Author: John Greenewald

Background Mission Research Corporation performed analysis for the Weapons Laboratory in high power microwave computations and theory and high energy plasma computations and theory. Document Archive Beam and Plasma Physics Research, June 1990 [124 Pages, 6MB]

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By John Greenewald, Jr. – The Black Vault – Originally Published September 17, 2019 On December 16, 2017, the New York Times and To the Stars Academy of Arts & Science (TTSA) published two videos which both organizations claimed showed “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” or UAPs. Although reported at the time as being recently “declassified” by the U.S. government (a claim currently disputed by both the Pentagon and the U.S. Navy); revelations in the weeks that followed proved that one of the two videos known as “FLIR1” had already been leaked onto the internet in 2007, about a decade prior to…

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Background According to the CIA: Throughout history, trained animals have been used in security roles to fulfill mission requirements, notably by the armed forces, whether for transport, communication, or threat detection. From carrier pigeons in World War I to today’s explosives-detecting dogs, government agencies have turned to animals to do the important jobs human couldn’t do. CIA is no exception, and it once worked on developing ways animals could help with intelligence collection. This collection of declassified documents highlights the diverse programs involving the feasibility of using marine and avian animal capabilities in support of intelligence operations. For a variety…

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By John Greenewald, Jr. – The Black Vault – Originally Published September 11, 2019 Today, the U.S. Navy released the dates of three officially acknowledged encounters with what they call “phenomena.”  In multiple statements received exclusively by The Black Vault, the Navy excited those interested in UFOs by officially admitting that the videos referred to as the ”FLIR1,” “Gimbal” and “GoFast” were, in fact, “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” or UAPs. Now, the Navy has offered up brief, but additional details about the cases, some of which, were previously unknown. The three videos referenced were originally released by the New York Times…

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