Document title: UFO buffs: Otherworldly leaders also at talks
Document type:  Newspaper article
Publication:  Cincinnati Enquirer
Date:  Nov. 4, 1995 
Author: Cameron McWhirter

UFO buffs: Otherworldly leaders also at talks

By Cameron McWhirter
The Cincinnati Enquirer

Richard Hoagland is watching the Dayton peace talks with keen interest 
this week - but it's not the Bosnian war he's worried about.

Hoagland, a former NASA consultant, and other UFO buffs are wondering 
what the extraterrestrials are doing at the talks.

That's right, it's conspiracy time: spaceships, aliens, advanced tech-
nology and, of course, a government cover-up.

"These three leaders are being brought to Wright-Patterson Air Force 
Base) for a reason," said Hoagland, founder of the New Jersey-based Mars 
Mission, an international group  convinced that evidence shows human 
civilization once existed on Mars and the moon. "How can you get these 
guys to see the bigger picture? With a bigger stick. You show them you 
have a greater power than they could ever imagine."

Operation Blue Book

For years Wright-Patterson has been the focus of UFO conspiracy theor-
ists. The base is the headquarters for Air Force research concerning new 
and foreign technologies. It was home to Operation Blue Book -- the Air 
Force's investigation of Unidentified Flying Objects from 1947 to 1959.

Most important, UFO watchers believe the base is home to what they call 
"Hangar 13", a facility where alien bodies were stored after an alleged 
1947 crash of an alien spaceship in Roswell, N.M.  The alien ship and 
bodies, they believe, were taken to Wright-Patterson for secret research 
and storage. The military maintains the crash was in fact a spy balloon.

But for many UFO enthusiasts, the peace meeting at the remote air base 
is not a coincidence, it's a sign.

"Think of all the centers of world government," Hoagland said. "The 
Hague, Geneva, Camp David... Dayton is not on the list... I just think 
it stinks to high heaven."
   
Hoagland, whose group has 20,000 members, according to Omni magazine, 
thinks the leaders of Earth are trying to settle all world conflicts 
before preparing for war against other humanoid civilizations in outer 
space. The Bosnian leaders are being shown aliens and advanced alien 
technology now in the hands of the United States Air Force.

'The Roswell myth'

He predicted the talks would soon result in a peace agreement-after 
the Serbian, Bosnian and Croat leaders had seen "them."

"We're being prepared for an interplanetary war," Hoagland said. "Events 
are coming to a head."

Reached at the base, air force officials had no comment.

Hoagland is not without his detractors.

Joe Nickell, senior researcher for the Buffalo based Skeptical Inquirer 
magazine, said of Hoagland, "A mind is a terrible thing to waste."

Nickell, who has spent years working to debunk what he calls "the 
Roswell myth," said the idea that aliens are stored at Wright-Patterson 
is absolutely ridiculous.

"Oh sure they're on ice in Hangar 18 or is it Hangar 9," he said. 
"Little pickled humanoids. Peace talks. I don't know how you could ever 
link the two."

A greater connection

Nickell said the UFO idea in our culture expresses a psychological
need for humans to feel a greater connection, to feel that something
greater is watching over them.

"But the point is there is no credible evidence that extraterrestrials
ever visited this planet or ever crashed at Roswell, N.M., or, least of 
all, are stored on ice in Dayton, Ohio," he said.

Kevin Randle, author of two books on the Roswell incident, said he does 
not go as far as Hoagland to draw a connection between the talks and 
aliens, but he is convinced extraterrestrial research is being conducted 
at Wright-Patterson.

"We've got a chain connecting Roswell to Dayton, Ohio," said Randle from 
his Dubuque, Iowa, home.  "It's clear the base is important in the 
history of UFO phenomenon."

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