference
was Robert C. Warth, President of S.I.T.U., (Society for the
Investigation of The Unexplained.) According to Mr. Warth,
Schneider opened his shirt during a question and answer period
after his lecture to reveal a large scar on his chest and
abdomen: evidence, he claimed, of his near-fatal Close
Encounter.
What possible link could there be between the shocking story
of Phil Schneider and the motion-picture The Andromeda
Strain? Well, the secret installation where the violent,
human-alien encounter occurred is, according to Schneider and
others, located somewhere beneath the desert near the town of
Dulce - IN THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF NEW MEXICO AND VERY CLOSE TO
THE LOCATION OF THE FICTITIOUS TOWN OF PIEDMONT, AS DEPICTED IN
THE MOVIE-VERSION OF THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN.
Even more shocking are accusations by Schneider and others
that the alien presence outside Dulce is actually the result of a
treaty between the U.S. government and the Grays. In exchange for
access to alien technology, the U.S. government allegedly allows
the Grays to abduct, implant and experiment upon U.S. citizens;
as well as allowing the aliens the right to harvest biological
compounds through animal mutilation. Unfortunately, the voice of
Phillip Schneider has been silenced: he died, under what some
believe to be questionable circumstances, on January 17, 1996.
The other curious change made in the movie-version of
The Andromeda Strain was the relocation of the
secret, underground government lab where the scientists waged
battle against the deadly germ. In his book, Michael Crichton
chose to locate this facility - which he called Project
Wildfire - in the northwest corner of Nevada. In the movie,
it is located in the desert south of Las Vegas. A meaningless
detail? Perhaps, but remember that Area 51 - the U.S. Air
Forces test-site for exotic aircraft, (and the place where
many believe the U.S. government stores and tests captured UFOs),
is also relatively close to Las Vegas. Area 51 was still a
relatively obscure place in 1971 and had yet to achieve the
notoriety it enjoys today. In fact, Hangar 18, the
first major motion-picture to address the question of Area 51 as
a storage facility for captured UFOs and aliens, would not appear
in theaters until 1980.
Were Robert Wise and Nelson Gidding alone responsible for the
curious changes made to The Andromeda Strain story:
or were they acting upon outside advice? Although the
true extent of Hollywoods inside knowledge concerning UFOs
is a subject for debate, it is not likely that definitive answers
are forthcoming. However, another possible link to The
Andromeda Strain might be found in recently revealed
Majestic-12 (MJ-12) documents acquired by researcher
Tim Cooper, Dr. Robert Wood and his son Ryan.
The Woods appeared on the December 7, 1998 broadcast of the
nationally syndicated radio talk-show Coast To Coast A.M.
with Art Bell to announce the existence of the compelling
papers. The term Majestic-12 refers to a Top Secret
presidential commission purportedly founded by U.S. President
Harry Truman in 1947. The group included a number of high-ranking
government officials; including then Secretary of Defense James
Forrestal, (who would commit suicide under mysterious
circumstances in 1948), and presidential science advisor Vannevar
Bush. Their mission: to evaluate - among other things - reports
of crashed UFOs and aliens near Roswell, New Mexico in July of
1947: the now-famous Roswell Incident. The first
examples of so-called MJ-12 documents came to light in 1984, and
others surfaced ten-years later.
Contained within the documents obtained by the Woods are
startling reports that certain individuals who handled the
corpses of dead aliens succumbed to a frightening disease.
Reportedly, at least four persons died of seizures and massive
bleeding as a result of physical contact with aliens. Although
the exact cause of death is not reported in these new documents,
it was suspected at the time that some micro-organism of
extra-terrestrial origin was involved: perhaps a real-life
version of The Andromeda Strain.
These newly revealed MJ-12 documents also suggest a possible
link to another science fiction movie: one of the classics of the
1950s.
Earth Versus The Flying Saucers was released by
Columbia Pictures in 1956 during the height of the Flying
Saucer Craze. It was produced by Charles H. Schneer, who
would go on to create such memorable fantasy films as
Mysterious Island, Jason and The
Argonauts and Clash of The Titans. The
special-effects were created by the legendary master of that art:
Ray Harryhausen. Earth Versus The Flying Saucers was
meant to be a fast-paced sci-fi thriller that was also rooted
firmly in the UFO headlines of its day. The screenplay was
suggested by the book Flying Saucers From Outer
Space by Major Donald E. Kehoe.
The film opens with an alien attack on an American rocket
launching base somewhere in the deserts of the Southwest. Later,
the aliens abduct two humans in order to gain
information. The climax of the movie is a dramatic and
action-filled attack on Washington, D.C. by giant saucers.
Fortunately, a heroic scientist is able to develop an ultrasonic
weapon in the nick of time, and the aliens are defeated.
The Flying Saucer assault on Washington may have been inspired
by an actual UFO event that occurred over the U.S. capitol.
During the night of July 26-27, 1952, three different radar sites
surrounding Washington picked-up unidentified, high-speed
objects. Jet interceptors were dispatched from nearby air bases
in an attempt to identify the UFOs: those attempts failed. The
incident made national headlines, and according to historian and
UFO skeptic Curtis Peebles, it resulted in the largest press
conference since World War Two. The conference was convened on
the afternoon of July 29, 1952 by Major General John Samford,
Director of Air Force Intelligence. Samford stated the Air
Forces belief that the UFOs were merely false
radar images resulting from a temperature inversion
over the Washington, D.C. area during the night in question.
The alien attack on the desert launching site in Earth
Versus The Flying Saucers could have been based on reports
Major Keyhoe had received concerning multiple UFO sightings near
the White Sands Proving Ground in New Mexico: the
place where much of Americas early rocket experimentation
took place. According to the newly discovered MJ-12 documents,
however, UFOs did more than just fly around over the New Mexico
desert. One document indicates that U.S. test-launches of
captured German V-2 rockets were actually interfered with by
UFOs. One particularly stunning memo was addressed to a
Lieutenant-General Nathan Twining. The memo, dated 8 July 1947,
ordered the general to proceed to White Sands and evaluate
reports of a captured UFO. The tone of the memo also suggests
that the White Sands facility was in something close to an
uproar; with allegations that a Military Policeman had committed
suicide. The full-story surrounding these new MJ-12 documents
will be found in the upcoming book The Secret: Evidence
That We Are Not Alone by Robert and Ryan Wood.
One of the most well-regarded science fiction movies of the
1950s was the film This Island Earth. Although I have
seen it at least a dozen times, it is the sort of motion picture
that can offer new revelations with every viewing. I have
identified four different elements within it that are also part
of contemporary ufology:
1. Humans abducted by aliens, (a la Budd Hopkins and Dr. John
Mack.)
2. A flying saucer parked in a concealed hangar dug into the
side of a hill, (alleged to be a reality at Area 51.)
3. Secret alien bases at various places on Earth, (the Dulce,
New Mexico underground alien base, UFO bases alleged to be
beneath the ice of Antarctica, and underwater bases off the coast
of Puerto Rico.)
4. Alien technology being covertly introduced into a
commercial research laboratory in the United States, (the late
Col. Corsos allegations that technology from crashed UFOs
at Roswell, New Mexico was secretly transferred to Bell Labs by
the U.S. government.)
During my most recent viewing of This Island
Earth, I was stunned to realize that the design of the
small Zagon spaceships, (seen only briefly in the
film), was almost identical to that of the Lockheed-Martin F-117A
stealth fighter. The resemblance is truly uncanny - and also a
bit eerie! The final-design of the stealth fighter would not
achieved until more than twenty-years after the movies
release.
Is modern-day science fiction the stepchild of ufology, or
vice-versa? Regrettably, that question may never be answered. The
evidence presented here could be interpreted to support either
position. Some have speculated that the genre of science fiction
is being used to channel truths too controversial to be
represented as such publicly. Others suspect that ufology itself
is frequently tainted by deliberate disinformation; skillfully
planted to create confusion and foster doubt as to the reality of
UFOs and other things. Perhaps all we can do is heed the advice
offered at the conclusion of that memorable sci-fi flick of the
1950s - The Thing: Watch The Skies! Keep
Looking! Keep Watching The Skies!