Spy Game Disrupts UFO Disclosure

Gary S. Bekkum
(STARpod.org) -- The biggest question faced by the extraterrestrial disclosure movement (exopolitics) is not whether the public has a right to know about the alleged alien presence, but does the current President of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama, have a "need to know."

For the rest of this story, see SPIES LIES and POLYGRAPH TAPE -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games Book. To read more about the book, click here.>

A couple of years ago investigative author Gus Russo asked the question, "Is Uncle Sam a closet UFOlogist?"

After reading various materials supplied by his sponsor, Dan T. Smith, son of a famous Harvard economist who worked for the Eisenhower administration, Russo concluded that the reason Smith's friend, former CIA analyst Ronald "Ron" Pandolfi remained involved with UFO-related topics and persons, was "national security."

At the time of Russo's investigation, Pandolfi was with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence MASINT. The ODNI coordinates all national intelligence and is responsible for briefing the President.

(Gus Russo's article, "The Real X-Files" is available at the STARpod.org website.)

According to Smith, who notes that his older sister is a friend of Nancy Bush Ellis (President George H.W. Bush's sister), with every change of administration there is a ripple effect within the government's closely held secrets that he calls the "repositioning."

A recent example is the Presidential release of classified CIA "torture memos."

In spite of enhancements to Freedom Of Information (FOIA), attempts to gain access to UFO-related government memos remains torturous, with numerous escape clauses designed to protect the national security.

A recent attempt comes from Lee Graham, who was investigated by the Defense Investigative Service for his UFO interests. Graham asked the USAF for images of two specific anomalous "UFO" events.

The Air Force provided Graham with a "neither confirm not deny" response on the grounds of national security.

One source to Russo, a gentleman who provides high level input to a Defense Intelligence Agency sponsored National Academies' scientific committee, was questioned about the extraterrestrial rumors:


"I have spoken to three former Presidents and the subject always comes up, not as a briefing, but they also want to know the truth. But apparently they arenīt cleared for it."

Perhaps the President is not allowed to discuss the topic with Senior Intelligence Officials who are not on a short and closely held "need to know" list.

One would hope (and naively expect) that "government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth."

Unfortunately the bitter history of secrets deemed too sensitive for consumption by the man on the street and foreign governments, both friend and foe, remains a stumbling block to further pursuit of the topic.

I take note of my previous line with a sense of disdain: the citizens of this nation and foreign nationals, both good and bad, have been compartmented together under an umbrella of national secrecy.

The historical record is pockmarked by ugly abuses of power, intended not for the protection of the people, but to conceal the nefarious activities of select persons and their shadow agendas.

And so we are left to look to our leaders, and the President of the United States, for guidance as we gaze into the dark unknown. If we cannot see into the darkness, and if the leader of our nation has "no need to know," then who remains accountable to our collective future?

At least the President remains comfortably visible.

We know for certain, based upon government documents and personal accounts shared by many past and present officials, there exists an interest in developing "crazy ideas" like telepathy, psychic remote viewing, mind to mind influence, earth penetrating gravity waves, anti-gravity propulsion, wormholes and warp drives, and other staples from science fiction.

These exploits appear on the surface to be "extraterrestrial derived technology."

For the rest of this story, see SPIES LIES and POLYGRAPH TAPE -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games Book. To read more about the book, click here.
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Gary S. Bekkum

Gary S. Bekkum is an independent occasional rogue journalist, author, and researcher of material that blurs the distinction between fiction and reality.

He is the author of several books, including "Spies, Lies and Polygraph Tape," "Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games," and "To the Moon and Back, With Love."

In 2004 Bekkum initiated STARstream Research, as an informal survey of exotic physics and consciousness concepts related to the survival or otherwise of the human race, built from an international network of contacts in science and the defense industry. Some of the STARstream Research material is available to the public at STARpod.org.

As a result of his efforts, Bekkum has reported numerous contacts with past and present intelligence officials interested in the application of exotic phenomena, ranging from antigravity to mind-to-mind communication, and predicting future events.

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