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,This is a satellite image of Area 51, Southern Nevada |
For reasons unknown, the government finally has admitted
that Area 51 — the Shangri-La of alien hunters and a sturdy trope of
science-fiction movies — is a real place in the Mojave Desert about 100
miles north of Las Vegas.
It presumably does not house hideous
squidlike ETs, but at least you can see the place on a map. Area 51 is
confirmed in declassified CIA documents posted online Thursday
by the National Security Archive at George Washington University. A
dogged researcher pried from the CIA a report on the history of the U-2
spy plane, which was tested and operated at Area 51.
The military,
which runs the base, always denied that Area 51 was called by its
famous moniker, preferring a designation connected to the Groom Lake
salt flat, a landing strip for the U-2 and other stealth aircraft.
“Your
honor, there is no name,” an Air Force attorney told a federal judge in
1995. “There is no name for the operating location near Groom Lake.”
The
hearing was part of an environmental poisoning case brought by Area 51
workers who said that they had been sickened by exposure to toxic
chemicals — including anti-radar coatings and other classified materials
— burned in open pits on the base.
For years, those workers
commuted from Vegas to Area 51, also known as “the Ranch.” Some of them
died after developing strange rashes and respiratory problems.
The
men could tell no one what they did; they had signed national-security
oaths barring any disclosures about the black-budget facility, where the
stealth bomber also was tested. But some became plaintiffs in a case
against the government brought by George Washington University law
professor Jonathan Turley.
That case brought me to Area 51 in
1997. I had hoped to see the base from afar. From certain vantage
points, I’d heard that it might appear, suitably, like a mirage.
But
I didn’t make it past the perimeter, where a sign warned that
trespassers fell under the jurisdiction of military law. Too dangerous:
“Use of Deadly Force Authorized,” the sign said, citing the Internal
Security Act of 1950.
In 1955, President Dwight D. Eisenhower
“approved the addition of this strip of wasteland, known by its map
designation as Area 51, to the Nevada Test Site,” according to the
declassified CIA history. The area was near the Atomic Energy
Commission’s vast, desolate proving grounds.
The CIA internally
published its official history of the U-2 program in 1992. It was
released in heavily redacted form thereafter, and National Security
Archive fellow Jeffrey Richelson reviewed a copy in 2002. He filed a new
Freedom of Information Act request in 2005 and the documents arrived
about a month ago, this time with fewer redactions. Therein, the
first-ever reference to Area 51.
Why was the veil finally lifted?
“It
is something we do not know the answer to,” Richelson said Friday. “One
of the things I want to find out is the genesis of this decision: Why
did they not redact it?”
Back in the 1990s, the Clinton administration fought fiercely to
prevent the Area 51 workers from going forward with their case.
President Bill Clinton signed an order exempting Area 51 from disclosing
its pollution records, although the Environmental Protection Agency did
do an inspection. Of course, it was never called Area 51.
Eventually the plaintiffs won a Pyrrhic victory. Turley
prevailed in proving that environmental laws were violated at Area 51.
“They were forced to clean up the facility,” he said Friday.
“It was a major victory legally, but it felt quite incomplete,”
Turley said. “The workers received nothing but the satisfaction of
knowing the facility was brought up to compliance.”
They had hoped at least to have some of their medical expenses paid for by the government.
The
secrecy surrounding Area 51 amplified conspiracy theories claiming it
was infested with extraterrestrials — a notion popularized in movies
such as “Independence Day” and, more recently, “Super 8.”
The UFO angle emerged because, for decades, people reported seeing
strange lights in the surrounding desert — presumably secret aircraft
taking off and landing in Area 51.
Now that Area 51 officially exists, does that ruin its mythical utility for Hollywood creature features?
The clandestine base always was a reliable haven for horrifying Monsters from Beyond.
Veteran sci-fi author Harlan Ellison — who worked on the original “Star Trek” and “Babylon 5,” among other shows — says filmmakers will always find new tropes.
“The
human race has a psychopathic need to create gods and mysteries,” he
said. “Demystifying Area 51 is like saying, ‘Gee there might not be a
Bigfoot.’ . . . By now, only the most lame-brained think we are regularly visited by aliens and that they are at Area 51.”
The next big Area 51 movie is awaiting release. It is ingeniously called “Area 51.” The plot, per the Internet Movie Database, is simple:
“Terror strikes when reporters visit a secret base that houses extraterrestrials.”
I’m
sure it’s long since been cast, but it would be an honor to play a
scribe who has been there and is eager to face the slimy maw of a
squidlike alien.
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