Nexus - 1206 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 61 of 78

Page 61 of 78
Nexus - 1206 - New Times Magazine-pages

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al MILITARY NUCLEAR SPECIALIST SPEAKS OUT ON UFO REALITY During that period of time, one of my functions was to accompany a security team which visited all of the nuclear facili- ties to check on the security of weapons. And we were getting reports of visits by UFOs over the storage facilities and even some of the manufacturing facilities. And that went on continuously... And so then, after that siege which went through the entire '50s, I was assigned to the Unified Command under Admiral Felt during the '60s. I was the officer in charge of the alternate command post involved with nuclear weapons operation planning. During that period of time, I maintained contacts with NORAD, with the SAC operations, and was involved with opera- tional plans for the use of nuclear weapons. And during this period of time, I also earned of a number of incidents which appened involving UFOs. And then further on, I finally retired rom the air force and joined The Boeing Company where I was assigned to the Minuteman program, where I was responsi- le for the accounting of all the nuclear eet, the Minuteman I, II and III. And dur- ing that period of time, I also learned about incidents involving nuclear weapons. And among these incidents were those where a couple of nuclear weapons that were sent into space were destroyed by the extrater- restrials... Dr Steven Greer (SG): Were over- flights of nuclear facilities taken seriously? RD: Oh yes; oh yes indeed. In fact, they were taken so seriously that the observers would often not report them because it involved so much bureaucracy and protocol, etc. They deliberately would not report them. On most of those cases where the UFOs became identified at least on a radar or with reports—why, they would try to scramble aircraft to intercept them. It was a very aggressive, you might say, response from our own government. Well, there was one incident when we exploded a nuclear weapon over the Pacific and this was in about '61, I believe. The consternation that it caused [from the ETs] was because it shut out communications over the Pacific basin for a number of hours, in which no radio transmission was available at any time. And this was very significant. And of course, this was one that the extraterrestrials were really con- cerned about, because it affected our ionos- phere. In fact, the ET spacecraft were unable to operate because of the pollution in the magnetic field which they depended upon. It is my understanding that, in either the very end of the '70s or the early '80s, we attempted to put a nuclear weapon on the Moon and explode it for scientific mea- surements and other things, which was not acceptable to the extraterrestrials. everal military and intelligence wit- S nesses who were Strategic Air Command (SAC) and other nuclear specialists have come forward with testi- mony proving that UFOs are real and appear to be concerned about our nuclear weapons. One such witness is Ross Dedrickson, a retired USAF colonel and Stanford Business School management graduate who worked with the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) in the 1950s and later for Boeing where he was in charge of the accounting for the Minuteman nuclear weapons program. Following is an extract from the testimony he gave to Dr Steven Greer during Project Disclosure hearings in September 2000. Col. Ross Dedrickson (RD): While I was at the AEC in 1952, I had my first inci- dent with UFOs, which was in mid-July when they flew over Washington, DC. I saw my first nine UFO. I was a staff officer for the military liaison committee between the chairman of the AEC and the secretary of defence. I became acquainted with not only the army, navy and air force, but civilian agencies, the CIA, the National Security Agency and other contacts which I developed. 60 + NEXUS www.nexusmagazine.com OCTOBER — NOVEMBER 2005