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Authors: Len Kasten

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APPENDIX 7

EBEN RELIGIOUS BELIEFS

Below is an excerpt from Release 28, undated, wherein Anonymous discusses a meeting between an Eben visitor he refers to as OSG (Our Special Guest) and Pope Benedict XVI in Washington, D.C. The meeting took place during the Pope's visit in April, 2008, followed by meetings with Vatican representatives at Groom Lake. These visits were opportunities to compare Eben spiritual views and beliefs with Catholicism.

During each visit, a representative from the Vatican WAS present. The pope was particularly interested in the religious activity of the Ebens. The Ebens worship a God. The pope feels their God is the same as ours. The Ebens worship God differently, but NOT so much. In fact, OSG [“Our Special Guest” referring to an Eben “ambassador”] brought artifacts of the Ebens' God that fits directly into OUR [Christian] God.

Several Eben paintings, sculptured statutes, and carved fetishes were similar to our God. In fact, the story of their God—appearing thousands of years ago on SERPO and setting up religious sects on their planet—is similar to our story of Jesus. The Ebens chant verses, which, when translated, are similar to OUR prayers. The Eben chants contain twenty-six verses, which they repeat every day at their prayer hour, which is in the afternoon (SERPO day). The chants sound like Tibetan chants. On a particular Eben day of their year, the Ebens expand the chants to thirty-eight verses. The extra twelve chants pertain to “angels”—which we have translated to mean “saints”—who have helped the Eben society. This information has NEVER been released.

The basic beliefs/religion of the Ebens are simple. However, their practice is very complex. The Ebens worship one God, which they call an “Entity,” and they have religious symbols that reflect other religious entities, which they call “subentities.” This would be similar to our identification with saints.

The Ebens' belief in life after death is similar to that of the Roman Catholic church and some Eastern religious doctrines. Once an Eben dies, [his or her] soul [bioplasmic body] is taken from the body by these subentities (saints) and cleansed of all sins. The soul is then taken to a midpoint (Catholics would call it “Purgatory”) between Heaven and that midpoint. Then once the soul is ready, it is taken to the “Supreme Plateau” (Heaven), where it remains for an eternity.

Their beliefs become much more complex at this point. Some souls, called “The Arranged” (that is their word), are prepared for entry back into the living society, i.e., this plane of existence. The Ebens believe that if they perform some specific act—referred to as “karma” on Earth—during their regular life, they then can come back to the living life in another body. The Ebens believe in reincarnation and the eternity of the soul. The Ebens do NOT believe that animals or their sworn enemies of other space-traveling races have souls.

This is something that might help hold people over on the “Project SERPO” subject matter until all of our files and materials have been given back to us from the Dept of Defense.

APPENDIX 8

THE DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

By Victor Martinez

This paper by Victor Martinez, the Serpo website moderator, provides some in-depth information about the DIA that is necessary to understand their dedication to transparency, which is unique among government intelligence agencies.

The DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY is organized into six (6) directorates and the Joint Military Intelligence College (formerly the Defense Intelligence College). The directorates are:

Administration

Analysis

Human Intelligence [HUMINT]

Information Management and Chief Information Center

Intelligence Joint Staff

Measurement and Signature Intelligence [MASINT] and Technical Collection

The DIA headquarters is in the Pentagon. The DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS CENTER is an extension of that headquarters which is at Bolling Air Force Base in southwest Washington, D.C., as is the Joint Military Intelligence College. [Bolling AFB is where all of the Project Serpo files are located, which include thousands of photographs of the Eben civilization in several large photo album books; animal, plant and soil samples; audio recordings of the Eben music; and photos of other alien species that visited/were cloned on Serpo.] A few DIA employees are based at the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center in Maryland, and at the Missile and Space Intelligence Center in Alabama. The DIA's military attachés are also assigned to U.S. embassies around the world and as liaison officers to each unified military command. The DIA's Russian counterpart, or parallel, organization is the
Glavnoye Razvedyvatelnoye Upravleniye,
or GRU [Main (Chief ) Intelligence Administration].

PRELUDE: HOW AND WHY IT ALL STARTED

The creation of a unified Dept of Defense [DOD] in 1947–49 was not accompanied by the unification of defense activities. Each of the military services maintained its one [own] intelligence organization; indeed, maintaining these distinct capabilities had been a major demand of the military during deliberations over the creation of the CIA. But there were also a number of intelligence requirements that were either interservice or departmentwide. Thus, an additional intelligence organization had to be designed and developed to meet these broader, growing needs for the future.

THE BIRTH OF THE DIA

The U.S. Dept of Defense established the DIA on Sunday, October 1, 1961, to coordinate the intelligence activities of the military services. The DIA serves as the intelligence agency for the Joint Chiefs of Staff [JCS] as well as for the Secretary of Defense and the U.S. unified or theater military commanders. As a senior military intelligence component of the U.S. intelligence community, the DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY is a combat-support arm, providing all-source intelligence to the American armed forces, defense policy makers, and other members of the U.S. intelligence community. Under the Defense Reorganization Act of 1958, several unified military commands were created, but as long as each individual service had its own intelligence organization, the unified commands would not be receiving unified intelligence. The services had set up barriers that prevented the free exchange of intelligence data.

Complaints about vastly different estimates and bureaucratic infighting inspired the creation of the DIA under the KENNEDY administration, although the specific efforts by the Dept of Defense “to put its house in order” with respect to intelligence dates back to 1959. In his first State of the Union message, President Kennedy said: “The capacity to act decisively at the exact time action is needed has too often been muffled, [creating] a growing gap between decision and execution, between planning and reality.”

The brainchild of President JOHN F. KENNEDY and his secretary of defense, ROBERT S. McNAMARA, the DIA was established in 1961 as a military intelligence authority that would provide independent information while circumventing the “turf” problems arising from interservice rivalries. [See end of this section.]

The Secretary of Defense ROBERT S. McNAMARA created the DIA, giving to it as a prime mission the coordinating of intelligence estimates, which previously had been individually produced by the individual services. The DIA is a member of the intelligence community and, as such, in theory comes under the nominal responsibilities of the director of central intelligence [DCI] as well as the secretary of defense. Further, as originally set up, the DIA director assumed the functions of the J-2 (intelligence) within the JCS; the DIA still provides support for the J-2. The classified Plan for the Activation of the Defense Intelligence Agency (1961) called for a maximum of 250 personnel—military and civilian—at DIA headquarters.

THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE IS REVAMPED

The military services retained their intelligence agencies—Air Force intelligence, Army intelligence, Naval intelligence—and responsibilities for intelligence training, developing doctrine for combat intelligence, internal security, and counterintelligence within their respective services. Other duties retained by the services, but available to the DIA for its mission, included the collection of technical intelligence and intelligence support for JCS studies.

The DIA has frequently struggled—through reorganizations and Pentagon lobbying—to increase its importance within the intelligence community. But in fulfilling its charter to collect military and military-related intelligence, the DIA must rely upon the National Reconnaissance Office [NRO] for military information obtained by satellites and strategic reconaissance [
sic
] aircraft; the National Security Agency [NSA] for the making and breaking of codes; and the CIA for military intelligence gained from foreign intelligence agencies. If, for example, the CIA “turns” a Russian GRU officer, the DIA must depend on the CIA to obtain the GRU officer's information.

By 1975, the DIA had more than 4,600 employees and an annual budget estimated at more than $200 million. However, the DIA had been among the intelligence agencies most severely hit by the end of the Cold War, which led to a 25 percent reduction in its personnel. Former DCI Admiral STANSFIELD TURNER wrote in 1986: “Because the DIA is self-conscious about living within the shadow of the more capable CIA, it often takes contrary positions just to assert its independence. . . . More often than not, when the DIA does produce a differing view, it cannot—or will not—support it.” Turner, like many other CIA officials down the years, also criticized the DIA for being unable to dominate with the competing military services.

There were great changes in intelligence network and routing systems to battlefield and at-sea commanders. In February 1991, the DIA began producing a closed-circuit telecast to about 1,000 defense intelligence and operations officers in the Pentagon and at 19 military commands in the United States.

THE DIA IN THE MODERN ERA

The
Defense Intelligence Network Show
is encrypted so that it can be watched ONLY by authorized monitors. Ingredients for the telecasts in clude aerial and satellite reconnaissance images and audio reports from the NSA. “We've got to do to intelligence what CNN has done to news,” a Pentagon official told The WASHINGTON POST.

The DIA has also provided intelligence to United Nations peacekeeping forces and to U.S. responses to terrorist actions. The DIA also aids law enforcement agencies involved in antidrug operations. There has been a marked improvement in performance as the military establishment has changed its attitude toward intelligence, which had been seen as a dead end for nonspecialist officer career paths.

Although the DIA was conceived as a military agency, by the mid1980s, about 60% of the DIA staff were civilians. The DIA has sometimes found itself torn between its military customers (the JCS and their organization) and the civilian customers of the DOD. The Joint Chiefs may seek analysis to support specific or preferred positions; the civilians may prove skeptical of military-produced analysis, which often tends toward more pessimistic assumptions about conflict and combat.

A possible renaissance [
sic
] for the DIA came in 1995 with the appointment of JOHN M. DEUTCH, former deputy secretary of defense, as DCI. During his time in the Pentagon, Deutch had taken a close interest in the DIA and had created within it the Defense HUMINT Service [DHS], which is authorized to run agents and proprietary companies overseas.

After the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003, the CIA was chosen to lead his interrogation. But specialists in the DIA, who had operated extensively in Iraq, were also part of the interrogation team. DIA analysts were also involved in the hunt for weapons of mass destruction.

DIA VS CIA: “SIBLING RIVALRY” AND INTELLIGENCE TURF WARS

The so-called “sibling rivalry” is just that: it is a CIA term used to refer to officers employed by the sometimes rival DIA. The UNofficial rivalry between the two (2) agencies began when the DIA was established in 1961. From the beginning, some CIA officials felt that the DIA was encroaching on agency territory. It was believed that the DIA was too involved with CIA-controlled spy satellite operations. The rivalry also stemmed from fiscal concerns, wherein both agencies found themselves competing for budget dollars. However, by virtue of the coordinating and oversight authority of the DCI, the CIA is senior to the DIA within the U.S. intelligence community. Today, the DIA very effectively reduces the role of the individual armed services in the realm of strategic intelligence.

APPENDIX 9

DEEP SPACE PROBES

In addition to the publicized space probes such as
Voyager,
the U.S. has been sending other probes into deep space since 1965 that have been kept secret. We now learn from Anonymous that the main purpose of these probes is to set up a reliable communication system with Serpo. Clark McClelland, former NASA Aerospace Engineer, said in 1999: “Some of these NSA Probes are launched from the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) during secret missions called ‘Classified' missions. They loaded the payloads on the Space Shuttle at night under tight security and few technicians had the proper clearances to participate. An allmale crew of specially trained military astronauts flew those missions.”

Anonymous gives us the following information about these probes:

NSA/NASA both teamed up to develop new technologies to explore the universe. They have deployed the following deep space probes. These probes were used to establish a communication link with the ALIENS. They formed a type of repeater system for the communications. Not much else is known.

The following is a list of known probes:

A. 1965: First deep space probe, Code name: “Patty”

B. 1967: Second deep space probe, Code name: “Sween”

C. 1972: Third deep space probe, Code name: “Dakota”

D. 1978: Fourth deep space probe, Code name: unknown

E. 1982: Fifth deep space probe, Code name: unknown

F. 1983: Sixth deep space probe, Code name: unknown

G. 1983: Seventh deep space probe, Code name: unknown

H. 1983: Eighth deep space probe, Code name: “Moe”

I. 1985: Space probe launched on SS Mission 51-J, Code name: “Sting Ray”

J. 1988: Ninth deep space probe, Code name: “Amber Light”

K. 1988: Tenth deep space probe, Code name: “Sandal Slipper”

L. 1989: Eleventh deep space probe, Code name: “Cocker Peak”

M. 1992: Twelfth deep space probe, Code name: “Twinkle Eyes”

N. 1997: Thirteenth deep space probe, Code name: “Kite Tangle”

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