"UFO Disclosure": a covert op to discredit real disclosure
By Jon Rappoport
The current Tom DeLonge disclosure happened in a most curious
way. Suddenly, several high-level ex-CIA spooks and Pentagon insiders
joined Blink-182 rocker DeLonge's team, a start-up company called "To
the Stars Academy." One of the team members, Luis Elizondo, rolled out
information on a UFO Pentagon program he headed up.
But Elizondo, for years, ran clandestine covert ops in Latin America for the US intelligence community.
Another DeLonge team member, Steve Justice, was once the
program director of the Lockheed Skunk Works in Palmdale, California,
where super-secret aerospace (and UFO?) research is carried out.
Jim Semivan, another DeLonge team member, "retired from
the Central Intelligence Agency's Directorate of Operations after 25
years as an operations officer, both overseas and domestically," states
the Academy website.
Chris Mellon "served 20 years in the federal government,
including as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
in the Clinton and Bush Administrations."
Paul Rapp's "past honors include a Certificate of
Commendation from the Central Intelligence Agency for 'significant
contributions to the mission of the Office of Research and
Development'." (Note: This office, ORD, was where the CIA's MKULTRA mind control program secretly landed, in 1962, after it purportedly ended.)
Norm Kahn-"Dr. Kahn had over a 30-year career with the Central Intelligence Agency..."
This is an impressive team of insider heavy hitters, with extensive backgrounds in deception.
In order to roll out secret information about UFOs, they
COULD HAVE FORMED AN INDEPENDENT GROUP OF THEIR OWN, WITH NO
AFFILIATION, AND LAUNCHING FROM THAT PLATFORM, THEY COULD HAVE GAINED
INSTANT CREDIBILITY WITH THE PRESS AND MUCH OF THE PUBLIC.
That's how UFO disclosure could have happened.
But no. Instead, they chose to align themselves with a rock
musician who has stated: "Hello, my name is Tom DeLonge from the
Blink-182. I have brought together an elite team from CIA, DOD and the
FMR Director of Advanced Programs at Lockheed Martin's SkunkWorks. We
are aiming to build this ElectroMagnetic Vehicle to Travel
INSTANTANEOUSLY through Space, Air and Water BY ENGINEERING THE FABRIC
OF SPACE-TIME. Our company is called To The Stars... and you can invest
in our plan to revolutionize the world with technology that can change
life as we know it." [emphasis added]
Compare how these government insiders COULD HAVE done disclosure as opposed to how they actually DID disclosure.
Getting the picture?
They aligned themselves with the perfect person who would bring down the scorn and mockery of the press.
Why?
Because clean and credible and convincing disclosure wasn't their number-one objective.
What was their objective?
Obviously, to attract a certain amount of negative reaction.
In the world of intelligence ops, this would be called a limited hangout with a twist.
You put out a few tidbits of information, thus concealing the
largest part of the truth---and at the same time you associate yourself
with a bizarre source who will surely stain the quality of your limited
hangout.
It works.
Again, Elizondo, the point man for recent UFO revelations,
could have stepped up to the podium at a global press conference and
said, "I want to introduce you to my elite team of former government
insiders. After discussions, we've decided to form OUR OWN group and
tell the truth about UFOs. We represent no one in government or outside
government. We need no mouthpiece or promoter. We're simply here to
reveal hidden reality..."
But instead, he and the other insiders signed on with Tom
DeLonge, a man they didn't need and whose reputation would do them no
good.
If you believe that choice was a simple error in judgment,
committed by long-time CIA and military spooks with large ops
experience, I have condos for sale on Venus.
The plan was to disclose and smear the disclosure. Confess and stain the confession. Admit and cast doubt on the admission.
If that isn't so, if there is some other reason for these insiders to join forces with DeLonge, let's hear it.
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