Independence Day summer meets with yawns
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
One dares hope that our latest foreign policy disaster, Afghanistan, might derail us from our foreign policy disasters in the making, such as Russia and China. That President Bidenâs first phone calls were to them is encouraging.
Of course, by now we know better than to think Washington might finally place a premium on stable relations above intrigues and war profits, or that foreign policy might finally pause and reevaluate itself rather than march forward into oblivion. For that reason, the summerâs biggest foreign policy story was reassuring, even if it got lost amid Haiti, Cuba and Afghanistan. The Pentagon announced June 25 what we spent the better part of a century getting it to acknowledge: UFOs are real.
The one TV program consistently on the case, âTucker Carlson Tonight,â in May hosted Luis Elizondo, the man who for years oversaw the Pentagonâs UFO investigations. His group Skyfort obtained official government correspondence that âdemonstrates quite clearly that weâve had issues with these [unidentified aerial phenomena] for at least 70 years.â
Quoting from a â60 Minutesâ interview with former Lt. Ryan Graves, Mr. Carlson emphasized journalist Bill Whitakerâs words: âThe Pentagon admits it doesnât know what in the world this is.â
Mr. Carlson said: âFrom a national security perspective, that is a very big problem. The U.S. military has observed unidentified flying objects maneuvering in restricted airspace off the coast of Virginia âevery day for two years.â
âSound like a potential threat? You think? So what has the Pentagon done about it? We donât know that theyâve done anything about it other than ignore it and then cover the fact they ignored it by declaring the whole subject classified for decades and then spending the rest of the day thinking about how to bomb Syria again and rid the Marine Corps of people who voted for Donald Trump.
âNo one seems especially alarmed. Just days ago, the Pentagon confirmed that an 18-second video of three UFOs harassing the USS Russell [in 2019] is, in fact, real.â
Indeed, the militaryâs fixation on wokeness suggests it has less interest in defending America than, like any other bureaucracy, in becoming whatever it needs to perpetuate itself. But what Mr. Carlson is essentially asking is for our failures to go intergalactic. Ignoring the visitors is the most constructive thing our destructive security apparatus can do. With World War II and Korea the most recent exceptions, itâs whenever we âDo something!â that things get worse and threats are created or solidified.
Consider also that this national security âproblemâ may be closer to a solution, that the visitors are here because of everything the smartest man on television rails against: concluding, as he does, that we are our own biggest national security threat. Just a few of our recent maneuvers: the English HMS Defenderâs incursion into Russian naval waters, accompanied by a U.S. spy plane; the transfer of our missile defense systems from the Middle East to locations nearer to Russia and China, as holy terror takes a back seat to âgreat power competitionâ (though Afghanistan fallout may prove otherwise); ongoing bipartisan anti-Russian indoctrination, the substance of which was measured this summer by the predictable collapse of last summerâs story about Russian bounties on U.S. troops in Afghanistan; and, of course, NATOâs continuing war provocations along Russiaâs borders.
In April, Mr. Carlson repeatedly warned: âYou may have noticed that we seem to be moving closer toward some kind of conflict with nuclear-armed Russia. The White House has called Russia a national emergency.â
He didnât connect to this looming catastrophe his subsequent observation that âthere seems to be a connection between these [unidentified flying] objects and nuclear reactors, nuclear warheads, nuclear-powered vehicles, submarines and warships.â
Mr. Elizondo confirmed: âOnce the United States and other countries really entered into the Atomic Age, we began to see an uptick [in] what appeared to be some sort of reconnaissance or surveillance of our nuclear development.â
Mr. Carlson listed several incidents, including one in 1967 in which â10 ICBMs at a Montana Air Force base were temporarily knocked offline. At the same time, base security noticed a glowing red object floating in the sky. According to journalist George Knapp, âAll of the nuclear facilities â" Los Alamos, Livermore, Sandia, Savannah River â" all had dramatic incidents where these unknown craft appeared.ââ
And itâs not just us, but India, Pakistan and a âBritish Roswellâ in 1980. The Russians too, Mr. Elizondo recalled. âAfter the Berlin wall came down there was this new romance between the U.S. and Russia, where they shared a lot of UFO information with us, and they were seeing exactly the same thing in their skies that we were,â he said.
Indeed, UFOs are perhaps the one thing not being pinned on Russia. Our officials even correct public conjecture to that effect.
Former National Intelligence Director John Ratcliffe told Fox News host Trey Gowdy: âA lot of people say, âWell, maybe itâs Russia or China. [But] things like transmedium properties and hypersonic speed, meaning vehicles that go at five times the speed of sound Russia and China clearly did not have that.â
In the 1950s, on the other hand, the government was perfectly willing to use UFOs as a pretext for attacking Russia, as illustrated in the History channelâs âProject Blue Book,â based on astronomer J. Allen Hynekâs memoirs of the Air Force program studying the phenomenon.
In one episode, a mechanical engineer tells Hynek: âWhen the Air Force hired me, they told me I was reverse-engineering Soviet technology. But the craft weâve been working on, itâs not Russian. The technology on these things, itâs way beyond our capabilities.â He explains why he is reporting this: âMy brother died in the war. So when I see these reports about Russians being responsible for UFOs, it makes me think that people here, they want to start another one.â
If UFO activity increased at the dawn of the Atomic Age, and if we see an uptick as we come nearer to doing something globally stupid with it, then thereâs a good chance the UFOs âare here to protect us from ourselves,â as âProject Blue Bookâ chronicler John Baker posits on the Three If By Space blog.
If our otherwise blustering brassâ response has been muted, perhaps itâs not only because they know theyâre outmatched technologically, but also because that makes these masters of the universe something smaller, their global overlordship more provincial.
Itâs really something when the Pentagon is more honest about UFOs than about Russia. Perhaps these bumblers are just a little humbled by the idea that someone they canât lie to is watching.
⢠Julia Gorin was a child refusenik and is editor of the humor volume âHillarisms: The Unmaking of the First Female President.
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