Veille ufologique américaine
Le journaliste américain Walter Cronkite est mortNOUVELOBS.COM | 18.07.2009 | 14:32Le présentateur de télévision de CBS avait été sacré "l'homme qui inspire le plus confiance à l'Amérique" par un sondage d'opinion en 1972.Walter Cronkite, ancien présentateur vedette de CBS News, est mort (Reuters)Surnommé "l'homme qui inspire le plus confiance à l'Amérique", le pionnier américain de la télévision Walter Cronkite est décédé, vendredi 17 juillet, à l'âge de 92 ans. C'est la CBS qui a annoncé son décès, chaîne où il a passé l'essentiel de sa carrière. Les raisons de sa mort n'ont pas été précisées.Cependant, selon le Washington Post, citant ses proches, le présentateur souffrait d'une maladie vasculaire-cérébrale depuis plusieurs années....
Walter Cronkite saw UFO destroy a U.S. missile Michael Salla, Ph.D.July 18, 7:55 AMWalter Cronkite: Photo: AP In 1973, Walter Cronkite was working on a CBS story involving UFOs. He interviewed leading UFO researchers to find material and stories about incidents for the special. The most remarkable story however was not covered. That was Cronkite’s own UFO experience during the 1950s when covering a U.S. missile launch in the Pacific.Bill Knell in 1973 was only beginning his career in UFO research. He relates how during his interview by Cronkite for the CBS special, Cronkite shared his own UFO experience. Knell explained that Cronkite and the other reporters covering the missile test were not allowed to take photos or audio. Reporters could only write about the test. There would be no photographic or audio record of the surprising event that would happen. Knell writes:Citer"As Air Force Security personnel walked around the perimeter of the test area with guard dogs and the news reporters watched, the missile was fired-up and about to be released. Just then, a large disc-type UFO appeared on the scene. Cronkite guessed that the object was about 50-60 feet in diameter, a dull grey color and had no visible means of propulsion. Because the noise of activity around him and the missile engine was so loud, he couldn't tell whether the disc made any noise. He did not notice any coming directly from the object. As Air Force guards ran toward the UFO with their dogs, the disc hovered about 30 feet off of the ground. It suddenly sent out a blue beam of light which struck the missile, a guard and a dog all at the same time. The missile was frozen in mid-air about 70 feet from the launcher as it had taken off. A guard was frozen in mid-step and a dog frozen in mid-air as it had jumped at the disc. Cronkite reminded me that this all happened within the space of about five minutes or less. Suddenly, the missile exploded! After that, the disc vanished. The guard and dog looked alright, but were quickly taken away by medical personnel always present at tests in case anyone became injured. At the same time, guards rapidly ushered the reporters into a concrete observation bunker."About thirty minutes after the incident an Air Force Colonel debriefed Cronkite and the other reporters. Knell continues:Citer"The officer told them, "It was all part of the test." Obviously making it up as he went along, the Colonel said that the event was "staged" to test media reaction to UFOs. He reinforced the usual line to the reporters that Flying Saucers were probably not extra-terrestrial, but what people were actually seeing was secret planes being tested by the Air Force. This test was designed to show the media how "shocking" it could be to suddenly view a new technology. Well, Cronkite was certain that what he viewed was a new technology, but he was also sure it was not an Earthly one! He didn't believe the Air Force explanation then, and he still didn't believe it at the time when he told me the story." Cronkite’s experience was not the only time a UFO had been witnessed destroying or disabling a missile. In 1964, Professor Robert Jacobs served as a Lietenant with the U.S. Air Force and was stationed at Vandenberg Air Force base. He was responsible for filming the test of an Atlas missile. He captured on film the following incident:Citer"...we were testing ballistic missiles that were to deliver nuclear weapons on target...my duty [was] to supervise the instrumentation photography of every missile that went down in that western test range...and into the frame came something else. It flew into the frame and shot a beam of light at the warhead. Now remember, all this stuff is flying at several thousand miles an hour. So this thing [UFO] fires a beam of light at the warhead, hits it and then it [the UFO] moves to the other side and fires another beam of light, then moves again and fires another beam of light, then goes down and fires another beam of light, and then flies out the way it came in. And the warhead tumbles out of space. The object, the points of light that we saw, the warhead and so forth, were traveling through subspace about 60 miles straight up. And they were going somewhere in the neighborhood of 11,000 to 14,000 miles an hour when this UFO caught up to them, flew in, flew around them, and flew back out." Jacobs experience along with other incidents of UFOs interfering with nuclear missiles and facilities is covered in a book by Robert Hastings, UFOs and Nukes.Cronkite ultimately choose not to include his own UFO experience in his 1973 CBS Special. While Cronkite told a few friends and researchers about the UFO incident, he never made a public statement about it. Cronkite’s passing away on July 17, 2009 will be mourned by many. Something else to mourn is that he took to the grave perhaps one of the most remarkable UFO incidents ever witnessed by a U.S. reporter.
"As Air Force Security personnel walked around the perimeter of the test area with guard dogs and the news reporters watched, the missile was fired-up and about to be released. Just then, a large disc-type UFO appeared on the scene. Cronkite guessed that the object was about 50-60 feet in diameter, a dull grey color and had no visible means of propulsion. Because the noise of activity around him and the missile engine was so loud, he couldn't tell whether the disc made any noise. He did not notice any coming directly from the object. As Air Force guards ran toward the UFO with their dogs, the disc hovered about 30 feet off of the ground. It suddenly sent out a blue beam of light which struck the missile, a guard and a dog all at the same time. The missile was frozen in mid-air about 70 feet from the launcher as it had taken off. A guard was frozen in mid-step and a dog frozen in mid-air as it had jumped at the disc. Cronkite reminded me that this all happened within the space of about five minutes or less. Suddenly, the missile exploded! After that, the disc vanished. The guard and dog looked alright, but were quickly taken away by medical personnel always present at tests in case anyone became injured. At the same time, guards rapidly ushered the reporters into a concrete observation bunker."
"The officer told them, "It was all part of the test." Obviously making it up as he went along, the Colonel said that the event was "staged" to test media reaction to UFOs. He reinforced the usual line to the reporters that Flying Saucers were probably not extra-terrestrial, but what people were actually seeing was secret planes being tested by the Air Force. This test was designed to show the media how "shocking" it could be to suddenly view a new technology. Well, Cronkite was certain that what he viewed was a new technology, but he was also sure it was not an Earthly one! He didn't believe the Air Force explanation then, and he still didn't believe it at the time when he told me the story."
"...we were testing ballistic missiles that were to deliver nuclear weapons on target...my duty [was] to supervise the instrumentation photography of every missile that went down in that western test range...and into the frame came something else. It flew into the frame and shot a beam of light at the warhead. Now remember, all this stuff is flying at several thousand miles an hour. So this thing [UFO] fires a beam of light at the warhead, hits it and then it [the UFO] moves to the other side and fires another beam of light, then moves again and fires another beam of light, then goes down and fires another beam of light, and then flies out the way it came in. And the warhead tumbles out of space. The object, the points of light that we saw, the warhead and so forth, were traveling through subspace about 60 miles straight up. And they were going somewhere in the neighborhood of 11,000 to 14,000 miles an hour when this UFO caught up to them, flew in, flew around them, and flew back out."
Walter Cronkite's UFO?July 18, 4:25 PMIt is not often a journalist will pass on what could be the scoop of a lifetime. But apparently Walter Cronkite did just that in not reporting on his UFO experience. Yes, according to some reports, the most trusted man in America had a close encounter with a flying saucer.It is a story Cronkite shared with few friends and never reported on air, despite being on assignment for CBS news when it happened in the 1950’s. UFO researcher Bill Knell is one of the rare individuals claiming to get the story firsthand from the broadcast legend. Knell relates that the United States military invited Cronkite and several other journalists to a South Pacific island for a missile demonstration. They were warned that no filming or photography would be allowed. Just as the missile launched, a flying disc appeared in the sky nearby. Knell writes,“As Air Force guards ran toward the UFO with their dogs, the disc hovered about 30 feet off of the ground. It suddenly sent out a blue beam of light which struck the missile, a guard and a dog all at the same time. The missile was frozen in mid-air about 70 feet from the launcher as it had taken off. A guard was frozen in mid-step and a dog frozen in mid-air as it had jumped at the disc. Cronkite reminded me that this all happened within the space of about five minutes or less. Suddenly, the missile exploded! After that, the disc vanished.”Remember—“UFO” only means Unidentified. It does not necessarily mean “alien”. But according to Knell, Cronkite believed what he saw was neither military, nor man-made nor even of this Earth.Although Cronkite hosted a CBS News special about the UFO phenomenon, he did not include his own sighting. Watch Walter Cronkite report on UFO’s and read more of his personal story here from fellow Examiner Michael Salla.**Added 10:43pm 7/18/09: We might benefit from asking why Cronkite only told a few people this story and why he never reported on it himself. Either he did not want to suffer the ridicule that comes when nearly anyone reports a UFO encounter OR it never happened. And just as there are believers and disbelievers when it comes to this phenomenon, there are believers and disbelievers when it comes to the Cronkite story. All we can do is decide for ourselves what to accept.
Peut être n'est ce pas nous qu'ils cherchent à protéger.Sinon pourquoi ne nous protéger que de ce genre de menace.Peut être s'intéressent ils davantage à la planète !Peut être ne sommes nous qu'un parasite temporaire (d'où l'absence de contact véritable) !En tous les cas, ce témoignage semble solide et époustouflant !