UFO retrieval program

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Revision as of 09:13, 30 November 2024 by Editor1 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{About|the UFO crash retrieval program|programs to retrieve conventional downed craft|Conventional craft retrieval program}} UFO retrieval programs in the U.S. military have usually involved alleged crash-landed UFOs. ==History== UFO crash retrievals have allegedly occured since the 1940s or 1930s {{citation needed}}, including the alleged recoveries of the Roswell crafts in 1947 and in Kecksburg UFO inci...")
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UFO retrieval programs in the U.S. military have usually involved alleged crash-landed UFOs.

History

UFO crash retrievals have allegedly occured since the 1940s or 1930s [citation needed], including the alleged recoveries of the Roswell crafts in 1947 and in Kecksburg, Pennsylvania in 1965.

A second-hand account by Milton William Cooper was included in Behold a Pale Horse (in 1991, though he may have circulated the claim as early as 1988 in message boards). Cooper recounted that a couple of sergeants told him "several stories about being attached to a special unit that recovered crashed flying saucers". "Sgt. Meese" described an operation involving the transportation of a saucer so large that it required extensive logistical planning. According to Meese, a team traveled ahead to lower telephone poles and remove fence posts, while another team followed to restore them. The craft was transported exclusively at night to avoid public attention and parked off the road during the day under heavy cover.[1]

References

  1. Cooper, Milton William (1991). Behold a Pale Horse. Flagstaff, Ariz.: Light Technology Publishing. ISBN 978-0929385228. p. 14. PDF: Highlander Juan's archive. Internet Archive: "Behold a pale horse"