The Flying Saucers Are Real - Donald Keyhoe-pages

Page 145 of 151

Page 145 of 151
The Flying Saucers Are Real - Donald Keyhoe-pages

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145 And the flying disks? Army, Navy, and Air Force missiles, launched in droves all over the country to prove whose was the best? A public missile race, with the joint Chiefs of Staff to decide the winner! It seems fantastic that this theory would be believed by any intelligent person. In effect, it accuses the armed services of deliberate, criminal negligence, of endangering millions in the cities below. I am convinced that some of these rumors led to at least one of the published guesses about our missile program. One widely publicized story stated that the flying saucers seen hurtling through our skies are actually two types of secret weapons. One, according to radio and newspaper accounts, is a disk that whizzes through space, halts suspended in the air, soars to thirty thousand feet, drops to one thousand feet, and then usually disintegrates in the air. These saucers, it was said, ranged from 20 inches to 250 feet in diameter. They were supposed to be pilotless--and harmless. The second type was said to be a jet version of the Navy's circular airfoil "Flying Flapjack." It was credited with fantastic speed. "Some are guided, others are not," said the radio commentator who released this story. "They can stay stationary, dash off to right or left, and move like lightning. But they are utterly harmless." {p. 170} Within a few days after this story was broadcast, the United States News and World Report declared that the saucers are real, and identified them as jet models of Navy "Flying Flapjacks." This magazine, which is not an official publication despite its name, mentioned the variable-direction jet principle that I had previously described in the True tod article. These two flying-saucer "explanations" brought denials from the White House, the Navy, and the Air Force. 1. None of the armed forces is conducting secret experiments with disk-shaped flying objects that could be a basis for the reported phenomena. The "true disks," however, were mainly Air Force devices, according to the report. In these "harmless" disks there was supposed to be an explosive charge that destroyed them in mid-air at a predetermined time. The Air Force flatly declared that: