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
It should be noted that the Dugway Proving Ground is just as secret and impenetrable as Area 51—albeit for what are largely very different reasons, the claims of alien bodies held at the facility aside, of course. Before we get to the matter of those alleged E.T.s at Dugway—which may well have been transferred there from Area 51—let’s take a look at the history and origins of the base. It was largely the terrible events that went down at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941, that dictated the necessity for the construction of a facility along the lines of the Dugway Proving Ground.
The attack, which demonstrated the horrific extent to which the United States was vulnerable to an out-of-the- blue assault from the skies, not only led the United States to enter the war (which had been raging since September 1939) but also led the U.S. government to consider the possibility that the country might not just be hit by another Pearl Harbor but possibly also attacks using chemical and biological warfare—issues that the United States knew the Japanese were secretly working on.
It was a combined result of Pearl Harbor and the legitimate fears that the Japanese might attack the United States with chemicals and deadly viruses that led then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 6, 1942, to hand over no fewer than 126,000 acres of the Utah desert to the government, specifically to the military. Such was the need for a dedicated facility to be constructed that in less than a week, work began to construct a rudimentary facility that could significantly help to guard the country and the American people.
Work officially began on March 1, 1942. Much of the early work was focused on determining how best to combat potential attacks of the chemical variety. Research into biological warfare largely began in 1943. By 1945, even more land had been grabbed by the government. In addition, Utah’s Wendover Bombing Range was handed over to Dugway, thus increasing its size even more. Then, when the hostilities with the Axis powers came to an end, the Dugway Proving Ground essentially joined forces with the Desert Chemical Depot, and the Dugway Desert Command came into being.
At the turn of the 1950s, close to three hundred thousand more acres were added to the installation—making it a truly huge base and one that, just like Area 51, was heavily guarded and largely shrouded in secrecy in terms of its work, which went forward in leaps and bounds. A change occurred in the late 1960s, specifically in 1968. That was the year in which the Fort Douglas-based Deseret Test Center and the Dugway Proving Ground came together. Then, in 1973, yet another change occurred for the base: it was brought into TECOM, the U.S.
Army Test and Evaluation Command. One more change occurred in 1999, when TECOM was reorganized as the Developmental Test Command. Today, the Dugway Proving Ground covers a massive eight hundred thousand acres. The Public Affairs Office of the DPG states: “In addition to chemical and biological defensive testing, environmental characterization, and remediation technology testing Dugway is the Defense Department’s leader in testing battlefield smokes and obscurants. Testing now includes further determining the reliability and survivability of all types of military equipment in a chemical or biological environment.” All of which brings us to another aspect of the matter of the alleged extraterrestrial bodies held at the Dugway Proving Ground from 1989 onward, having previously been reportedly held at Area 51.
The second story revolves around a Col. George Weinbrenner, who was the chief of the Foreign Technology Division (FTD) at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base’s Air Materiel Command (AMC) in Dayton, Ohio, for a period of seven years during the 1960s and 1970s. On several occasions, Weinbrenner made brief allusions to the fact that “we have five aliens in Utah.” Those same allusions were made to close friends and family, although he would not expand on this issue, but why, exactly, might such bodies have been transferred to Dugway? Researcher Tony Bragalia offers a viable and logical explanation: “Dugway serves as the central source for information on biological material issues for all Commanders-in-Chief and Services.
For over six decades they have acted as this source. Though there are other military installations in Utah, Dugway is,” as a Deseret Morning News reporter once said, “the single most secretive site in all of Utah. Its isolated physical location is uniquely suited for such ‘alien containment.’ Dugway is home to the most advanced facilities in the world designed for the containment, storage and preservation of highly exotic biological material.” Indeed, if the story is true, then none could deny that the remains of extraterrestrial corpses and body parts would equate to “highly exotic biological material.”
In that sense, we may very well be seeing a situation in which senior personnel at Area 51 and their counterparts at the Dugway Proving Ground are secretly sharing materials of the alien variety.