UAP Begin

UAP/UFO EARLY DAYS Richard Dolan, a UFO author and historian, interviews a former CIA official about the Eisenhower administration and the initial disclosure of the existence of UFOs and the secrets associated with them. The CIA official wanted to reveal these secrets before his impending death. He is a highly credible eyewitness, possessing truly bizarre revelations about the initial hiding and cover-up of beings and crafts. FORMER CIA AGENT INTERVIEW
Slide Brigadier General Lovekin entered the Army in 1958 and joined the White House Army Signaling Agency in May 1959 as a technical specialist. He served in both the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations until August 1961. Lovekin also states that he was in counterintelligence during his military service.

As part of Lovekin's testimony, he describes Eisenhower's concern about the government losing control over the study of UFOs as more and more control landed in the hands of private corporations. Today, his fears appear to have developed into something very dark.
BRIG. GENERAL LOVEKIN INTERVIEW
Slide Phillip James Corso, who served in the US Army from 1942 to 1963 as a high-level officer, discloses what he witnessed and expresses a strong opinion about revealing the truth to the citizens of the US. Corso acknowledges that he had been in charge of a military department that studied the UFO that crashed in Roswell in 1947.

Corso confesses that many technical discoveries that appeared in the public realm emerged from reverse engineering of alien technology. Some of these, such as Kevlar body armor, optical fibers, transistors, night vision devices, and the integrated circuit, originated from his development unit. He further explains that these discoveries were a direct result of what scientists studied and found inside the alien craft. He also claimed that his job had been to transfer alien technology to American companies.

Corso passed away in 1998 but was on a mission to make sure that the things he knew in secret would be exposed to younger generations. He was a true hero.
COLONEL PHILLIP J. CORSO INTERVIEW