In February 1954, Eisenhower allegedly met with human-looking beings at Edwards AFB and came to an agreement or treaty of some sort with them. According to the Cs, the U.S. government was "tricked", the treaty was never in effect, and this was discovered around 19 years later in 1972 (probably late 1972 if the date of the Eisenhower meeting is correct).
In the 80s John Lear talked about a 1964 treaty (maybe he got the year wrong, was fed disinfo, or if true, maybe it was reaffirmed on the 10-year anniversary). In an infamous letter (Dec. 1987), he wrote:
Anyways, if 1972 was the year, what was going on then?
1972 was the year of Watergate, the creation of the Stargate remote viewing program, the year the NSA allegedly started monitoring for UFO allegations worldwide, and the year of the final NASA Apollo mission. (The next planned missions had already been cancelled in 1970, though.)
So, did it have something to do with what was discovered during the Apollo missions? A concern about abductions? Insights gained via Stargate remote viewing? Something else?
Following that year, 1973 was the year of the Nixon-Gleason UFO/alien body meeting, the year the AF almost gave Emenegger footage of the Holloman landing for public viewing, and one of the largest UFO waves in the fall. Cattle mutilations and mystery helicopters spiked in the mid-1970s, and abductions became more frequently reported. That seems to be when a lot of the crazy and hostile behavior picked up.
Here are some relevant tweets from research Richard Geldreich on some of the above developments in the 70s.
https://twitter.com/richgel999/status/1693422901037322667
https://twitter.com/richgel999/status/1693446524661850602
Interestingly, the period from 1954 to 1972 was relatively tame in certain respects. 1947-1954 saw the U.S. Air Force and government facing a giant mystery that routinely violated secure facilities (including nuclear/atomic), engaged in what looked like surveillance activities, etc. From this paper:
Another data point: crash retrieval stories died out in the early fifties and only regained steam in the late 70s:
In the 80s John Lear talked about a 1964 treaty (maybe he got the year wrong, was fed disinfo, or if true, maybe it was reaffirmed on the 10-year anniversary). In an infamous letter (Dec. 1987), he wrote:
MJ-12 representing the U.S. Government made a deal with the EBE's (extra-terrestrial biological entities) or "Greys" around the period of 1969- 1970-1971. The "deal" was in exchange for technology that they would provide to us we would ignore the abductions that were going on.The EBE's assured us that these abductions were merely ongoing monitoring of developing civilizations: (in fact these abductions have been for at least 3 purposes: (1) insertion of a tiny probe about 3millimeters in size into the brain for monitoring and programming purposes; (2) post hypnotic suggestion concerning an important event that will occur in the next 2 to 5 years and giving the subject someplace to go and something to perform at that time; under our best hypnotic techniques we were unable to find out when or where or what this event is, and (3) genetic crossbreeding between the EBE's and humans. In many of the abductee hypnotic regressions of women with unusual terminated pregnancies they have been shown these"cross-breeds", usually frail tiny beings with comparatively large heads, thin skin, very thin arms and legs. Since we weren't aware of these facts we went along with the agreement but insisted on a list of the abductees to be submitted periodically to the National Security Council and MJ-12.
Lear's timeline looks like it may be shifted some ten years later. Or maybe the "deal" in the early 70s was a different kind of deal, i.e. a treasonous one involving gov/mil/intel types collaborating with aliens, around the same time that others in the elite realized they had been hoodwinked.After the initial agreement between MJ-12 and the aliens, Groom Lake, one of this nation's most secret test centers in Nevada was closed for a period of 2 years (1972-1973) and a huge underground facility was constructed for and with the help of the EBE's. The bargained-for technology was set in place but could only be operated by the EBE's themselves. Needless to say, the advanced technology could not be used against the EBE's in case of need.
During the period of 1979 through 1983 it became increasingly obvious to MJ-12 that things were not going as planned. It became known that many more people (in the thousands) were being abducted than were listed on the official abduction list being supplied to the National Security Council and MJ-12 and that the abductions included much more that the"simple monitoring of an advancing civilization". In addition, it became obvious that some, not all, but some of the nation's missing children had been used for secretions and other parts required by the aliens.
In 1979, there was an altercation of sorts at the Archuletta laboratory. Delta Force was called in to try and free a number of people trapped in the facility who had become aware of what was really going on. 66 of the soldiers were killed in the effort and our people were not freed.
By 1984, MJ-12 must have been in stark terror of the mistake they had made in dealing with the EBE's.
Anyways, if 1972 was the year, what was going on then?
1972 was the year of Watergate, the creation of the Stargate remote viewing program, the year the NSA allegedly started monitoring for UFO allegations worldwide, and the year of the final NASA Apollo mission. (The next planned missions had already been cancelled in 1970, though.)
So, did it have something to do with what was discovered during the Apollo missions? A concern about abductions? Insights gained via Stargate remote viewing? Something else?
Following that year, 1973 was the year of the Nixon-Gleason UFO/alien body meeting, the year the AF almost gave Emenegger footage of the Holloman landing for public viewing, and one of the largest UFO waves in the fall. Cattle mutilations and mystery helicopters spiked in the mid-1970s, and abductions became more frequently reported. That seems to be when a lot of the crazy and hostile behavior picked up.
Here are some relevant tweets from research Richard Geldreich on some of the above developments in the 70s.
https://twitter.com/richgel999/status/1693422901037322667
https://twitter.com/richgel999/status/1693446524661850602
Interestingly, the period from 1954 to 1972 was relatively tame in certain respects. 1947-1954 saw the U.S. Air Force and government facing a giant mystery that routinely violated secure facilities (including nuclear/atomic), engaged in what looked like surveillance activities, etc. From this paper:
Aside from the 1967 wave and high profile cases over the period, it looks like overtly hostile engagements with military quieted down for this period. And abduction accounts were rare, with only a handful of recognizable cases (e.g. Villas-Boaz, Betty and Barney Hill).Elevated UAP activity was found at all three atomic site classes and was most noticeable in the earliest facility in each class. UAP activity began during the construction phase for some sites and escalated when the site became operational. Elevated activity at study sites occurred in a “window” between 1948-1951, continued through the national spike in UAP reporting in 1952, then dramatically decreased, never to repeat the “window” levels during the remainder of the study period. The second phase of the study compared additional atomic weapons deployment sites vs: 4) additional non-atomic military sites, and 5) major American rocket/missile and aerospace test and development facilities. Moderately elevated UAP activity was associated with bases where atomic weapons were operationally deployed (Air Force and Navy). Distinctive patterns of UAP activity were noted in conjunction with the deployment of Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM), and other individual and distinctive patterns of UAP incident reports were noted for different types of atomic weapons complex sites over the full period of this study.
Another data point: crash retrieval stories died out in the early fifties and only regained steam in the late 70s: