FRIEDMAN COMES OUT STRONGLY IN FAVOR OF THE DOCUMENTS’ AUTHENTICITY
Stanton Terry Friedman (1934–2019) was a nuclear physicist for 14 years, before becoming a professional ufologist in 1970.
He wrote in the Introduction to this 1996 book, “For almost 40 years, I have been researching UFOs. I have written two books and dozens of articles, have spoken before hundreds of live audiences, and have appeared on many more call-in shows on television as well as radio… I am positively convinced that alien UFOs exist, that they are visiting earth, and that our government knows this… My conviction comes from a scientific analysis of facts that I and other researchers have gathered over the years. This growing body … of data overwhelmingly supports the idea that other civilizations, probably from nearby in our own galaxy, are checking us out from close range.” (Pg. 1)
He adds, “Much of what I learned in industry has come in handy during my ufological research… I learned early on that the absence of evidence is not the same as evidence for absence. And through my own classified research, I learned that secrets can certainly be kept; that an enormous amount of extraordinary scientific work is done in classified programs that the public never hears about. Thus, the data presented in this book is the result of long, painstaking research, and the logical conclusions that I make are based on my almost 40 years’ acquaintance with high-tech matters and high-security procedures… The objective of this book is to review a very substantial amount of research that has been done since receipt of the first Operation Majestic-12 documents in late 1984. In addition, more recently received MJ-12 documents will be presented here for the first time ever in a public report… With this book, the data is on the table. Make up your own mind.” (Pg. 13-14)
He states, “my confusion about [Donald] Menzel was giving way to the certainty that he was the best suited of all the members of Majestic-12 to provide disinformation to the public. He had written science fiction and popular newspaper articles about science. That his UFO efforts were disinformation is fairly clear if one carefully reviews criticisms of his UFO investigations by myself [and others]… In some cases, Menzel invented fictional concepts such as ‘reflections from clouds’ to explain sightings. When you carefully examine the data used by Menzel to justify certain conclusions about specific UFO cases, you find that it just doesn’t stand up. And Menzel was too smart not to know he was putting out nonsense.” (Pg. 33)
Later, he adds, “To establish Menzel’s own ability to segregate his activities, one has merely to consider that he could have saved himself a great deal of grief at the Air Force loyalty hearings by stating that he had an active Navy Top Secret Ultra clearance. Yet he didn’t do so, even though he later described the extended period surrounding the hearings are the worst time of his life… it wasn’t until January 1951 that the Air force cleared his record. During that whole period, Menzel was living with uncertainty.” (Pg. 36)
He recounts, “If the very existence of an organization was classified, then even a knowledgeable person would be bound to deny its existence. This would not mean that information did not exist. Over the years, I have spent many weeks at 15 different archives. Although some of those archives certainly have compartmentalized Top Secret documents, I have never yet been able to see any. The Eisenhower Library admitted having a drawer full, but could not even search it for material with the terms ‘Majestic,’ ‘MAJIC,’ or ‘MJ-12.’ Indeed, even at the highest levels of government there is compartmentalization of data. If an official does not need to know of the existence of a report or the information in a report, he does not get to see it. Period.” (Pg. 76)
He explains, “It must be stressed that the MJ-12 documents were prepared by people who never expected that they would serve any other purpose than to provide information to the recipients… the formats were often as not determined by the department head’s proclivities or a secretary’s experience… There is no rule that people in government must use a particular format for internal documents… Another concern about format and style is the use of the term ‘Executive Order #092447’ the identifies the Truman-Forrestal memo on page 6 of the briefing. Obviously, the numbers signify the date of the memo. People have checked a whole host of available unclassified executive orders… and find that this number doesn’t fit that numbering system at all. However, this is not the problem it might seem to be… this may very well have been the first time the memo was referred to as an Executive Order… it may not have been thought of as an Executive Order in the official sense.” (Pg. 81)
He rejects skeptic Philip Klass’s arguments about ‘suspiciously alike’ signatures proving the fraudulence of the MJ-12 documents, and summarizes, “This carries the analysis of the MJ-12 documents themselves about as far as it can go. Surprisingly, nothing that we found or that others had alleged indicated that the documents were anything other than legitimate. Barring independent confirmation of the briefing, you either believed its validity or you did not.” (Pg. 85)
He that Klass challenged him to find any Cutler or Lay memos that were in pica type, not elite. Friedman then recounts triumphantly, “I knew Klass’s statement that the White House didn’t use pica typewriters was untrue … I had in my own files numerous memos from Cutler and Lay typed in a pica typeface. I mailed him copies of twenty of these, and a month later, copies of fourteen more pica memos from Lay that I found at the Eisenhower Library. On March 3, Klass sent me a check for $1000. It appeared that the primary debunker of UFOs was satisfied that the typeface of the Cutler-Twining memo was legitimate.” (Pg. 95)
He notes, “On a 1991 Larry King show… with Kevin Randle, Klass was forced to admit that he had not then spoken to any of the more than 90 Roswell eyewitnesses who we had located up to that time. His minimal research, flawed logic, and propagandistic writing call into question the validity of his claims.” (Pg. 126)
He also recounts, “In 1991, Don Schmitt of the Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS) and Kevin Randle were publicizing their book ‘UFO Crash at Roswell.’ I had shared a great deal of information with the two while they were working on the book, but when it came out I was surprised by the amount of misleading information it had… the treatment of Majestic-12 and the crash that occurred … was startlingly subjective.” (Pg. 126-127)
He states, “If the original Majestic-12 documents are genuine, as clearly appears to be the case, the person who risked so much in sending that roll of film in 1984 must have bene feeling terribly frustrated. Nine years were gone, and there were no truly solid results from the revelation. The original documents were still being attacked, and the government agencies involved continued to stonewall. The source couldn’t go public without revealing his identity and the fact that he probably broke several laws by distributing highly classified material to uncleared persons. The debunkers seemed to be holding the upper hand. Perhaps the documents that Tim Cooper received showed that the source was still alive, still trying to get the truth out. A year later, a new breakthrough confirmed this hope.” (Pg. 160)
He continues, “In December 1994, I learned of what is perhaps the mother of all Majestic-12 documents! I was on the phone with Don Berliner… when Don let it slip that he had received another MJ-12 document in March… Only when he had the film developed did he realize that he had black-and-white pictures of a document… entitled ‘Majestic-12 Group Special Operations Manual: Extraterrestrial Entities and Technology, Recovery and Disposal.’ It was marked TOP SECRET/MAJIC Eyes Only, and was dated April 1954. The report outlined how to secure, package, ship, and store artifacts and extraterrestrial biological entities from recovered alien flying saucers!” (Pg. 161)
He concludes, “it’s time for planetary discussion as to what it means to be part of a galactic neighborhood. International conferences should be convened, perhaps through the United Nations, to evaluate the religious, economic, military, political, and philosophical implications of our situation with regard to extraterrestrial visitors. I hope we can soon qualify for admission to the cosmic kindergarten---or at least the preschool… My own personal goal is to help move earthlings down this path. The current members of Operation Majestic-12 (or whatever it is now called) must have the courage to do the same.” (Pg. 219)
This book will be of great interest to those studying UFOs, MJ-12, and related issues.