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Authors: Len Kasten

Tags: #UFOs/Conspiracy

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BOOK: Secret Journey to Planet Serpo
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PART TWO

PROJECT CRYSTAL KNIGHT

This part of the book draws heavily upon the diary of the Team
Commander, who we also know as “102” (see
page
). We are very
fortunate to have his personal record of this amazing journey as it was
happening. In this diary is recorded far more than simple information
and observations. We can also now appreciate all his anxieties, his misgivings,
and his impressions. When he says, “I dreamt of Earth” and
describes his Colorado home, we experience a wave of sympathy for
this man who has volunteered to travel 240 trillion miles from Earth,
as we try, with great difficulty, to comprehend what such a journey
could be like. We also become spectators to what he is seeing and hearing,
and we learn what he thinks about his adventures. We must give
many thanks to Anonymous who had access to the actual diary and
who painstakingly transcribed it verbatim and sent it in to the Serpo
website. In sending in these diary entries, Anonymous prefaced them
with a plea to Victor Martinez, the website moderator. He said:

Attached for your UFO Thread List are just four pages of the Team
Commander's diary. The diary contains a large number of pages, all
hand written. It took me several days to prepare the attached four
pages
from the diary. This is the actual, verbatim diary of the Team
Commander. It was started the morning of the departure. There were
code names for control personnel and three-digit numbers for each
Team Member [addressed above]. There are other codes and abbreviations
for certain things, which is [sic] not explained.

I've typed the EXACT words, phrases, and abbreviations. Nothing
has been changed. And likewise, I will ask you to not alter,
change, or
correct any of the text here as you often do with mine to make it gram- matically correct. This includes your use of caps to emphasize things I've written; I ask you to not do this with these journal entries, Victor.

In making this plea, Anonymous is communicating to Martinez how important it is to leave the Commander's precise phraseology intact and to reproduce it exactly as he recorded it with incorrect spelling, grammar, and inconsistencies included. He understood that this diary must be given to posterity “warts and all.” He knew that someday school children all over the world would read these words in their history books, and they would be right there with the Commander to witness these events as they happened, to see it all through his eyes! So, in the diary extracts in this section, we have tried to maintain this high degree of authenticity and have reproduced the text exactly as it was sent to the website, and we ask the reader's indulgence in reading the diary entries that are laced with errors, some careless, some in the interests of saving time, and some without regard for grammatical accuracy. In some cases, where absolutely necessary, I have added the correct text in brackets. In any case, I am confident that the Commander's intent will easily be understood.

The more we learn about 102, the more admirable he becomes. Having dared to cross the galaxy, he must now shepherd his team through thirteen years of an incredibly challenging existence. They must endure extreme heat, strange food, constant daylight from two suns in the sky, excessive radiation exposure, and little or no recreation. All the while he must carry out his mission to learn all he can about this civilization. There are times when he can easily be mistaken for Captain Kirk from
Star Trek,
such as when he confronts the Ebens for authorizing the cannibalization of his dead teammate for a cloning experiment (see
pages
). Interestingly, the team arrived on Serpo within a few months of the date that Captain Kirk first appeared on our television screens in 1966. Apparently, the timing was right for both. Sometimes it seems there is an amazing confluence of reality and fiction.

7

SELECTION AND TRAINING

President Kennedy gave the official directive for the Eben exchange program. The date for the alien landing had been previously set for April 24, 1964, and the landing site was to be at the western border of Holloman Air Force Base, adjacent to the southern entrance to the White Sands Missile Range, in New Mexico. It was originally planned to be only a diplomatic visit during which the aliens would also retrieve the bodies of the nine dead victims of the two New Mexico crashes, as well as the body of Ebe1. But President Kennedy decided to request that the event become an exchange program. This request was communicated to the Eben home planet, and was approved by them around September 1962. As noted earlier, the exchange program idea was originally put forth by Ebe1 in his fifth message in 1952. In a reply directly to him, the Ebens agreed to a return visit, but did not mention an exchange program. They suggested a date ten years in the future. This reply may have suffered from Ebe1's translation and the military handlers at Los Alamos first believed it to be a mistake. But before they could obtain a correction, Ebe1 had died, so that date (1962) remained until the new one in 1964 could be established in 1955 via human to Eben communication. As it turned out, the new date was really twelve years in the future from when Ebe1 had received his reply. Now, in 1962, when communications were much improved, Kennedy realized that the exchange request might now receive an approval, and it did. It was agreed that we would send twelve American astronauts to the alien planet, and they would leave one Eben ambassador here, for a period of ten years. Since the planned date of the landing could not be changed without great difficulty, that meant that the government planners had only about eighteen months in which to select and train our ambassadorial team. It was a very tight schedule for such an unprecedented and complicated program. The selection process alone could easily involve a six-month effort. While President Kennedy had placed the entire program in the hands of the Defense Intelligence Agency, this did not preclude the use of civilian subcontracting agencies. However, it was quickly decided that the Air Force would be the lead agency, taking responsibility for finding twelve volunteers for this historic mission.

The Air Force brought in civilian consultants to help with personnel selection and mission planning. Interestingly, NASA, which became operational on October 1, 1958, had no involvement in the mission. Under the terms of the National Aeronautics and Space Act of July 29, 1958, NASA was to be the official government agency charged with space exploration. And since they had fully absorbed the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), they already had a forty-six-year history of space research that could certainly help to expedite the program planning and preparations. But the NASA charter specified that it remain nonmilitary. So, while the DIA was free to contract with civilian agencies, NASA could not be involved in a DIA program. However, as will be seen below, NASA did participate in training the team.

A GRAND ADVENTURE

The appointed military-civilian selection committee debated for months about the criteria to be applied in choosing the team members. This was precious time lost. It was finally decided that all candidates must be military, but not necessarily from the Air Force. There were to be no civilian members of the team. They had to have chosen the military as a career, and had to have completed at least four years of service. This decision made a lot of sense. The mission required an ultrahigh level of personal and team discipline, since the team members would be facing enormous hardship, and they would have to rely on that discipline to handle the challenges. Furthermore, as previously discussed, Kennedy and the DIA were not absolutely certain that they would not be facing a possible threat from the Ebens, and they wanted people who could defend themselves, and could possibly even find a way to return to Earth by force, if it became necessary. The committee would be looking for individuals with special skills appropriate to their roles in the mission who had additionally been cross-trained in other needed skills. Also, they wanted some evidence that each team member had the ability to step into the shoes of another member, if necessary.

The team members had to be currently unmarried. Presumably, this requirement did not eliminate those previously married, but they could not have any children. Preference would be given to those who were themselves orphans. The goal was to select candidates with as few family ties as possible. Apparently, there was concern that family members might somehow learn of the program and might conceivably make public their worries about its safety. These twelve individuals would be entirely in the hands of another civilization on a planet in a distant star system, and the government had little or no leverage to ensure their safety. Their safety, of course, was highly problematic. This was a very dangerous mission, and the fate of the team was basically unpredictable. If they did all die, we would have no way of knowing whether it was accidental, so we could not retaliate against the Eben in our custody, nor would we want to anger an alien race that had the technology to invade the Earth! This was a delicate balance, but we had enough experience with the Ebens to feel confident that the team had a reasonable chance of survival and returning safely. We basically had learned to trust them, but this was to be the first time any human would be sent out into space beyond Earth's orbit. It was a grand adventure, really more appropriate to the realm of science fiction than to that of reality. But it was worth the risk. If they all or even some of them returned safely to Earth, we would have complete details about a civilization on a distant planet, which would be a window into the universe of incalculable value.

The call for volunteers was placed in military publications. Eventually, after some months, the final twelve—ten men and two women—were chosen. There were eight Air Force selectees, two Army and two Navy. Additionally, four alternates were picked. They would go through the same training as the main team, in case a trainee was eliminated or dropped out. These sixteen were the very best, and most likely to complete the mission successfully.

Relative to selection, the following quoted information came from someone in England who claimed to have been in MI6 (the British intelligence agency) and was involved in the program. It was sent to the website and was not disputed by Anonymous.

The advertisement which was sent out asked anyone interested in volunteering for a space program [to] apply. It was a semi-classified announcement. The disguise was that the USAF was selecting a special team to travel to the moon and these people must undergo special training and a special selection process. None of the military people trying out for this team knew the real mission. About 500 people applied and that narrowed down to about 160. But there was a problem. Some specialists required on this mission were missing. Besides, the requirement called for each team member to be single, never married, no children and if possible, orphans. The USAF had to go out and recruit two doctors and several other specialists.

SHEEP-DIPPED

The selection committee decided to completely dissolve the identities of all the team members, and to assign them three-digit numbers as their new identities. They wanted to sever all their existing connections to Earth, except those with the mission personnel, and that meant destroying traceable identities. Consequently, they were all “sheep-dipped.” According to an article in
Time
magazine on February 3, 2003, titled “The CIA's Secret Army,” by Douglas Waller, “If a soldier is assigned highly clandestine work, his records are changed to make it appear as if he resigned from the military or was given civilian status; the process is called sheep dipping, after the practice of bathing sheep before they are sheared.” This metaphor is slightly askew. It is really the shearing and not the dipping that applies here. Identities are sheared off like the wool of the sheep. One suggestion was that they all be listed as dead. That was debated and rejected. It was finally decided that they be shown on their official military records as “missing.” That seems like a very odd decision, since the “missing” category was really only appropriate in wartime when thousands of military personnel were listed as “missing in action.” In 1963, the Vietnam War had not yet begun. It wasn't clear how the military would be able to explain how twelve people could be “missing” in peacetime. How could members of the armed forces suddenly not show up for duty without being labeled as deserters? Stranger still was the decision to either destroy their military records or to place them in a secret storage facility. That meant that no investigator would ever even know that they had been in the military. This means that they could never question the “missing” designation anyway. All other records were to be collected and destroyed or placed in a vault, including Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax returns, medical records, and any other papers that showed that these twelve individuals had ever existed. That was really an impossible task since there were probably papers such as birth certificates, school and college records, and Social Security cards that may not have been retrievable by the military.

The purpose of all this strict depersonalization is obscure. Very possibly, the committee wanted to prevent the writing of articles and books when the team members returned to Earth and were released to civilian life. The security oath alone should have accomplished that goal. But they weren't taking any chances. By eliminating their credentials, the military made it easy to disavow such writings. They wanted the full report of the space travelers to remain under lock and key for as long as they chose. There could have been a justifiable security reason for this at the time, but now, in retrospect, it seems a great shame that these twelve courageous space pioneers must forever remain in the dark halls of historical anonymity. The final makeup of the team with their new three-digit identities is as follows:

Team Commander
102
Assistant Team Commander
203
Team Pilot #1
225
Team Pilot #2
308
Linguist #1
420
Linguist #2
475
Biologist
518
Scientist #1
633
Scientist #2
661
Doctor #1
700
Doctor #2
754
Security
899

In one of his e-mails, Anonymous answers some questions regarding the Serpo material that were sent in. One question relates to the selection process and offers some additional insight. Following is the question and answer:

Another question pertained to the team makeup. Why were only 2 females taken? If one considers the monumental problem associated with picking a team of 12 people, where each person must be totally erased from the military system—no family ties, no spouses, and no children—one can see the difficulty that the selection group had. The selection group picked the best team members from a limited pool of military people. The original selection group picked 158 people. The final 12 were selected from that number. If you consider the psychological, medical, and other tests that had to be administered, the final 12 were the best qualified from the original number. Why they chose 2 females was never written. Apparently, those two females were the best qualified in their individual specialty: a doctor and a linguist.

THE FARM

The primary training for the mission took place at Camp Peary, Virginia, on the York River near Williamsburg. This is the not-so-secret main CIA training location popularly known as “The Farm,” but officially referred to as the Armed Forces Experimental Training Activity (AFETA). The project was assigned its own training complex within the larger facility, where it could impose its own secrecy and security within the already highly secure CIA system. So it was necessary to go through two levels of screening to gain access to the team training location. Camp Peary was the home training site for the team, but they were also trained at Sheppard Air Force Base in Wichita Falls, Texas, Ellsworth Air Force Base outside of Rapid City, South Dakota, and Dow Air Force Base in Bangor, Maine. They were given high-altitude astronaut training at Tyndall Air Force Base near Panama City, Florida. Anonymous says that they were also sent to unidentified locations in Mexico and Chile for special training.

Camp Peary was a logical choice for training the team, primarily because it was self-contained and it was ultrasecure. Since it was operated by the Defense Department, it was really a military base under the nominal control of the U.S. Navy. It was named after famed naval explorer Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary, who in 1909 was the first man to reach the North Pole. Self-containment was important to the planners of the mission. They didn't want the team to make any connections outside their training facility where they might inadvertently drop a hint or reference to their mission. Camp Peary already had pleasant homes and apartments, recreational facilities, and retail establishments for the CIA trainees that were easily adaptable for the team. Since it was previously a Virginia state forestry and game preserve, the camp residents could even enjoy hunting on the nine-thousand-acre, heavily wooded reservation in whatever spare time they were given. Secrecy and self-containment had always been the major virtues of this facility throughout its history. During World War II, it was the main training camp for the Navy Seabees, and then it was used to house those German prisoners of war, mainly officers, who were supposed to have been killed in action, but had actually been rescued by the Navy. Consequently, the German High Command thought they were dead and couldn't give away any information. The prisoners could live normal lives securely at Camp Peary while they were being interrogated. Eventually, most became naturalized American citizens. The Navy gave the reservation back to Virginia in 1946, but then took it over again in 1951.

The purpose of CIA training at the Farm is to imbue deskbound intelligence operatives with the paramilitary skills they would need in enemy territories. Here, the keenly academic types are “toughened up” and made into pseudo-soldiers. This kind of James Bond commando training was resumed after 9/11 by George W. Bush after a long era of blunders by CIA paramilitary operatives in foreign countries who were in the Special Operations Group (SOG). Waller says in his
Time
article, “Until fairly recently, the CIA, in an effort to clean up a reputation sullied by botched overseas coups and imperial assassination attempts, had shied away from getting its hands dirty. Until about five years ago [1998], it focused instead on gathering intelligence that could be used by other parts of the government. Before that, traditional CIA officers, often working under cover as U.S. diplomats, got most of their secrets from the embassy cocktail circuit or by bribing foreign officials. Most did not even have weapons training.” Now, says Waller, “At Camp Peary, new SOG recruits also hone their paramilitary skills, like sharpshooting with various kinds of weapons, setting up landing zones in remote areas for agency aircraft and attacking enemy sites with a small force.” This rebuilding of the Special Operations Group by CIA Director George Tenet required a makeover of the facilities and capabilities of Camp Peary starting in 2001. By the mid-1960s, there had been some improvements as a result of the lessons learned in the Bay of Pigs debacle in 1961. But those facilities were still rather primitive when the Serpo team was in training at the camp between 1963 and 1965.

Navy Seabees in training at Camp Peary, 1943

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