Continuing Contacts: ALIEN BASES

Alien Base: The Evidence for Extraterrestrial Colonization of Earth: ALIEN BASES

Joelle told me that, having no knowledge of the subject at the time, she began by asking some ‘rather stupid’ questions. Later, after reading a few books, she was able to make more sophisticated enquiries. Her first question, naturally, related to the origin of the visitors. This was one of a number of things that Mark and Val politely refused to discuss in precise terms: they responded merely that they came from a planet, similar in many ways to Earth, located in another solar system. They also stated that we are not alone in our solar system, and implied that they had bases on two (unspecified) moons of Jupiter.

Interestingly, it was reported in 1997 that signs of life, in the form of molecules containing carbon and nitrogen, had been detected ‘on two of Jupiter’s largest moons, Ganymede and Callisto, based on data gathered by NASA’s Galileo spacecraft. For many years, some astrophysicists have speculated that life might exist in the warm water lying beneath the frozen surface of Europa, the smallest of Jupiter’s moons.

Thousands of years ago, said Mark and Val, their people had bases on Mars and on the Moon. They also revealed that they had a number of bases on Earth, located in South America, Australia, the Soviet Union and elsewhere (though not in the United Kingdom).

Although Homo sapiens originated on Earth, the visitors explained that, to speed up human evolution, they had on two occasions genetically ‘interfered’ with us. While similar in appearance, Earth humans and extraterrestrial humans evolved separately. Because of their advanced evolution, aliens live longer than Earth people. Val and Mark were extremely refined, fair-skinned, with perfect teeth and a not immediately noticeable peculiarity about the eyes. On one occasion, Joelle says she saw, though did not meet, a dark-skinned man who was a member of the same group.

Mark and Val said they were liaising in great secrecy with a team of scientists from several nations, having initially established their English contacts through Jack eight years earlier. None of those names was ever revealed to me. In addition to Jack, Joelle met two other such scientists, one of whom worked at the Woomera rocket range in Australia, set up jointly with Britain at the end of the Second World War. As to the purpose of the extraterrestrial missions, this was another question that they declined to answer precisely. ‘We are not here for entirely philanthropic purposes,’ was all they volunteered on one occasion.

Whatever the mission, it demanded considerable dedication from the scientists, some of whom ostensibly worked with the aliens at the bases, or even (on rare occasions) travelled to their planet, necessitating their going ‘missing’. Ideally, therefore, those without family responsibilities were involved.

In Alien Liaison, I discussed an alleged alien base located at, or in the vicinity of, Pine Gap, America’s most secret facility in Australia, some 15 miles from Alice Springs. According to information supplied by Professor J.D. Frodsham in 1989, three hunters returning from an all-night trip witnessed a ‘camouflaged door open up in the grounds of the base and a metallic circular disk ascend vertically and soundlessly into the air before disappearing at great speed’.

Officially a ‘Joint Defense Space Research Facility’ sponsored by both the American and the Australian defence departments, Pine Gap serves principally as a downlink site for reconnaissance and surveillance satellites.

It was established by the Central Intelligence Agency in 1966 and is run jointly by the CIA and the National Security Agency (NSA). According to one American observer: ‘The Australians have accorded the [Pine Gap] facility remarkable hospitality. People and cargo routinely fly in and out, entering and exiting without the burden of customs or immigration checks. The place enjoys almost extra-territorial status.’

According to one of my sources, formerly a CIA employee, Alice Springs is considered to be a ‘reward’ posting — which is not to say that an actual alien base exists, or did exist, at Pine Gap. Nevertheless, there are some intriguing early references to the alleged existence of such a base, located ‘1,400 miles from Sydney’ (which could place it in the Alice Springs area), in letters written by George Adamski. In 1951, for example, he wrote to a correspondent as follows: Under very interesting circumstances I had previously been told of a big space laboratory 1,400 miles from Sydney [which] has been in operation for the past three years. I was made to understand that space ships could be landing there [and that] a communication system could be going on through this laboratory between earthmen and spacemen . . . It wasn’t given to me as definite fact, but as a possibility from which I was to draw my own conclusions.

If there is any truth to this rumour, the implication is that the laboratory was functioning in about 1948, years before Pine Gap was officially known as a satellite intelligence-gathering and relay base. In replies to questions from the same correspondent a few months later, Adamski explained that he had acquired the information in 1949 from a scientist attached to the Chilean government, a former commanding officer in the Chilean Air Force. ‘A communication system is definitely going on,’ wrote Adamski, ‘not only there but in [the United States] as well.’

Regarding the existence of alien bases in the United States, in January 1952, prior to his first contact in the Californian desert in November that year, Adamski spoke with a marine engineer from Alaska who claimed that spacecraft regularly landed in a certain area in that state. According to the unnamed engineer, the ‘space people‘ he saw ranged in height from three to six and a half feet.

I include the foregoing information from Adamski for three reasons: first, it pre-dates any publication relating to the existence of alien bases on our planet. Secondly, as discussed in Chapter 7, Joelle claimed to have met a similar group of extraterrestrials to those who contacted Adamski in 1952 (and who regrettably were obliged to discredit him). Joelle’s contacts also informed her that they had a base in Australia, location not specified, where they liaised with a team of human scientists. Finally, one of my most reliable and well-connected sources has learned that a number of such bases exist worldwide, and that a limited liaison between extraterrestrials and our people was established in the late 1940s. Interestingly, the locations of two of these bases were given as somewhere in Alaska — and Pine Gap.