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AREA 51 UNCOVERED
The “secret”
military base in Nevada, known
as Area 51, has been central in
alien and UFO conspiracy
theories. Whatever goes on in
Area 51, not many people know
about it since signs like this
one surround the perimeter of
the base. The airspace is also
restricted and the area is known
by pilots as “The Box.”
What makes it so secure?:
You can’t get in. Along with the
signs, a security subcontractor
in camouflage Humvees and F-140s
constantly patrol the area,
especially around the signs .
These security guards are armed
with M-16s and have
authorization to use deadly
force. These “cammo dudes” also
have helicopters that act as
deterrents. The area has motion
sensors buried in the ground to
detect anyone trying to sneak
into the base. Closed-circuit TV
cameras also line the perimeter
and some even have night vision.
The base does not appear on any
public government map and only
through Google Earth can you
actually see the base from
above.
Jesse Ventura Conspiracy Theory - Area 51
Parts 1 through 6
Area 51 is a
nickname for a military base located in the
southern portion of Nevada in the western
United States (83 miles north-northwest of
downtown Las Vegas). Situated at its center,
on the southern shore of Groom Lake, is a
large secretive military airfield. The
base's primary purpose is to support
development and testing of experimental
aircraft and weapons systems.
The base lies within the United States Air
Force's vast Nevada Test and Training Range.
Although the facilities at the range are
managed by the 99th Air Base Wing at Nellis
Air Force Base, the Groom facility appears
to be run as an adjunct of the Air Force
Flight Test Center (AFFTC) at Edwards Air
Force Base in the Mojave Desert, around 186
miles (300 km) from Groom, and as such the
base is known as Air Force Flight Test
Center (Detachment 3).
Other names used for the facility include
Dreamland, Paradise Ranch, Home Base,
Watertown Strip, Groom Lake and most
recently Homey Airport. The area is part of
the Nellis Military Operations Area, and the
restricted airspace around the field is
referred to as (R-4808N), known by the
military pilots in the area as The Box.
The intense
secrecy surrounding the base, the very
existence of which the U.S. government
barely acknowledges, has led it to become
the frequent subject of conspiracy theories
and a central component to unidentified
flying object (UFO) folklore.
Operations at Groom Lake
Groom Lake is not a conventional airbase,
and front-line units are not normally
deployed there. It appears, rather, to be
used during the development, test and
training phases for new aircraft. Once those
aircraft have been accepted by the USAF,
operation of that aircraft is generally
shifted to a normal Air force base. Groom is
reported, however, to be the permanent home
for a small number of aircraft of Soviet
design (obtained by various means). These
are reportedly analysed and used for
training purposes.
Soviet spy satellites obtained photographs
of the Groom Lake area during the height of
the Cold War, but these support only modest
conclusions about the base. They depict a
nondescript base, airstrip, hangars, etc.,
but nothing that supports some of the wilder
claims about underground facilities. Later
commercial satellite images show the base
has grown, but remains superficially
unexceptional.
Senior Trend / U-2 program
Groom Lake was used for bombing and
artillery practice during World War II, but
was then abandoned until 1955, when it was
selected by Lockheed's skunkworks team as
the ideal location to test the forthcoming
U-2 spyplane. The lakebed made for an ideal
strip to operate the troublesome test
aircraft from, and the Emigrant Valley's
mountain ranges and the NTS perimeter
protected the secret plane from curious
eyes.
Lockheed constructed a makeshift base at
Groom, little more than a few shelters and
workshops and a small constellation of
trailerhomes to billet its small team in.
The first U-2 flew at Groom in August of
1955, and U-2s under the control of the CIA
began over-flights of Soviet territory by
mid-1956.
During this
period, the NTS continued to perform series
of atmospheric nuclear explosions. U-2
operations throughout 1957 were frequently
disrupted by the Plumbbob series of atomic
test, which exploded two dozen devices at
the NTS. The Plumbbob-Hood explosion
scattered fallout across Groom and forced
its (temporary) evacuation.
As U-2's primary mission was to overfly the
Soviet Union, it operated largely from
airbases near the Soviet border, including
Incirlik in Turkey and Peshawar in Pakistan.
Even before U-2 development was complete,
Lockheed began work on its successor, the
CIA's OXCART project, a Mach-3 high altitude
reconnaissance aircraft later known as the
SR-71 Blackbird. The blackbird's flight
characteristics and maintenance requirements
forced a massive expansion of facilities and
runways at Groom Lake. By the time the first
A-12 Blackbird prototype flew at Groom in
1962, the main runway had been lengthened to
8500 ft (2600 m) and the base boasted a
complement of over 1000 personnel. It had
fueling tanks, a control tower, and a
baseball diamond. Security was also greatly
enhanced, the small civilian mine in the
Groom basin was closed, and the area
surrounding the valley was made an exclusive
military preserve (where interlopers were
subject to "lethal force"). Groom saw the
first flight of all major Blackbird
variants: A-10, A-11, A-12, RS-71 (renamed
SR-71 by USAF Chief of Staff Curtis LeMay
and not by a presidential error as popularly
believed), the abortive YF-12A
strike-fighter variant, and the disastrous
D-21 Blackbird-based drone project.
Have Blue / F-117 program
The first Have Blue prototype stealth
fighter (a smaller cousin of the F-117)
first flew at Groom in late 1977. Testing of
a series of ultra-secret prototypes
continued there until mid-1981, when testing
transitioned to the initial production of
F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighters. In
addition to flight testing, Groom performed
radar profiling, F-117 weapons testing, and
was the location for training of the first
group of frontline USAF F-117 pilots.
Subsequently active-service F-117 operations
(still highly classified) moved to the
nearby Tonopah Test Range, and finally to
Holloman Air Force Base.
Later operations
Since the F-117 became operational in 1983,
operations at Groom Lake have continued
unabated. The base and its associated runway
system have been expanded, and daily flights
bringing civilian commuters from Las Vegas
continue. Some commentators, after examining
recent satellite photos of the base,
estimate it to have a live-in complement of
over 1000 people, with a similar number
commuting from Las Vegas. In 1995 the
federal government expanded the exclusionary
area around the base to include nearby
mountains that had hitherto afforded the
only decent overlook of the base.
Rumored aircraft that have supposedly been
tested at Groom include the D-21 Tagboard
drone, a small stealthy VTOL troop-transport
aircraft, a stealthy cruise missile, and the
hypothetical Aurora hypersonic spyplane.
Area 51 Commuters
Defense contractor EG&G maintains a private
terminal at McCarran International Airport
in Las Vegas. A number of unmarked aircraft
operate daily shuttle services from McCarran
to sites operated by EG&G in the extensive
federally-controlled lands in southern
Nevada. These aircraft reportedly use JANET
radio callsigns (e.g. "JANET 6"), said to be
an acronym for "Joint Air Network for
Employee Transportation" or, (perhaps as a
joke) "Just Another Non-Existent Terminal".
EG&G advertises in the Las Vegas press for
experienced airline pilots, saying
applicants must be eligible for government
security clearance and that successful
applicants can expect to always overnight at
Las Vegas. These aircraft, painted white
with a red trim, include Boeing 737s and
several smaller executive jets. Their tail
numbers are registered to several
unexceptional civil aircraft leasing
corporations. They are reported to shuttle
to Groom, Tonopah Test Range, to other
locations in the NAFR and NTS, and
reportedly to Naval Air Weapons Station
China Lake. Observers counting departures
and cars in the private EG&G parking lot at
McCarran estimate several thousand people
commute on JANET each day.
A chartered bus (reportedly with whited-out
windows) runs a commuter service along Groom
Lake Road, catering to a small number of
employees living in several small desert
communities beyond the NTS boundary
(although it is not clear whether these
workers are employed at Groom or at other
facilities in the NTS).
The Government's position on Area 51
The U.S. Government does not explicitly
acknowledge the existence of the Groom Lake
facility, nor does it deny it. Unlike much
of the Nellis range, the area surrounding
the lake is permanently off-limits both to
civilian and normal military air traffic.
The area is protected by radar stations,
buried movement sensors, and uninvited
guests are met by helicopters and armed
guards. Should they accidentally stray into
the exclusionary "box" surrounding Groom's
airspace, even military pilots training in
the NAFR are reportedly grilled extensively
by military intelligence agents.
The base does not appear on public US
government maps; the USGS topological map
for the area only shows the long-disused
Groom Mine, and the civil aviation chart for
Nevada shows a large restricted area, but
defines it as part of the Nellis restricted
airspace. Similarly the National Atlas page
showing federal lands in Nevada doesn't
distinguish between the Groom block and
other parts of the Nellis range. Although
officially declassified, the original film
taken by US Corona spy satellite in the
1960s have been altered prior to
declassification; in answer to freedom of
information queries, the government responds
that these exposures (which map to Groom and
the entire NAFR) appear to have been
destroyed (Corona image). Terra satellite
images (which were publicly available) were
removed from webservers (including
Microsoft's "Terraserver") in 2004 (
Terraserver image), and from the monochrome
1m resolution USGS datadump made publically
available. NASA Landsat 7 images are still
available (these are used in the NASA World
Wind program and are displayed by Google
Maps). In Non-US images, including
high-resolution photographs from Russian
satellites and the commercial IKONOS system
are also easily available (and abound on the
Internet).
In response to environmental and employee
lawsuits (including a class-action lawsuit
brought by employees of the base for toxic
waste exposure), a Presidential
Determination is issued annually, exempting
the Air Force's Operating Location Near
Groom Lake, Nevada from environmental
disclosure laws (2002 determination, 2003
determination). This (albeit tacitly)
constitutes the only formal recognition the
US Government has ever given that Groom Lake
is more than simply another part of the
Nellis complex.Nevada's state government,
recognising the folklore surrounding the
base might afford the otherwise neglected
area some tourism potential, officially
renamed the section of Nevada Highway 375
near Rachel "The Extraterrestrial Highway",
and posted fancifully-illustrated signs
along its length.Interlopers discovered on
(or, some say, near) the restricted area are
generally detained by armed private security
guards (reportedly employees of defence
contractor EG&G) and are then handed over to
the Lincoln County sheriff.
Modest fines (of around $600) seem to be the
norm, although some visitors and journalists
report receiving follow-up visits from FBI
agents.Although federal property within the
base is exempt from state and local taxes,
facilities owned by private contractors are
not. One researcher has reported that the
base only declares a taxable value of $2
million to the Lincoln County tax assessor,
who is unable to enter the area to perform
an assessment. Some Lincoln County residents
have complained that the base is an unfair
burden on the county, providing few local
jobs (as most employees appear to live in or
near Las Vegas) an iniquitous burden of
land-sequestration and law-enforcement
costs.
UFO and conspiracy theories concerning
Area 51
the storage, examination, and
reverse-engineering of crashed alien
spacecraft (including material supposedly
recovered at Roswell), the study of their
occupants (living and dead), and the
manufacture of aircraft based on alien
technology. Bob Lazar claimed to have been
involved in such activities.meetings or
joint undertakings with extra-terrestrials.the
development of exotic energy weapons (for
SDI applications or otherwise) or means of
weather control.activities related to a
supposed shadowy world government.Some claim
an extensive underground facility has been
constructed at Groom Lake (or nearby Papoose
Lake) in which to conduct these activities.
* meetings or joint undertakings with
extra-terrestrials
* the development of exotic energy weapons
(for SDI applications or otherwise) or means
of weather control
* activities related to a supposed shadowy
world government
Some claim an extensive underground facility
has been constructed at Groom Lake (or
nearby Papoose Lake) in which to conduct
these activities.
Most Detailed Images Ever of Top-Secret
U.S. Air Base Show Major Expansion
space.com
Detailed images of Area 51 just released may
not show evidence of little green men, but
they do show that the super-secret Air Force
base has grown significantly over the years.
"I want to see flying saucers as much as
anyone," said Federation of American
Scientist¹s John Pike, who ordered the
1-meter (3.2-foot) images, the most detailed
to date, from Thorton, Colorado-company
Space Imaging. Instead, the photos --
captured over the past few months -- show
that the area has significantly expanded
since the first images were snapped of the
infamous site over 30 years ago.
"It¹s interesting to contemplate what is
going on there. It seems as though there is
tons of money going in there and nothing is
going out," he said.
And four
aircraft hangars are visible off the runway.
Conspiracy theorists have long believed that
one of these hangars, dubbed Hangar 18, is
the holding area for the alien bodies and
captured alien technology taken from crash
sites.
These high-resolution images, captured by
Space Imaging¹s IKONOS satellite on April 2,
were released less than a week after
Raleigh, North Carolina-based Aerial Images
unfolded its series of 6.6-foot (2-meter)
photos of the mysteriously secretive area
over the Web, crashing the site for days.
Though the public's ravenous appetite for
these images was made obvious this past
week, Pike¹s purpose for getting these
photos was different.
Pike said the request was a test to see how
long it would take to gain access to these
images and how they may be used by military
agencies around the world.
"This is an interesting case study that
enables us to explore in practical rather
than theoretical terms just what is this
'Brave New World' we¹ve entered into."
This so-called 3.3-foot (1-meter) resolution
technology once was available only to
intelligence agencies through their own spy
satellites. But it has been estimated that
by the year 2003, at least 11 companies in
five countries will have high-resolution,
remote-sensing cameras in orbit.
That sort of commercial technology in space
worries government officials because they
believe such detailed imagery could
encourage industrial espionage, terrorism or
more cross-border military attacks in the
developing world.
But Pike seemed unfazed by the impact of
this imagery on national security.
Because it took 2 months to get the images,
he said the technology would only be useful
during peacetime for monitoring specific
regions instead of during wartime, when the
military may need to target a strategic
area.
"The war may already be over before you get
your picture," Pike said.
Space Imaging's Mark Brender argued that
obtaining images doesn't always take so
long. "We can turn stuff around in 24
hours," he said. When twin tornadoes touched
down in Texas on March 28, for example,
Brender says that within a few hours they
were evaluating the images and ready to
release them to the public within 24 hours.
"We can produce images very shortly for
natural disasters and crisis, " he said.
Area 51 -- 75 miles (121 kilometers)
northwest of Las Vegas occupies about 150
square miles (390 square kilometers) of a
dried up lakebed in the Great Basin Desert,
Nevada. It was named after the grid it
occupies on an old Nevada map and came into
existence in 1955 when aerospace company
Lockheed Martin landed there to test the U
2, a high-altitude surveillance plane.
The top-secret base later became a proving
ground for several generations of high-tech
prototypes, including the F 117-A Stealth
fighter.
The shroud of secrecy thickened once the Air
Force bought up about 9,000 acres of land
around the base to prevent the public from
getting too close. In August 1994, an Air
Force official admitted the base existed,
saying the Air Force has "facilities within
the complex near the dry lakebed of Groom
LakeŠused for testing, training
technologies, operations and systems
critical to the effectiveness of U.S.
military forces."
Ufologists have long believed that
unidentified flying objects from other
planets are entrenched in underground bases
in the region and insist alien autopsies are
being conducted there. But, conventional
wisdom says the base is likely a center for
super-secret operations dealing with
sophisticated military aircraft.