FBI
Told of National Security Issue Buried in UFO Tale
Gary
S. Bekkum
Undisclosed
government and other sources have confirmed to the private intelligence report
www.startreamresearch.com that the FBI has been apprised of concerns over a possible
national security breach involving former government intelligence officers.
An
on-going investigation by Starstream Research revealed that in late August of
this year three agents of the Washington Bureau of the FBI met with an undisclosed
party and discussed a UFO tale involving several former and present government
intelligence officers. Multiple sources have confirmed that following this meeting
concerns were raised that secure government vaults may have been breached at a
USAF base and Los Alamos National Laboratory, under the guise of a 'harmless'
UFO investigation.
Discussion
of this issue was directed to an official under the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence (DNI), and eventually transmitted between official government
email servers. Some of the confidential information was passed to a SSR contributing
writer, and later confirmed by a party directly involved in the investigation.
The
SSR contributing writer has received a request not to publish transcripts of confidential
email messages on the web.
Previously
concerns had been raised that sensitive or classified material had been passed
in a series of counterfeit government UFO documents. One government source suggested
that counter-intelligence information targeted to the KGB had been publicly released
within some of the documents. A prior investigation by the FBI had concluded that
the documents were "bogus."
Starstream
Research first learned of the renewed interest in the bogus documents from an
independent researcher, following on-going contact with a high ranking U.S. Government
intelligence officer. An amicable meeting with the officer and his wife in Washington,
D.C. later took on a bizarre twist, when the researcher was accused of asking
inappropriate questions about a sensitive operation, resulting in cancellation
of previously scheduled meetings with a former USAF counter-intelligence officer
and other sources at the center of the UFO tale.
A
consultation with the researcher and another source present at the meeting determined
that the most likely explanation involved a deliberate effort to scare off potential
sources of information about the AVIARY, an unofficial and loosely knit group
of present and former government intelligence officers interested in the UFO phenomenon.
It was later suggested that Starstream Research may have bumped into a counter-intelligence
operation during the course of the investigation.
The
founder of Starstream Research commented, "Although our focus has been on
documented government interest in unusual phenomena for intelligence gathering,
we suspect the use of phenomenology for intelligence may be closely tied to real
cloak and dagger activities, both past and present."
It
is now known that the CIA previously welcomed UFO reports as convenient cover
for real-life spy plane sightings. One theory is that intelligence operations
continue to infiltrate the world-wide network of phenomenologists and encourage
their activities for a similar purpose.
It
is also suspected that other governments have similar networks in place, and that
may be the source of the on-going concern over the UFO material.
The
extent of any additional reporting to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
(DNI) is not known.
Involvement
by the FBI appears to have raised a red flag, marking a demarcation line drawn
between personal interest in government cover-up of UFO phenomena and more serious
issues involving top secret clearance. There has been a lot of finger pointing
involved, and that is what appears to have lead to FBI involvement, when they
were alerted to the UFO activities during a review of other security issues.
Some
members of the AVIARY have developed the reputation of being 'untouchable' in
spite of semi-public breaches of confidential information.
Additional
information is available at the Starstream Research website:
www.starstreamresearch.com
Starstream
Research is a provider of intelligence and analysis on futuristic national and
international defense, security and risk developments.
A
former CIA senior analyst commented that:
"You
do a service. Excellent analysis from what is officially released material needs
constancy of theme and purpose, not simply "expose'" morning coffee.
You do excellent analysis. I sure as heck am learning things I didn't know, but
which fit like my hands in gloves I was shown but never allowed to try and put
on."