Excerptus Caeruleus:
[...]
[...]
[...]
"He called them, in deference to the Falcon, his first contact
and his first stab at word code, 'the
aviary.' He no longer had any doubts about their position,
their power.
[...]
"And Moore, how did he feel about his tacit complicity in the
government's plot against Bennewitz? Did he feel ashamed by his
silence? By his betrayal of his friend? He has yet to comment,
and his reluctance is understandable. Instead, he preferred to
describe his work with Doty as an 'opportunity,' his spying on
Bennewitz as 'the price I had to pay.'
[...]
[End Excerptus Caeruleus]
With the sun beginning to set, the humpback Manzano foothills
would cast long, broad shadows across Coyote Canyon. The sky
would slowly start to bleed, turning from a deep, brilliant
desert blue to a pastel shade, a faded denim color streaked with
an irradiating red, until, at last, it all settled easily into a
soft zinc gray. And then the lights would appear. In these
last moments before the New Mexico night began, coming from
somewhere in the west near
Kirtland Air Force Base, the strange
craft, their running lights aglow, began their maneuvers. They
would fly in a circling formation in the dusk sky above the
Manzano Nuclear Weapons Storage Facility, and next fly south
toward the Coyote Canyon test area. Every evening they came.
Their arrival was as regular as the sunsets, and no less
spectacular.
From the deck of his house perched high in the Four Hills
section of Albuquerque, Paul Bennewitz had a perfect view.
Night after night, he paced the deck, an eight-millimeter movie
camera in his hand, as he, with considerable anxiety, recorded
the erratic, hovering flight paths of these craft. At the same
time, his tracking antennas would also be at work, sweeping in
unison across the sky. With lumbering deliberativeness, the
huge antennas automatically rotated toward the ships, vectoring
in on their flight. They moved clockwise, their rotors loudly
grinding, until contact was made. Then banks of ultra-sensitive
receivers -- lovingly hand-crafted machines, the cherished
brainchildren of Bennewitz's own ingenious designs -- would come
alive. A steady, low-frequency electromagnetic beep ... beep ...
beep would fill his workroom. [cf. the silly
historical treatise A Message From
Our Space Brothers via Shortwave Radio (ca. 1954) by Adamsky's
friend and carnival barker, occultist
George Hunt Williamson -B:.B:.] The signal came in
modulated pulses, loud and clear and well-defined like the exultant
opening chords of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. He never doubted
those strange craft were sending a message.
Each night it was all recorded. There were over 2,600 feet of
film. A locked filing cabinet held the tapes of months of
encounters. These were Paul Bennewitz's clues and, after much
painstaking analysis, his proof. They were the irrefutable
cornerstones of his great discovery -- Project Beta.
"And for four years Bennewitz never suspected his friend of any
sin worse than skepticism. Moore was the perfect spy. Why?
That was the one question Moore kept asking himself as he, now
an insider, observed the government's sustained campaign against
Bennewitz. Why were Doty and the Falcon so intent on
discrediting one solitary UFO crusader?
"...Moore had no doubts about the effectiveness of the
government's disinformation program. Moore watched as Bennewitz
was driven to the breaking point. As he was fed stories about
evil and threatening grays, Bennewitz grew more emotional. He
kept guns and knives hidden throughout his house. He had extra
locks installed on his doors. He could not sleep. He turned
his business over to his son. At lunch with Moore, Bennewitz,
his hands shaking, his face as haggard as a skeleton's, told his
friend that aliens were coming through his walls at night and
injecting him with hideous chemicals. The chemicals knocked him
out; he was very worried about what the aliens had done to him
when he was unconscious. As he spoke, he smoked constantly.
Moore, whose job was to be observant, counted each of the twenty
eight cigarettes Bennewitz had puffed in the course of the
forty-five-minute meal. It was not long after that lunch that
Bennewitz was hospitalized for exhaustion and fatigue.
"He [Moore] suppressed all his natural emotions: his anger and
revulsion at Bennewitz's torture, his impatience with the Falcon'
s capriciousness, his eagerness to run to the media for help and
protection. He let everything well up inside. He held it back,
a fair trade, he felt, for his chance to 'learn the truth.'
"Keeping secrets is a habit. It is the way officials -- spies,
generals, and scientists -- are taught to behave. Because some
explanations are not simple. All is never explained. Because
now that we are at the end of a politics of global conflict, as
men and states abandon their allegiances to failed ideological
gods, all that is left for a great nation to protect and believe
in is its tattered secrets."
| Brother Leo, B:.B:. 7°=4° |
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| Caerulean Adeptus Exemptus |
Dr. Sprinkle believed her, and he did not believe her. Filled, then, with a sense of concern and fascination, as well as skepticism, he decided to consult his friend Dr. Paul Bennewitz. It was his hope that Bennewitz, an accomplished physicist, a prodigious inventor, a man of science with a wizard's mind as well as a soft, sympathetic spot for all talk about UFOs, might be able to contribute some insightful analysis. Bennewitz was most definitely interested, and the woman was eager for whatever help he -- or anyone -- might offer. It was arranged that Bennewitz would be present during her hypnosis.
The sessions continued for three months. The woman would slip into a trance easily, her eyes nearly closed, her voice a low monotone; and then, under Dr. Sprinkle's prodding, more and more of her repressed encounter would come forth. Moments before her abduction, she recalled as the two men listened, she had witnessed a bizarre ritual. The aliens were killing cattle, draining the beasts of their blood. She saw it all. That was why they took her. They took her to their ship and she was forced to watch as the aliens did strange things, things she couldn't quite understand, things she still didn't quite recall, with the cattle and with the blood. And then they did things to her.
As Paul Bennewitz listened over the course of those months to the woman's agonized tale, he did not at first know what to make of it. But the more he mulled it over, he became convinced -- absolutely certain beyond a shadow of a doubt -- that she was telling the truth. No one, he felt, could be that good an actress. Her pain was genuine.
But there were still crucial pieces missing from her story. It was necessary, Bennewitz realized, his own fears building, to learn what the aliens had done to this poor woman. He urged Dr. Sprinkle on. The facts, however, were buried too deep, were too successfully repressed. Yet Bennewitz was unyielding. He was convinced those lost moments aboard the spacecraft were the keys to understanding the motives of the aliens. His task was apparent. What the victim couldn't remember, the rescuer -- and by now he saw himself in that role -- would discover. So piece by piece, part observation, part scientist's logic, part instinct, he over many months came to an understanding about what had happened. The aliens had surgically implanted mind- control devices in the woman's skull. They could see what she saw. They could hear what she heard. They could control her every move.
Bennewitz was terrified.
Still, goaded on by what was at stake, in a state of constant alert, he conceived Project Beta. His careful and documented monitoring of the alien ships flying over the New Mexico desert, and the messages they were sending to control their victims, began.
From the start, rumors full of mystery and promise involving Project Beta swirled through the tightly bonded communities of kindred thinkers who lived across the Southwest. And so, looking at subsequent events from this perspective, perhaps it was inevitable that Bill Moore's and Paul Bennewitz's paths should cross. Nevertheless, it wasn't until 1981, after Project Beta had been in operation for nearly two years, that a curious Moore, now a director at the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO), a Tucson-based group of UFO investigators, drove east from Arizona to the scientist's home in Albuquerque. His assignment was to evaluate Bennewitz's findings.
Moore, who prided himself on his ability to size people up, found much to admire in the scientist. Bennewitz, mesmerizingly articulate, able to pepper any conversation with seemingly inexhaustible flourishes of esoteric information, had the confident manner of a man who had grown up being the smartest boy in the class. And yet there was also something disquieting about him. Moore found his intensity -- a trait many would agree Moore could analyze with considerable authority -- especially disconcerting. It was as if Bennewitz felt his role was to serve as one of history's not so silent witnesses; or, perhaps he even saw himself as a prophet, one of those high- minded souls whose nagging earnestness was meant to call lesser lives into question [you catchin' all this, Ed "Make a Dent in History" Dames? -B:.B:.]. Whatever it was, it rankled Moore. He preferred to take Bennewitz in small doses.
As for Project Beta, Moore viewed the footage of the hovering
lights and listened to the tapes of recorded messages. It was
undeniable that Bennewitz had seen and heard something; the
films clearly depicted unusual lights maneuvering near the
Sandia National Labs complex, a classified Department
of Energy facility on the Kirtland base. And, just as
certainly, Bennewitz's receivers had been monitoring odd low-frequency
electronic signals. But Moore was not at all convinced that
these "discoveries" had anything at all to do with UFOs. The
strange craft might be, he reasoned, nothing more ominous than
Air Force helicopters or perhaps even some sort of experimental
plane. Similarly, Moore found it difficult to accept that the
signals were alien radio transmissions. Bennewitz's highly
touted computer-generated decoding program was based, as best
Moore could tell, on the sort of shaky assumptions that would
just as readily have translated the pulses of Morse code into an
extraterrestrial monologue.
Moore returned to Arizona and announced to APRO that as far as
he was concerned Bennewitz was a dedicated researcher who just
didn't seem to have the emotional objectivity to sort, as he
noted with deadpan candor, "the shit from the candy." Still,
over the years Moore remained in touch with Bennewitz and the
two men became friends; after all, they were involved in the
same quest. And it was with a mixture of amusement and
bewilderment that Moore watched as Project Beta evolved into an
all-encompassing theory. What had started with some fragile
conjectures about mind-controlling aliens had, Moore would state
with a sigh, "blossomed into a tale which rivaled the wildest
science fiction scenario anyone could possibly imagine."
According to Bennewitz -- and supported, he insisted with
unshakable ferocity, by his research -- two opposing forces of
aliens had invaded the United States. The white aliens wanted
intergalactic brotherhood; they came to this planet in peace.
However, the malevolent group, the grays, were in control. It
was the grays who were responsible for the cattle mutilations,
the human abductions, and the implanting of mind-control devices
in humans. The government was not only aware of this, but had
also negotiated a secret treaty with these invaders. The grays
were granted the right to establish an underground base beneath
Archuleta Peak near Dulce in northwestern New Mexico, and in
return the military had received a shipment of extraterrestrial
weapons. But then an atomic-powered alien spaceship crashed on
Archuleta Peak. The grays suspected sabotage. And, Bennewitz
was convinced after decoding radio transmissions, the treaty was
about to be broken. The angry grays were preparing for nothing
short of total war.
It was a theory that Bennewitz, in his own mind another Paul
Revere, was devoted to circulating. He attempted to contact not
just UFO researchers like Moore, but also congressmen, military
commanders, members of the scientific establishment, and even
the President. "Instead of withholding judgment until all of
the facts were in, Paul insisted on repeatedly going off half-
cocked to anyone who would listen," Moore complained. The way
Moore saw it, Bennewitz was "his own worst enemy."
It would not be until months later, after Moore was recruited by
the Falcon and given his assignment by Air Force Office of
Special Investigations agent Richard Doty, that Moore would
realize Bennewitz had a more formidable enemy -- the government
of the United States.
Disinformation, as the Soviet term
desinformatsiya was quickly
anglicized by admiring Western intelligence agencies, is the
propagation of false, incomplete, or misleading information to
targeted individuals. But for a disinformation campaign to be
truly successful, it must accomplish two related goals. One,
the target must act on these new "facts." And two, the target
must be irrevocably diverted from the more fruitful path he had
previously been following.
For the past three years, since 1980, Bill Moore learned from
AFOSI agent Doty, counterintelligence officers from a variety of
agencies had been running a disinformation campaign against Paul
Bennewitz. The purpose of the exercise -- or so Moore would
remember being told by a gloating Doty -- was systematically to
confuse, discourage, and discredit Bennewitz.
Their work had been remarkably successful. It was government
agents, pretending to be friendly co-conspirators or using other,
more convoluted covers, who had first passed on to a gullible
Bennewitz "official" documents and stories detailing the secret
treaty between the U.S. government and evil aliens, the
existence of underground alien bases, the exchanges of
technology, the wave of brain implants, and even the tale about
the spaceship that had crashed into Archuleta Peak. These "
facts" became the linchpins of his grand theory; and, fulfilling
all the government's hopes, Project Beta -- the filming of
airship maneuvers in the vicinity of nuclear bases and the
monitoring of the unusual signals emanating from these craft --
had been now relegated to a secondary concern.
And now agent Doty wanted Moore to join the government's team.
He assigned Moore to spy on Bennewitz. Moore's job was to
report on a regular basis to Doty about the effectiveness of the
government's disinformation campaign. Did Bennewitz still
believe all the wild tales that had been passed on to him?
For four years Moore kept a careful watch on his friend. For
four years he listened mutely as Bennewitz complained that his
phone was tapped, that his office had been broken into. Moore,
the dutiful recruit, even passed on to Bennewitz the "Aquarius
Document," an actual classified AFOSI message that had been
skillfully doctored -- by Doty? the Falcon? Moore never asked
-- to prove that an alien invasion was at hand.
And for four years Bennewitz never suspected his friend of any
sin worse than skepticism. Moore was the perfect spy.
Why? That was the one question Moore kept asking himself as he,
now an insider, observed the government's sustained campaign
against Bennewitz. Why were Doty and the Falcon so intent on
discrediting one solitary UFO crusader?
The truth was never explained to Moore. He wondered if AFOSI
had simply picked Bennewitz at random, that he was an unlucky
target of an ongoing counterintelligence teaching exercise. Or,
perhaps Bennewitz had actually been filming UFOs from his sun
deck; the government's long cover-up was jeopardized and,
therefore, Bennewitz -- and his film and tapes -- must be
discredited at all costs. Or, equally plausible, it was
possible that Project Beta had been monitoring a top-secret
military training program, and a plan to discourage anyone else
-- foreign spies as well as believers in UFOs -- from paying too
much attention to these maneuvers was quickly conceived. Moore
would never know.
But whatever the reasons behind it, Moore had no doubts about
the effectiveness of the government's disinformation program.
Moore watched as Bennewitz was driven to the breaking point. As
he was fed stories about evil and threatening grays, Bennewitz
grew more emotional. He kept guns and knives hidden throughout
his house. He had extra locks installed on his doors. He could
not sleep. He turned his business over to his son. At lunch
with Moore, Bennewitz, his hands shaking, his face as haggard as
a skeleton's, told his friend that aliens were coming through
his walls at night and injecting him with hideous chemicals.
The chemicals knocked him out; he was very worried about what
the aliens had done to him when he was unconscious. As he spoke,
he smoked constantly. Moore, whose job was to be observant,
counted each of the twenty-eight cigarettes Bennewitz had puffed
in the course of the forty-five-minute meal. It was not long
after that lunch that Bennewitz was hospitalized for exhaustion
and fatigue.
And Moore, how did he feel about his tacit complicity in the
government's plot against Bennewitz? Did he feel ashamed by his
silence? By his betrayal of his friend?
He has yet to comment, and his reluctance is understandable.
Instead, he preferred to describe his work with Doty as an
"opportunity," his spying on Bennewitz as "the price I had to pay."
And, if one looked at it in such hard, pragmatic terms, it
was a moment of high achievement. Moore had penetrated a cadre
of top-level U.S. intelligence agents who were involved with
UFOs. His course was set: "I would play the disinformation game,
get my hands dirty just often enough to lead those directing
the process into believing that I was doing exactly what they
wanted me to do, and all the while continue to burrow my way
into the matrix so as to learn as much as possible about who was
directing it and why."


