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Mexico's Department of Defense Releases UFO Information
Evidence of an International Rift in the Management of UFO΄s/Extraterrestrial
Affairs? Signals Shift in International Disclosure Policy.
by Michael Salla, Ph.D.
Reposted by Greater Things News Service with permission
May 12, 2004
MEXICO
On Tuesday, May 11, 2004, an international press conference was held to
announce the findings of a joint official and private effort to investigate a
UFO sighting. What is remarkable in the press conference is that Department of
Defense collaborated with a top Mexican UFO researcher, Jaime Maussan, in the
release of information concerning the appearance of up to 11 UFO΄s in the
vicinity of a Mexican Air force flight that was on a drug surveillance mission
on March 5, 2004. Using infrared cameras and radar tracking, the eight- man crew
of the Merlin C26/A flight was able to monitor the UFOs, which at one point
formed a circle around the flight. In investigating the incident, the Air force
contacted Jaime Maussan and asked him to participate in the inquiry.
The release of data on the UFOs taken by a Mexican Air force crew was certainly
a coup for Maussan who released the information in the popular television
program ΄Great Mysteries of the Third Millennium΄ on May 9, 2004. Maussan was
initially contacted on April 20, by the Department of Defense and had a meeting
the next day with General Clemente Vega Garcia, Secretary of Defense and his
senior officials. The Secretary of Defense went further however than simply
informing Maussan of the incident. General Clemente released film and other data
of the incident to Maussan that he could investigate with his own independent
research team. The Department of Defense confirmed to international media
outlets such as Reuters in a May 11 Press Conference that it had handed over the
film and data to Maussan. This was certainly unprecedented and signaled a major
new approach to dealing with the UFO phenomenon by a major world government.
Up to the present time, there appears to have been a well- coordinated
international effort in managing UFO sightings and reports of UFO crashes. These
have typically been handled in a way suggesting a sophisticated global system
for dealing with UFO sightings, and even collecting the remains of crashed UFOs,
without witnesses having much credibility before the mass media. This global
management system has prevented governmental releases of UFO information to the
general public and international media. Whatever releases did occur typically
involved private civilians rather than military personnel in their official
capacities revealing UFO information. In the US, military personnel have been
legally proscribed from participating in the release of information of UFO
sightings according to military regulations described in the Joint Army Navy Air
Publication (JANAP) 146 released in 1953. Similar provisions are found in the
British Ministry of Defense and other major nations that have had to deal with
the UFO phenomenon, and/or cooperate closely with the US.
This official international system for repressing UFO reports suffered a
significant setback in 1999 with the release of a French government supported
study of the UFO phenomenon. The COMETA Report comprised former top military
officials and found credible evidence to support the existence of UFOs as
phenomenon that required serious political attention. The COMETA report was not
widely covered in the US but signaled that major nations differed in how much
information they should release to their general publics. In December 2002, the
British Ministry of Defense released a file on the Rendlesham UFO incident of
1980 describing one of the most well document UFO sightings in British history.
Significantly, the US military has not released its own files of the incident
despite having played a leading investigatory role at Rendlesham. The respective
official positions over the Rendlesham files suggests a clear difference of
opinion between the British and US military officials over the extent to which
UFO information will be released to the general public and the mass media.
The participation of the Mexican Department of Defense in collaborating with
Maussan in releasing information on a contemporary UFO sighting is
unprecedented. This is a significant development that goes even further than the
COMETA report in challenging the non-disclosure position supported by the US
government that apparently plays a major role in the international management
system in place for UFO sightings/crashes. The Mexican Department of Defense
effort in collaborating with Maussan simultaneously achieves a number of things.
First, it helps legitimate research into the UFO phenomenon that now has
official government support as a credible field of study at least in Mexico.
Second, it legitimates the investigatory skills and experiences of private
Mexican researchers such as Maussan. Third, it comes at a time of great
international friction over the war in Iraq suggesting that this Mexican
initiative marks a major rupture in the de facto global management system for
UFOs that echoes global dissent over US policies in Iraq. If the COMETA report
and the release of the Rendlesham files are solid indicators of the European
position towards UFO disclosure, then it appears that the US is becoming
increasingly isolated in its strict non-disclosure policy.
If indeed there is a major rift in the global management system over the rate
and extent to which disclosure of UFOs sightings and/or UFO evidence is made to
the general public of major states, then it may be predicted that further
disclosures by other governments are likely. It may be concluded that the
Mexican Department of Defense collaboration with private UFO researchers heralds
a major new phase in the UFO phenomenon. With a more integrated global media and
Internet, it will be very difficult if impossible for the mass media in the US
to ignore UFO developments in other countries. If major world governments begin
disclosing information concerning contemporary UFO sightings, then it may be
predicted that the non- disclosure policy in place for over 50 years may soon
come to an end. This would usher in the age of exopolitics where the political
implications of an extraterrestrial presence would predictably dominate global
politics.
Michael E.Salla, PhD
May 12, 2004
301-213-2558
www.exopolitics.org
exopolitics@yahoo.com
References:
"Mexico Air Force Video Creates UFO Stir,"
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=scienceNews&storyID=5109891
"Mexican DOD Acknowledges UFOs In Mexico,"
http://rense.com/general52/deff.htm
"COMETA Report," http://www.cufos.org/cometa.html
"Rendlesham UFO Incident," http://www.scifi.com/rendlesham/
Forward as you wish. Permission is granted to circulate among private
individuals and groups, post on all Internet sites and publish in full in all
not-for-profit publications. Contact author.
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