China -- UFO crash at Chengdu 1947 revealed in declassified
files
CHENGDU -- Recently All News Web published this ground-breaking article revealing the Chengdu Military Zone as China's
"Area 51". Now further information has been revealed to confirm this to be the case. An event that might well leave UFO researchers
pinching themselves has come to light. An incident that almost entirely mirrors the Roswell crash has been unearthed as occurring
on July 18, 1947, in Chengdu! On July 18th
1947 a farmer near Chengdu found unusual remains of what appeared to be a crashed flying saucer or UFO in the fields. News
spread and locals congregated to see the bizarre UFO wreckage. The head of the Physics department of the local university,
Professor Zeng Zhanhan, was asked to analyze the wreckage along with other experts and a report was written up. The object
was declared a UFO. At this point the military and the police stepped in and informed the academics that the wreckage was
merely a weather balloon.
Professor Zeng Zhanhan was then "asked" to retract his
analysis and confirm the object to be a weather balloon. The US military was stationed at the time in Chengdu and it is believed
they were involved in this cover-up. The farmer, other witnesses and the professor were never satisfied with the "weather
balloon" theory. Rumors still persist that it was a UFO of alien origin. Since then numerous UFO sightings have taken place
in Chengdu. The parallels with the Roswell are obviously striking. Thanks to Michael Cohen m.cohen@allnewsweb.com Source:Sichuan Online
Breaking news: China’s real Area 51 UFO zone revealed
09 April 2009
Michael Cohen m.cohen@allnewsweb.com
For years many westerners, especially UFO researchers,
have wondered where China’s equivalent of the Area-51 in the US is without being able to pinpoint a location. Now thanks
to an All News Web exclusive investigation we are able to solve this mystery with a high degree of certainty.
Recently this article along with photos appeared in
the Govt owned Chinese regional newspaper, Sichuan Daily. The most curious article, titled 'A large number of Air Force SU-30/SU-27
fighters assemble in China's Area 51', refers to an area in the Sichuan province and includes some photos. The article mentiones
that a large scale gathering and training exercise involving China’s hi-tech SU-27 jet-fighters is taking place there
at the current time. Strangely, the article does not specify the exact location of this event.
Even stranger is the article's lengthy explanation of
the original Area 51’s alien and UFO connection all while referring to this area as China's equivalent. Thanks to some
sharp-eyed local readers, the area has been now been identified as within the Chengdu Military Zone near the city of Chengdu
which is the capital of the south-western province of Sichuan. The specific field lies between the Chengdu Military Area Air
Force Command headquarters and the Bai Shiyi (White City) Military Airport. Does this represent a leak by the Chinese authorities
designed to reveal that they too possess UFO technology?
Many will be asking why China is now engaging in these
intense military exercises. Others will be asking if there is a connection to this area and the alleged UFO bases high in
the Himalayas to its west or if activities here have anything to do with the multitude of mass UFO sightings occurring throughout
China. One thing is for certain, China’s newly revealed Area 51 probably holds some earth-shattering secrets.
BACK/STORY
The Road to Area 51
by Annie Jacobsen
Area 51. It's the most famous military institution in the world that doesn't officially exist. If it did, it would be found
about 100 miles outside Las Vegas in Nevada's high desert, tucked between an Air Force base and an abandoned nuclear testing
ground. Then again, maybe not— the U.S. government refuses to say. You can't drive anywhere close to it, and until recently,
the airspace overhead was restricted—all the way to outer space. Any mention of Area 51 gets redacted from official
documents, even those that have been declassified for decades.
It has become the holy grail for conspiracy theorists,
with UFOlogists positing that the Pentagon reverse engineers flying saucers and keeps extraterrestrial beings stored in freezers.
Urban legend has it that Area 51 is connected by underground tunnels and trains to other secret facilities around the country.
In 2001, Katie Couric told Today Show audiences that 7 percent of Americans doubt the moon landing happened—that
it was staged in the Nevada desert. Millions of X-Files fans believe the truth may be "out there," but more likely
it's concealed inside Area 51's Strangelove-esque hangars—buildings that, though confirmed by Google Earth, the
government refuses to acknowledge.
The problem is the myths of Area 51 are hard to dispute if no one can speak on the record about what actually happened
there. Well, now, for the first time, someone is ready to talk—in fact, five men are, and their stories rival the most
outrageous of rumors. Colonel Hugh "Slip" Slater, 87, was commander of the Area 51 base in the 1960s. Edward Lovick, 90, featured
in "What Plane?" in LA's March issue, spent three decades radar testing some of the world's most famous aircraft (including
the U-2, the A-12 OXCART and the F-117). Kenneth Collins, 80, a CIA experimental test pilot, was given the silver star. Thornton
"T.D." Barnes, 72, was an Area 51 special-projects engineer. And Harry Martin, 77, was one of the men in charge of the base's
half-million-gallon monthly supply of spy-plane fuels. Here are a few of their best stories—for the record:
On
May 24, 1963, Collins flew out of Area 51's restricted airspace in a top-secret spy plane code-named OXCART, built by Lockheed
Aircraft Corporation. He was flying over Utah when the aircraft pitched, flipped and headed toward a crash. He ejected into
a field of weeds.
Almost 46 years later, in late fall of 2008, sitting in a coffee shop in the San Fernando Valley,
Collins remembers that day with the kind of clarity the threat of a national security breach evokes: "Three guys came driving
toward me in a pickup. I saw they had the aircraft canopy in the back. They offered to take me to my plane." Until that moment,
no civilian without a top-secret security clearance had ever laid eyes on the airplane Collins was flying. "I told them not
to go near the aircraft. I said it had a nuclear weapon on-board." The story fit right into the Cold War backdrop of the day,
as many atomic tests took place in Nevada. Spooked, the men drove Collins to the local highway patrol. The CIA disguised the
accident as involving a generic Air Force plane, the F-105, which is how the event is still listed in official records.
As for the guys who picked him up, they were tracked down and told to sign national security nondisclosures. As part of
Collins' own debriefing, the CIA asked the decorated pilot to take truth serum. "They wanted to see if there was anything
I'd for-gotten about the events leading up to the crash." The Sodium Pento-thal experience went without a hitch—except
for the reaction of his wife, Jane.
"Late Sunday, three CIA agents brought me home. One drove my car; the other two
carried me inside and laid me down on the couch. I was loopy from the drugs. They handed Jane the car keys and left without
saying a word." The only conclusion she could draw was that her husband had gone out and gotten drunk. "Boy, was she mad,"
says Collins with a chuckle.
At the time of Collins' accident, CIA pilots had been flying spy planes in and out of
Area 51 for eight years, with the express mission of providing the intelligence to prevent nuclear war. Aerial reconnaissance
was a major part of the CIA's preemptive efforts, while the rest of America built bomb shelters and hoped for the best.
"It
wasn't always called Area 51," says Lovick, the physicist who developed stealth technology. His boss, legendary aircraft designer
Clarence L. "Kelly" Johnson, called the place Paradise Ranch to entice men to leave their families and "rough it" out in the
Nevada desert in the name of science and the fight against the evil empire. "Test pilot Tony LeVier found the place by flying
over it," says Lovick. "It was a lake bed called Groom Lake, selected for testing because it was flat and far from anything.
It was kept secret because the CIA tested U-2s there."
When Frances Gary Powers was shot down over Sverdlovsk, Russia,
in 1960, the U-2 program lost its cover. But the CIA already had Lovick and some 200 scientists, engineers and pilots working
at Area 51 on the A-12 OXCART, which would outfox Soviet radar using height, stealth and speed.
Col. Slater was in
the outfit of six pilots who flew OXCART missions during the Vietnam War. Over a Cuban meat and cheese sandwich at the Bahama
Breeze restaurant off the Las Vegas Strip, he says, "I was recruited for the Area after working with the CIA's classified
Black Cat Squadron, which flew U-2 missions over denied territory in Mainland China. After that, I was told, 'You should come
out to Nevada and work on something interesting we're doing out there.' "
Even though Slater considers himself a fighter
pilot at heart—he flew 84 missions in World War II—the opportunity to work at Area 51 was impossible to pass up.
"When I learned about this Mach-3 aircraft called OXCART, it was completely intriguing to me—this idea of flying three
times the speed of sound! No one knew a thing about the program. I asked my wife, Barbara, if she wanted to move to Las Vegas,
and she said yes. And I said, 'You won't see me but on the weekends,' and she said, 'That's fine!' " At this recollection,
Slater laughs heartily. Barbara, dining with us, laughs as well. The two, married for 63 years, are rarely apart today.
"We
couldn't have told you any of this a year ago," Slater says. "Now we can't tell it to you fast enough." That is because in
2007, the CIA began declassifying the 50-year-old OXCART program. Today, there's a scramble for eyewitnesses to fill in the
information gaps. Only a few of the original players are left. Two more of them join me and the Slaters for lunch: Barnes,
formerly an Area 51 special-projects engineer, with his wife, Doris; and Martin, one of those overseeing the OXCART's specially
mixed jet fuel (regular fuel explodes at extreme height, temperature and speed), with his wife, Mary. Because the men were
sworn to secrecy for so many decades, their wives still get a kick out of hearing the secret tales.
Barnes was married
at 17 (Doris was 16). To support his wife, he became an electronics wizard, buying broken television sets, fixing them up
and reselling them for five times the original price. He went from living in bitter poverty on a Texas Panhandle ranch with
no electricity to buying his new bride a dream home before he was old enough to vote. As a soldier in the Korean War, Barnes
demonstrated an uncanny aptitude for radar and Nike missile systems, which made him a prime target for recruitment by the
CIA—which indeed happened when he was 22. By 30, he was handling nuclear secrets.
"The agency located each guy
at the top of a certain field and put us together for the programs at Area 51," says Barnes. As a security precaution, he
couldn't reveal his birth name—he went by the moniker Thunder. Coworkers traveled in separate cars, helicopters and
airplanes. Barnes and his group kept to themselves, even in the mess hall. "Our special-projects group was the most classified
team since the Manhattan Project," he says.
Harry Martin's specialty was fuel. Handpicked by the CIA from the Air Force,
he underwent rigorous psychological and physical tests to see if he was up for the job. When he passed, the CIA moved his
family to Nevada. Because OXCART had to refuel frequently, the CIA kept supplies at secret facilities around the globe. Martin
often traveled to these bases for quality-control checks. He tells of preparing for a top-secret mission from Area 51 to Thule,
Greenland. "My wife took one look at me in these arctic boots and this big hooded coat, and she knew not to ask where I was
going."
So, what of those urban legends—the UFOs studied in secret, the underground tunnels connecting clandestine
facilities? For decades, the men at Area 51 thought they'd take their secrets to the grave. At the height of the Cold War,
they cultivated anonymity while pursuing some of the country's most covert projects. Conspiracy theories were left to popular
imagination. But in talking with Collins, Lovick, Slater, Barnes and Martin, it is clear that much of the folklore was spun
from threads of fact.
As for the myths of reverse engineering of flying saucers, Barnes offers some insight: "We did
reverse engineer a lot of foreign technology, including the Soviet MiG fighter jet out at the Area"—even though the
MiG wasn't shaped like a flying saucer. As for the underground-tunnel talk, that, too, was born of truth. Barnes worked on
a nuclear-rocket program called Project NERVA, inside underground chambers at Jackass Flats, in Area 51's backyard. "Three
test-cell facilities were connected by railroad, but everything else was underground," he says.
And the quintessential
Area 51 conspiracy—that the Pentagon keeps captured alien spacecraft there, which they fly around in restricted airspace?
Turns out that one's pretty easy to debunk. The shape of OXCART was unprece-dented, with its wide, disk-like fuselage designed
to carry vast quantities of fuel. Commercial pilots cruising over Nevada at dusk would look up and see the bottom of OXCART
whiz by at 2,000-plus mph. The aircraft's tita-nium body, moving as fast as a bullet, would reflect the sun's rays in a way
that could make anyone think, UFO.
In all, 2,850 OXCART test flights were flown out of Area 51 while Slater
was in charge. "That's a lot of UFO sightings!" Slater adds. Commercial pilots would report them to the FAA, and "when they'd
land in California, they'd be met by FBI agents who'd make them sign nondisclosure forms." But not everyone kept quiet, hence
the birth of Area 51's UFO lore. The sightings incited uproar in Nevada and the surrounding areas and forced the Air Force
to open Project BLUE BOOK to log each claim.
Since only a few Air Force officials were cleared for OXCART (even though
it was a joint CIA/USAF project), many UFO sightings raised internal military alarms. Some generals believed the Russians
might be sending stealth craft over American skies to incite paranoia and create widespread panic of alien invasion. Today,
BLUE BOOK findings are housed in 37 cubic feet of case files at the National Archives—74,000 pages of reports. A keyword
search brings up no mention of the top-secret OXCART or Area 51.
Project BLUE BOOK was shut down in 1969—more
than a year after OXCART was retired. But what continues at America's most clandestine military facility could take another
40 years to disclose.
Breaking the Light Speed Limit
Once thought to be unbreakable, the speed
of light as set by the laws of physics has been exceeded in two recent experiments, according to a New York Times news report.
The speed of light in a vacuum, or empty space, is 186,000 miles per second. Exceeding this speed jeopardizes the entire theory
of relativity, which rests on the idea that light speed is the universal limit to how fast anything can travel.
Scientists
have found ways to break that speed limit. In one experiment performed by researchers at the NEC Research Institute in Princeton,
N.J., a pulse of light was sent through a transparent chamber filled with specially prepared cesium gas and was pushed to
travel at speeds of 300 times the normal speed of light. The light travels so fast that the main part of the light pulse exits
the chamber even before it enters. Theoretically, this means that you could see a moment in time before it actually takes
place.
Researchers at the NEC declined to comment on the experiment while it is under review by Nature, a weekly peer-reviewed
science journal. However, Kazuko Anderson, a spokesperson with the NEC in New York, confirmed the accuracy of the New York
Times report.
In a second superluminal study, published in the May 22 issue of Physical Review Letters, scientists
at the Italian National Research Council of Florence shone light beams at a curved mirror. The mirror then shot the beams
back at the instrument that measured the rays' speeds. The beam coming from the center of the mirror was measured at 5 percent
to 7 percent faster than light speed. The authors said this effect only works over relatively short distances, such as the
one meter used by the Italian researchers.
Exceeding the speed of light may have future implications for space travel
and computer chips, but for now scientists are uncertain about the practical use of this discovery. Neither experiment was
able to use a light beam to carry any information or prove that an object of any weight would be able to travel beyond light
speed.
Light can break its own speed limit, researchers say Associated Press, July 20, 2000 (news article) Scientists
have apparently broken the universe's speed limit. For generations, physicists believed there is nothing faster than light
moving through a vacuum -- a speed of 186,000 miles per second. But in an experiment in Princeton, New Jersey, physicists
sent a pulse of laser light through cesium vapor so quickly that it left the chamber before it had even finished entering.
LAW OFFICER TRACKED TEXAS UFO
SPEED WITH RADAR DEVICE by Steve Hammons
A Stephenville, Texas, area law enforcement
officer on patrol Jan. 8, 2008, used his police radar device for tracking speeders to measure the speed of a huge unidentified
object in the sky.
"I had to swivel my radar head up into the
sky. And I knew I got a good hit on it. It showed 27 miles per hour and was accelerating slowly."
This aspect of the observation of a UFO by
several peace officers and dozens of citizens was reported March 30 on StephenvilleLights.com by journalist and radio station
news director Angelia Joiner.
Joiner had previously reported that more
than one officer captured images of an unidentified object in the sky on the videocameras mounted on patrol car dashboards.
In this new report by an officer
who requested to remain anonymous because of his professional duties and responsibilities, Joiner reports that, "He said he
was unable to position his dash cam in a way that video footage could be taken, but he did manage to lock it in on radar."ANONYMOUS OFFICER X
Joiner calls this public safety officer as
"Officer X." He did not step forward when he first spotted a huge object over Stephenville Jan. 8.
However, he casually mentioned it to other
officers, then read reports in the local newspaper, the Stephenville Empire-Tribune, by Joiner who was then a reporter at
the paper.
"I want people to know that the citizens
are telling the truth," Officer X told Joiner.
"They're not lying," he said. "They are telling
the truth. There was something there. I think it´s stealthy. It has a stealth capability. I think it can change colors with
the sky. It was as dark as the sky until it lit up."
He confirms that several other local officers
also witnessed the craft.
Referring to a diagram of the craft based
on observations by officers and recently made public, Officer X told Joiner, "The diagram I did shows 400 feet [from wing
tip to wing tip], but looking back, I think it was larger, maybe between 500 and 600 feet."
In the diagram the craft was described as
a somewhat flat octagonal shape with raised portions on the top and bottom. Various light configurations with different colored
lights were observed by the officer.
When he first observed it, the craft was
hovering in a horizontal position. It was approximately 100 to 500 feet off the ground, based on reports of other officers.
The officer said, "My estimate is the object
was about a half mile away at the most. At first, I thought it was a big aircraft, but then I realized it was hovering. I
then thought, 'An aircraft that size doesn't hover.'"
Joiner quotes him as saying, "It started
out horizontal, went up to the left at 30 to 40 degrees, and stopped for about five seconds. Then it went slowly vertical.
It took about another five seconds to do this; then it slowly moved away to the northwest. It was one big craft."
The object eventually slowly
moved away from the officer's position, remaining at a low altitude, and he was no longer able to observe it because it went
behind tree tops and he was required to respond to an unrelated official police call.NEWS
MEDIA, TEXAS AND ARIZONA INCIDENTS
According to Joiner, the officer began to
think more about discussing what he had seen after reading articles in the Empire-Tribune about witness reports of an unidentified
object.
The first of a series of articles, written
by Joiner, was published in the paper Jan. 10.
Upon learning that other officers were talking
about it, he contacted them. One officer was Erath County Constable Lee Roy Gaitan, who was quoted on print articles and appeared
on camera in local and national TV news reports at the time.
He told Joiner, "I thought, 'Okay ... Lee
Roy (Gaitan) is talking, and he's a good friend of mine. I've known him for years and he's a credible, good person.' The other
two officers had already talked about it, so I went straight to them."
"The first night I talked to them was Jan.
12. They described what they saw and I did a drawing on Notepad and took it back to them, and they said it was how they saw
it."
Constable Gaitan was not the only local credible
witness who had stepped forward early in the incidents. Local businessman and pilot Steve Allen came forward. So did machinist
Ricky Sorrells.
Other local citizens and law officers chose
a more low-key stance. Some talked only with friends, family and professional associates. Some spoke confidentially and off-the-record
with Joiner.
When the Associated Press picked up the story,
other major regional, national and international print, broadcast and TV cable news organizations reported professionally
on the situation in Stephenville and Erath County.
As Joiner points out in her March 30 article,
this resulted in the evaluation by many that the Stephenville case is the most significant public UFO case since the so-called
"Phoenix Lights" incident March 13, 1997.
In that case, although some witnesses saw
only huge lights in an apparent shape, hundreds or thousands of other Arizonans reportedly saw a huge V-shaped or boomerang-shaped
object.
According to witnesses, it cruised slowly
and silently at low altitude over rural Arizona and metropolitan Phoenix in the early evening in a southeasterly direction.
As others concluded from the Phoenix Lights
case, Officer X in Texas stated, "I think what we saw wanted to be seen."
Another similarity: People considering the
Phoenix and Stephenville cases wondered if these craft were advanced U.S. technology of some kind, maybe from classified facilities
in the Southwest. Officer X told Joiner that he and another officer initially felt that the object was military. However,
he said a third officer "was pretty adamant that it was not." That officer´s reasons for his conclusion could not be revealed
to maintain his anonymity, Joiner reported. Officer X said, "The more I thought about it… I thought, 'They just don't
fly secret projects in free air space.' If it's military, they made a big boo-boo by flying it into Stephenville, Texas. The
Air Force knows better than that. It leads me away from the Air Force." He told Joiner he wasn't sure if the craft was extraterrestrial.
"How does a person know? How do you know without something landing and somebody walking out of it?"
Kenneth Arnold
Impossible! Maybe, But Seein'Is
Believin', Says Flier
Kenneth Arnold, with the fire control at
Boise and who was flying in southern Washington yesterday afternoon in search of a missing marine plane, stopped here en route
to Boise today with an unusual story -- which he doesn't expect people to believe but which he declared was true. He said
he sighted nine saucer-like aircraft flying in formation at 3. p.m. yesterday, extremely bright -- as if they were nickel
plated -- and flying at an immense rate of speed. He estimated they were at an altitude between 9,500 and 10,000 feet and
clocked them from Mt. Rainier to Mt. Adams, arriving at the amazing speed of about 1200 miles an hour. "It seemed impossible,"
he said, "but there it is -- I must believe my eyes."Tremendous speed
Another "Blue Folder" report reads: "On
the 25th of November, 1986, at 12:50 Moscow time civil flight control service as well as the military department of that service
in the airport of Magadan (a city in Eastern Siberia) discovered an unidentified target. At that time the aeroplane ÀÍ-12
No 11421 was approaching the target at the altitude of 7200 meters. The captain of the plane was warned by traffic control
service about the situation.
"When the plane and UFO passed clear of each other the object turned right in the direction
toward Shelekhov bay and raised its speed to 900-1000 kilometres per hour. The growth of UFO speed continued and at 13:00
it achieved 3000 kilometres per hour. Retaining this speed, the object moved away to the shore of Kamchatka, and at a distance
of 150 kilometres from the coastline it disappeared from radar screens." Sharp
turn & high speed
The
next document from the "Blue Folder" runs:
"On the 21st of October, 1989, near the village Burkhala in Yagodinsky
District of Magadan Region several local residents observed an unknown flying object. When the object approached the electric
power transmission line, it changed course sharply and climbed up. One of the eyewitnesses, who formerly had served at the
Baikonur space-centre, estimated the speed of the object as near to 1000 kilometres per hour . He noted also that not one
aircraft known to him would be able to perform such evolutions.
When flying above the eyewitnesses the object reduced
its speed noticeably so they were able to see it in detail. The flight was absolutely soundless. There was impression that
clearance lights shined along the contour of the object, from seven to nine in number."