Out of the nineteen collaborators brought together by
Kean, no less than five are retired air force generals from Belgium, Brazil,
Chile, France, and Iran.
Kean’s new UFO book includes top officials
Posted by: Antonio Huneeus August 11, 2010
5 Comments 2,799 Views
Book Cover
UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and
Government Officials Go On the Record, by experienced
journalist Leslie Kean and a long list of distinguished collaborators, should
be required reading for all skeptics and people who mistakenly believe that
there is no credible evidence supporting the existence of UFOs. Those
interested in the subject should also read it, since they will probably learn a
lot about important foreign cases from firsthand witnesses and officials and
scientists who investigated them. This is indeed a unique and much-needed
contribution to ufological literature. Out of the nineteen collaborators
brought together by Kean, no less than five are retired air force generals from
Belgium, Brazil, Chile, France, and Iran. The other fourteen include former
Arizona governor Fife Symington; military and civilian pilots from various
countries who encountered strange craft; and official government investigators
who dealt in one way or another with UFO investigations, such as Nick Pope, a
former employee of the British Ministry of Defence, James Callahan from the
Federal Aviation Administration, and Jean-Jacques Velasco, from the French
space agency UFO department, GEPAN (now called GEIPAN).
The foreword to Kean’s books is written by a respected
political figure, John Podesta, who was the chief of staff during President
Clinton’s presidency and led the transition team for President Obama. It’s
highly unusual to see such a well-known politician stating, in public, his
interest in UFOs; Podesta calls himself “a curious skeptic.” Then again,
Podesta supported Leslie Kean’s efforts with her Coalition for Freedom of
Information to obtain government UFO data a few years ago. “Kean and her
distinguished co-writers call for the establishment of a small U.S. government
agency to cooperate with other countries that are already formally
investigating, reviewing, and releasing information relevant to UFOs,” states
Podesta’s foreword. “This new agency would handle release of documents and any
future investigations with openness and efficiency. It’s an idea worth considering.”
Leslie Kean
We here at Open Minds sincerely hope that the largest
number of scientists, academics, mainstream-media commentators, and other
influential people get a chance to read Kean’s book. It will surely dispel many
beliefs and prejudices that people probably have about this subject. Where else
can you open a UFO book and see, not just references and quotes from documents
by important generals, but actually short essays written by those generals?
General (Ret.) Wilfried De Brouwer, for instance, was once the Belgian Air
Force point-man for the famous UFO wave that hit Belgium between 1989 and
1991. In Kean’s book, De Brouwer tells the full story. Additionally,
Kean’s book includes commentary by Iranian Air Force General (Ret.), Parviz
Jafari, who was one of the fighter pilots involved in the celebrated UFO
dogfight over Tehran in September 1976. Jafari was also a panelist at the
very important 2007 event at the National Press Club (NPC) in Washington, DC,
which was organized by Leslie Kean and filmmaker James Fox and would later
become the basis of the acclaimed documentary, I Know What I Saw.
Most of the contributors in Kean’s book attended the
NPC event, but Kean also includes others who didn’t speak. The bulk of the UFO
cases and investigations described in the book deal with aviation and military
incidents from a total of nine countries including Belgium, Brazil, Chile,
France, Iran, Peru, Portugal, the United Kingdom, and the U.S.
Podesta (right) with Obama.
The other retired generals included in the book are
Denis Letty from France, Ricardo Bermúdez from Chile, and José Carlos Pereira
from Brazil. A former fighter pilot and head of the southeast zone of the
French Air Defence, General Letty was the chairman of the Committee for
In-Depth Studies, composed of a number of retired French military and
intelligence officers, space officials, and scientists who released the now
famous 1991 COMETA Report entitled, “UFOs and Defense: What Should We Prepare
For?” It was this French study, in fact, that triggered Kean’s interest and
curiosity on the subject, leading to her first UFO article featured in the Boston
Globe. General Letty writes, in Kean’s book, about “The Birth of COMETA in
France,” explaining that his interest was sparked in 1965 when he heard of
fighter pilots scrambling to chase unknown objects over French skies. He was
particularly puzzled by the case of Captain Jean-Pierre Fartek, who saw a UFO
on the ground with his wife near Dijon, France in 1979. “I found the Farteks’
testimony so disturbing that I have been preoccupied by the UFO problem ever
since,” wrote General Letty.
James fox with Leslie Kean in D.C. (image credit:
James Fox)
In addition to testimony from multiple military
officials, Leslie Kean analyzes the different official approaches that various
nations have taken over the years. Some countries like the United Kingdom,
Brazil, and Uruguay, among others, look at UFOs from a military
standpoint—namely, whether these objects could potentially pose a threat to
their air defenses. Other countries, such as France, take a scientific
approach, conducting a thirty-three-year-long investigation of UFOS through its
specialized unit within the CNES—the French equivalent of NASA. Jean-Jacques
Velasco, who led this department between 1983 and 2004 (variously called GEPAN,
SEPRA, and now GEIPAN) contributed a chapter on these investigations. Velasco
was the case investigator of the Trans-en-Provence UFO landing case of January
1981. Yet other official agencies like Chile’s CEFAA (Spanish acronym for
Committee for the Study of Anomalous Aerial Phenomena), established in 1998,
which is under the Department of Civil Aeronautics (DGAC, equivalent to our
FAA), take a different approach, that of keeping a tab on UFOs to insure
aviation safety.
Will Leslie Kean and her team of experts succeed in
helping to create a new, open-minded official U.S. agency that can take a fresh
look at this phenomenon and cooperate openly with other governmental
investigations elsewhere in the world? That remains to be seen, but the
publication of this book is an important first step.
Leslie Kean (middle) with the Generals, Pilots, and
other officials in Washington D.C. (image credit: James Fox)
ABOUT ANTONIO HUNEEUS
Open Minds Investigative Reporter J. Antonio Huneeus
has covered the UFO field from an international perspective for over 30 years.
His articles have appeared in dozens of publications in the U.S., Latin
America, Europe and Japan. He was also the co-author of the Laurance
Rockefeller-funded “UFO Briefing Document – The Best Available Evidence” and
edited the book “A Study Guide to UFOs, Psychic & Paranormal Phenomena in
the USSR.” Huneeus studied French at the Sorbonne University in Paris and
Journalism at the University of Chile in Santiago in the 1970s. He has lectured
at dozens of UFO Conferences all over the world and been interviewed by many
media outlets including The Washington Post, the Sy-Fy and History Channels,
Nippon-TV, etc. He received the “Ufologist of the Year” award at the National
UFO Conference in Miami Beach in 1990 and the “Courage in Journalism” award at
the X-Conference in Gaithersburg, Maryland, in 2007.
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