The fact that Teller claimed not to have remembered Lazar (Part 1)

The fact that Teller claimed not to have remembered Lazar is at significant odds with his, Teller’s, recall of Lazar in 1988.…

The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies: Area 51

The fact that one of the world’s leading scientists—Edward Teller—would not take legal action against a man who effectively said that he, Teller, was part of a conspiracy to hide the truth surrounding UFOs and aliens held at Area 51 is extraordinary, and yet, that is exactly what happened: Teller hemmed and hawed in what was an embarrassingly awkward fashion.

Now it’s time for us to take a look at another possibility when it comes to Bob Lazar: it’s a theory that suggests that Lazar was telling the story as he saw it but that he may have been the subject—and the victim—of an ingenious disinformation program aimed at the former Soviet Union. It’s a fact that in the 1980s—specifically so in the latter part of the eighties—the Soviet Union was deeply interested in what was afoot at Area 51. They knew of the controversial land grab that began in 1984 and that continued for a number of years.

The Russians were also well aware that some highly radical aircraft were being secretly test-flown out at Area 51 and its immediate surroundings. Another issue is at hand, too.

While Russian espionage agents were spying on Area 51—and staying low in Las Vegas as a means to keep the U.S. government off their backs—Uncle Sam was fully aware that a number of Soviet spies were operating in Nevada, looking to find out what was afoot at the infamous base. The problem was that the U.S. government, military, and intelligence didn’t know where those Russian agents were exactly and who they were, so consider the following.

As a means to try to smoke out those Soviet personnel and quickly arrest them, disinformation specialists at Area 51 may well have used Lazar as a patsy, as a man who was used by American intelligence to spread tales of crashed UFOs, dead aliens, and cosmic conspiracies. Lazar may well have worked out at Area 51’s S-4, and he also may well have fully believed those briefing papers to which he had access and that told tales of ancient encounters between the human race and aliens and genetic alterations to the human species made by advanced E.T.s. In that sense, Lazar was a completely unwitting figure in this strange mind game. On the other hand, maybe Lazar was a witting player, acting as the lone scientist willing to reveal the truth of an alien presence deep in the deserts of Nevada.

It goes without saying that for the Russians, uncovering the alien truth would have been the ultimate prize, even more so anything that might be the creation of U.S. scientists. How could they refuse the startling story—dangling like a carrot before them—of incredible alien science that just might have given the Russians the upper hand? In light of all this, it’s doubtful that the Soviet hierarchy could have resisted the possibility of gaining alien technology and even extraterrestrial weaponry.

The result: no doubt a quiet word in the ear of a couple of guys hiding out in Vegas—let’s say Dimitri and Ivan—who are ordered to find out the amazing truth, and in doing so, they are discovered by the security teams at Area 51. The result: two important Russian spies have been captured and interrogated and no real secrets have been compromised, all as a result of an amazing plan to reel the Russians in by having Lazar swear to the world that the U.S. government has a highly classified UFO program when, just maybe, it really doesn’t in the slightest.

On this same issue, it’s worth noting one specific, short statement that Lazar made to George Knapp regarding what was going on at S-4. Lazar told Knapp that while he, Lazar, was at the base, the staff “play so many mind games there.” Lazar also admitted that certain memories from his time spent at Area 51 were not just hazy but suspiciously hazy. This was something that led Lazar to believe that his mind had been tampered with—possibly chemicals, hypnosis, and MKUltra-type “mind-control” technologies—all of which we’ll come to later to demonstrate how such technologies are incredibly successful in achieving their sinister goals.

On the other hand, though, and as we’ll now see, certain data and evidence suggests that everything really did go down just as Lazar claimed it did. The year 1989 was also notable, in relation to Area 51, for another reason of incredible proportions: did a secret transfer occur then of an unknown number of alien bodies from Area 51 to the ultrasecret, Utah-based Dugway Proving Ground? That’s the claim of a man named “Mitchell Baxter,” who worked on a tunneling program at Dugway in the early 1990s. According to Baxter, a colleague who also worked on that same program to expand certain underground facilities at Dugway shared with Baxter what he knew, having worked on similar tunneling and excavating projects at Area 51.

While the data was scant, Baxter’s informant claimed that a number of alien corpses were transferred to Dugway from Area 51 for a very serious and disturbing reason. At some point in 1989, several technicians who were involved in the autopsy of a number of dead aliens that were recovered from a UFO crash somewhere near the fringes of Area 51 were killed by what was suspected of being a deadly, fast-acting alien virus (shades of one of the stories told to John at Area 51 in the early 1970s). The lab in which the autopsies occurred was quickly locked down, and the bodies were transferred to Dugway, which was in a far better position to handle matters relative to viruses and biological warfare.