A PHOENIX PROJECT REPORT (The Deluce Report)
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(7078) Sat 4 Jul 92
8:17p
By: Michael
Corbin
To: All
Re: Dulce Report
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The following was
uploaded by a user on ParaNet. It is
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its affiliates makes no
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truthfulness or validity and does not endorse its contents in any
way.
As a further
note: Under paragraph (3E), it mentions
that there are buildings
with
"five-sided with a dome," ParaNet has seen photographic evidence of
such
buildings. These buildings are not buildings as one
would think of them, but
what appear to be
wilderness observation platforms. The
Dulce Report denies
any of these
buildings appeared in their investigation.
THE DULCE REPORT
NUMBER 920527
MAY 27, 1992
A Field Investigation and
Evaluation
A PHOENIX PROJECT REPORT
The "Phoenix Project
Reports"
Are Published By
ADVENT PUBLISHING COMPANY
P.O. Box 3748
Carson City, NV 89702
Entire Contents Copyright (c)
1992
by
The Phoenix Project
Logo
A Registered Trademark tm (r)
Permission to
quote is granted provided
The Phoenix
Project is acknowledged as the source and the
Report
Title and Date
are included in any quotes.
Reproduction of any Phoenix Project Report or Logo, in
any form
or by any means
is not permissible without written
authorization
from the
publisher.
WHAT IS THE PHOENIX PROJECT?
The
Phoenix Project is
a private, civilian,
research
organization formed
in 1952 to
investigate and correlate
information concerning
Unidentified Flying Objects
(UFOs) and
Extra-Terrestrial
(ET) activities. It has no affiliation with the
United States Government or any of its agencies.
Because of the
nature of its
work the Phoenix Project does not seek publicity.
Staff
members are former military personnel who have all
been
associated with intelligence activities, and have knowledge
of
covert government
operations concerning UFO's. Their knowledge of
the specialized
field of ~intelligence correlation,~
provide
unique insights
into various subject matter.
From
time-to-time and in the
public interest, the
Phoenix
Project will
publish research reports regarding certain subjects.
A list
of reports is
available from our
publisher. All
correspondence
should be addressed to:
The Phoenix
Project
C/O Advent
Publishing Company
P.O. Box 3748
Carson City,
NV 89702
[[Contributor's
Note ... A complete printed copy of this
report,
including all
exhibits, can be obtained for a minimal
cost by
contacting the
above address]]
IMPORTANT NOTE
The
name "Phoenix" is used
by many different publishers
and
organizations as
a part of the name
used in their
various
publications.
To
avoid any false association with or confusion that might be
caused by
a similar name, all publications
of the "Phoenix
Project" bear the Project's Logo (a registered trade-mark)
and
are published
exclusively by Advent Publishing
Company. The
"Phoenix Project" is not affiliated with any
other publication,
publisher,
organization or group.
In particular, there is no affiliation with a
publisher known as
America West, any of its publications, or the
individuals known
as George and
Desiree Green, all of Tehachapi, California.
The Dulce Report
In recent years, volumes of information have
circulated within
the UFO research community regarding the alleged
presence of a
joint U.S.\Alien
base in the area of Dulce, New Mexico.
In an
attempt to either prove or disprove the information, the
Phoenix Project
has completed an intense investigation
of the
Dulce area. Our
investigation encompassed the following:
1. A
detailed physical search of the Archuleta Mesa by vehicle
and on foot.
2. The physical exploration of a large area
surrounding the Town
of Dulce.
3.
Interviews with local citizens, native American Indians
of
the Jicarilla
Apache Indian Reservation and Rio
Arriba County
Sheriff and
highway maintenance personnel.
4.
A search of County building
and construction permits
and
records, and
interviews to determine if any large scale
civilian
or government
construction projects ever occurred in
the area
from 1930 to the
present.
5.
A comprehensive aerial survey
and airborne magnetometer
survey of the Archuleta Mesa, the Town of Dulce, the
Archuleta
Mesa, and
surrounding areas.
An Overview
Re: Dulce
The
Town of Dulce, is located in northern New Mexico near
the
southern border
of Colorado. Dulce is located eighty-three
miles
northeast of
Farmington, New Mexico on U.S. Route 64.
See Map
Exhibit 1.
It has a population of 1,648 and is nestled in
a valley. Just to
the north and overlooking the town is the large
Archuleta Mesa.
The town
is at an altitude of 6,825 feet above sea level.
The
main income producing activity in the area is cattle
ranching.
The business and service activities are typical
of those needed
in a community of
this size. There are no military or
industrial
activities, large
or small, in the area. See Photo Exhibits 4 and
5.
In
order to present the results of our investigation
it is
necessary to refer to items of information, widely
available to
UFO researchers, concerning the Dulce, U.S.\Alien
base. In
the
following, we
will quote from those items of information. We will
attempt to identify the source whenever possible.
This will be
followed by our
findings.
The Investigation
1) Source
Information Excerpts: Dulce Papers.Txt Author Unknown
...A
joint US/EBE facility exists
beneath the Archuleta Mesa
near the town of
DULCE NEW MEXICO. (1A) This facility has been in
existence in one
form or another since 1948.
(1B)
...The facility proper
is located one
kilometer
underground.
(1C) The base is approximately 2.5 miles
northwest of Dulce, and
almost overlooks
the town.
(1D)
There is a paved government road 36 feet wide going
into
the area.
* * *
Findings
of Phoenix Project Investigation (PHX)
regarding the
foregoing:
(PHX-1A)
No substantiating County records confirm
this. Local
residents have no
memory of any government installation, civilian
or military ever
having existed in this area.
(PHX-1B)
Same as 1A. There
is no record or memory
of any
underground heavy
construction, excavation, or mining activity in
the area.
(PHX-1C) See Map Exhibit 3.
(PHX-1D)
See Map Exhibits 2 and 3, and Photo Exhibits 6 and 7.
The road
in question is Indian Reservation Road # J-2. It has
never been labeled a "government" road.
This road is not paved,
as described
in the source material. It is a narrow,
two lane
dirt road (barely twenty (20) feet wide that is
completely open
for public use.
* * *
2) Source Information Excerpts: 1988
Krill2.Txt
...During
the occupation of the Greys,
they have established
quite a
number of underground
bases all over
the world,
especially in the
United States. (2A) One such base (among others
in the same state) is under Archuleta Mesa,
which is about 2.5
miles northwest
of Dulce, New Mexico.
The
foregoing extract is from a
transcript of a conversation
between Jim
McCampbell and Dr. Paul Bennewitz on July 13, 1984.
* * *
Findings:
(PHX-2A)
This refers to the previously
mentioned Indian
Reservation Road
# J-2. The road at this point is at the base
of
the Archuleta
Mesa. See Map Exhibit 3 and Photo Exhibit 7.
* * *
3) Source Information
Excerpts: 1988 Krill2.Txt
(3A) ...Bennewitz reports he was able to
determine the location
of the
underground facility: a
kilometer underground beneath
Archuleta Mesa on the Jicarilla Apache Indian Reservation
near
Dulce, New
Mexico (since 1976, one of the
areas of
the U.S.
hardest hit by
mutilations). (3B) Bennewitz' information is
that
this installation
is operated jointly as part
of an on-going
program of
cooperation between the U.S. government and the EBEs.
Back to
the base under discussion. After Bennewitz briefed Air
Force officials
on what he had found, a trip to the area revealed
the following
data:
(3C)
The base is 2.5 miles northwest of
Dulce, and almost
overlooks the town. (3D) There is a level highway
36 feet
wide
going into the area. It is a government road. (3E)
One can
see
telemetry
trailers and buildings that are five-sided with a dome.
Next to the
domes, a black limousine was noted -- a CIA
vehicle.
(3F) These limos
will run you off the road if you try to get into
the area. (3G) To the north there is a launch
site. (3H) There
are two wrecked ships there; they are 36 feet
long with wings,
and one can see
oxygen and hydrogen tanks. The ships that we
got
out of
the trade are atomic-powered with
plutonium pellets.
Refueling of the plutonium is accomplished at Los Alamos.
(3I)
The base has been
there since 1948.
Some of the disks are piloted by the NSA. (3J)
The base is 4,000
feet long (3K)
and helicopters are going in and out of there
all
the time. When it became known that Bennewitz was
familiar with
this, the
mutilations in the
area stopped. (3L)
In 1979,
something
happened and the base was temporarily closed. There was
an argument
over weapons and our people were
chased out. The
aliens killed 66
of our people, and 44 got away.
One
of the people who in fact got
away was a CIA agent
who,
before leaving,
made some notes, photos, and videotapes, and went
into hiding.
He has been in hiding ever since,
and every six
months he
contacts each of five people he left
copies of the
material with.
His instructions were that
if he
missed four
successive
contacts, the people could do whatever they want with
the material
and was received
in December, 1987,
by many
researchers. The
"Dulce Papers" were composed of 25 black
and
white photos, a videotape with no dialogue and a
set of
papers
that included
technical information regarding
the jointly
occupied (U.S.-Alien)
facility one kilometer
beneath the
Archuleta Mesa near Dulce, New Mexico. (3M) The facility
still
exists and is
currently operational.
* * *
Findings:
(PHX-3A) Refer to (PHX-1A & 1B.
(PHX-3B)
Refer to (PHX-1A & 1B). There are no records, nor is
there any
physical evidence to substantiate this allegation.
(PHX-3C)
The elevation at the location
described, where
Reservation Road
J-2 crosses the Navajo River, is not high enough
to overlook the Town of Dulce. The road is not
level and it is
not 36-feet wide.
See Map Exhibit 2.
(PHX-3D)
See (PHX-1D). The road is not level and it is not 36-
feet wide.
It is a narrow dirt road that climbs,
slowly, with
many curves,
around the base of Archuleta Mesa. See Photo Exhibit
7.
(PHX-3E)
Local residents and County highway
maintenance crews
have no
memory of any
such trailers, buildings,
domes or
limousines in
this area. Physical investigation reveals there
is
no area where
such structures ever existed.
(PHX-3F) The Rio Arriba County Sheriff's
Office has no record of
any reports,
ever, having been filed by motorists forced off
the
road by "any" type vehicle. As mentioned
previously, this is a
Reservation Road used by the Indians, ranchers and the
general
public. If
any occurrences, such
as those described
ever
occurred, it
would have been the "talk-of-the-town." No residents
interviewed,
remember any such events.
(PHX-3G)
Physical investigation, on foot, failed to reveal any
evidence of a
"launch" site at the location described.
(PHX-3H)
There are no physical indications
of any
kind, and
there are no cleared areas of sufficient size
to provide space
for two
crashed ships or the oxygen and fuel
tanks described.
This includes
both sides of the road, all the
way around the
mesa. See Map
Exhibit 3.
(PHX-3I) There are no indications of any such
facilities. No one
remembers any
such facilities. Such facilities
are not there
today.
(PHX-3J)
A complete examination of the area and the top of the
mesa show no
evidence of any 4000 foot long cleared area. If such
ever existed,
scars in the landscape would still be present.
See
Map Exhibit 3.
(PHX-3K)
Physical examination does not reveal past or
present
helicopter
landing pads anywhere in the area. Local residents do
not remember any extensive helicopter activity,
of any kind, in
the area.
(PHX-3L)
There is no record or local
memory of any
military
presence, garrison, or troop movements, past or
present, in the
Dulce area. Since
there is only one major highway into and out of
Dulce, the presence of any military truck convoys
or ambulances
would not
have gone unoticed by the local
residents. And, as
mentioned previously, there has never been any
major helicopter
activity that
could have brought in airborne troops.
(PHX-3M)
Contrary to the statements in the Krill2
information,
there is no
physical indication of any installation in the
Dulce
area or in,
around or underneath the Archuleta Mesa. Both
ground
and aerial
surveys do not
indicate any suspicious
terrain
features.
An airborne magnetometer survey of the
described areas reveal no
unusual underground
features that could be interpreted as a large
underground base.
If an underground base was located 1-KM beneath
the Archuleta
Mesa, and it was 3-KM wide by
8-KM long, its
presence would be revealed by the magnetometer.
Any underground
facility of the size described would be easily
detected even if
it was buried
5-KM below the mesa. It would be more than obvious.
It would
"shout" its presence. The Magnetometer Contour
Chart
indicates no
hidden underground facility
or any unusual
excavations or
caverns. See Exhibit-9.
* * *
4) Source
Information Excerpts: PROJECT
BETA BY DR.
PAUL
BENNEWITZ
(4A)...numerous road blocks extend northward. (4B)
Maintained
road some thirty
feet wide and servicing facilities, tanks,
etc.
There is also an apparent foundation for another
helo pad______
(4C) human
housing, and another black limousine
with tracks
leading to it
west of the road.
...The
total alien basing area
apparently contains several
cultures, (all
under the designation 'unity') (4D) and is
approx
3km wide by 8km long and is located in the middle
of nowhere on
the Jicarilla
Indian Reservation west of Dulce, NM.
...Based
on the number of ships presently
in this
area, the
total alien
population is estimated to be at least 2,000 and most
likely more.
----- Logistical plans -----
...initial
logistics would indicate
a plan sequentially
implemented as
follows: This plan
does not include
all
requirements and preparatory safety measures to be employed
by
the ground force; however, if Air Force
Intelligence desires to
pursue the
approaches suggested in this report, each
significant
requirement will
be discussed in depth.
(4E)
The attack must be directed almost entirely on the ground
since vehicle
ignition problems will
be encountered. All
electrical and
electronic equipment must be 'hardened'
using
specific techniques
perfected prior to
implementation. This
information has
been checked by interaction and eavesdropping
on
their communication
channels _______as far as weaknesses
are
concerned. The
program would be instigated in phases:
(4F)
1) The first procedure would be to close the
gates of the dam
above the
Navajo River. This dam could be held closed for
the
duration. Internal
to the one cave, there is a
small dam for
water storage.
Its capacity is small.
(4G)
There is also a discharge outlet downstream that could be
closed, causing
waste water to back up into the caves. The
water
is vacuum pumped
apparently by some electrostatic means from
the
river. (4H) There
is a water intake and dam upstream that can
be
totally cut off
and the water re-routed to Chama, New Mexico.
* * *
Findings:
(PHX-4A) There are no roadblocks on any roads
in the Dulce Area.
See Photo
Exhibit 7, of Reservation Road # J-2.
There are no
roadblocks present. According to County Maintenance Crews,
the
only time Road
J-2 was blocked was years ago when it was "washed-
out" by
heavy rains in the area.
(PHX-4B)
Reservation Road # J-2, 2.5 miles northwest of Dulce,
is a
narrow, winding, dirt
road. It does
not match the
description in
the source information.
(PHX-4C)
No such facilities exist. No one
ever remembers the
existence of any
such facilities.
(PHX-4D)
Investigations on foot, by vehicle, and
by aerial
survey, show no
evidence of secret entrances to any facility or a
base as large as
the one described in the source information.
(PHX-4E)
An Electro-Magnetic "spectrum sweep" of the Archuleta
Mesa and the Town of Dulce, revealed no
unusual electromagnetic
disturbances. The
entire area was surveyed by a
"Total Field"
Magnetometer. No
unusual magnetic disturbances were recorded.
(PHX-4F) There are no records of any
"Dams" on the Navajo River
anywhere near the
Dulce area or north of the Archuleta Mesa.
The
"Dam"
described in the source information does not exist.
(PHX-4G) An "on-foot" survey of the
Navajo River did not reveal
the existence of
any "discharge outlets" downstream. There is no
evidence of any caves. The Indians interviewed did
not know
of
any caves,
along the river,
as described in
the source
information.
(PHX-4H)
There is no "water
intake" or "dam" upstream
on the
Navajo River.
The lack of any "dams" can
be verified by
consulting any
topographical or aeronautical charts of the
area.
Re-routing the
Navajo River, by damming it, to Chama, New Mexico,
as described by
Bennewitz, would be a miraculous feat. Chama, New
Mexico is
at an elevation of 8,025 feet
above sea level,
as
indicated by Aeronautical Chart # 45 dated July
25, 1991. Also
noted, on
this same chart, is the elevation of Dulce as
6,800
feet above sea
level. It would be a natural impossibility to have
the water of the Navajo River re-routed to Chama,
as the
water
would have
flow up-hill over
the Continental Divide
that
separates the
two towns. The mountainous
terrain ranges from
9,025 to 9,916
feet above sea level with no obvious gravitational
advantages between the two towns. Such an effort would
require
the installation
on a monster pipeline and pumping
station to
accomplish this.
No such pipeline or pumping station
has ever
been built in
this area.
* * * 5) Source Information Excerpt
Thisisit.Txt Wm. C. Cooper
...The
alien underground base is located beneath
an indian
reservation near
the small town of Dulce, New Mexico...
* * *
Findings:
All of the previous "Findings" apply
to this source information.
* * *
CONCLUSIONS:
Information
from many sources regarding
the existence of an
alleged
U.S.\Alien Base at Dulce, New Mexico, does not agree with
the facts
obtained by the
investigation carried out
by The
Phoenix Project.
It would appear that the information
describing
this alleged
U.S./Alien Base and
the numerous facilities
associated with
it, is entirely false.
This would indicate
deliberate disinformation supplied to UFO investigators
and all
those interested
in UFO research.
It seems that
this
disinformation is
designed to mis-lead and
mis-direct serious
researchers away
from the truth. It seems incredible that serious
UFO researchers and the UFO Movement, in
general, could accept
the information
regarding a large U.S.\Alien Base
near Dulce,
without making a
detailed and complete investigation.
The facts revealed by the Phoenix Project
investigation do not
support the
presence of a joint U.S.\Alien base near Dulce -- and
it is not in,
around, or under the Archuleta Mesa. Perhaps
there
is a
such a base
somewhere else on
the Jicarilla Indian
Reservation, but
if that is true, it seems strange
that the
Apaches, the
local residents and the proper
local authorities
have no
knowledge of its presence or
that such a
base ever
existed.
From
a practical stand-point,
a base as large as
the one
described in the
information supplied by the sources
quoted,
along with a
staff of 2000 aliens and their
human co-workers,
would need to
meet certain logistical requirements. Any
sizeable
joint U.S.\Alien base, located anywhere, would need
to meet the
same
requirements.
1. The presence of a large, highly technical,
human work-force.
2.
Support facilities for
such a human
work-force, i.e.,
housing, medical,
recreational, service and shopping, and service
support
facilities.
3. There would obviously be work-shifts with
workers coming and
going at certain hours. None of this activity
could be
totally
concealed. This activity would be recognized by other
people in
the area.
4.
Such a base would require
operating supplies which
would
require incoming
freight shipments.
Delivering such supplies
would require
delivery trucks or some form of air transport. Such
activity, on a regular basis, would not go
un-noticed by local
residents.
5. If
such a base existed, above ground or
underground, there
would need to be
security guards, fenced or controlled areas
and
regular perimeter
patrols. A relationship
with local law
enforcement officials
would be required. The presence
of such
security forces
and patrols would not go un-noticed by
residents
in the area.
6.
Local authorities, i.e., city, county, and law enforcement,
would know if
such a base or facility existed in their area.
Please
note. None of the foregoing criteria exist,
or have
existed, in
or around the Town of Dulce or
anywhere on the
Jicarilla Apache
Indian Reservation. Nor do they exist
in any
other "remote
areas" where there are suspected
U.S. or joint
U.S\Alien bases. Thus, one can only conclude that
such bases
cannot remain
"hidden" in remote areas. Someone will always know
or remember
that something strange is going-on
in any remote
area.
Where then, should one look for such bases?
The answer should be
obvious. Such
bases must meet
the requirements outlined
previously. They are located in known areas which
meet all
the
logistical requirements. There are any number of government
or
military installations
in New Mexico that
easily meet such
requirements.
However, gaining entry to such facilities, to prove
that such a base
exists, would prove difficult if not
impossible
to any
civilian researcher without
the proper credentials,
security
clearances and a "need-to-know."
The following pages contain the maps,
photographs and scientific
exhibits
associated with this Report.
Signed,
The Phoenix
Project
END OF FILE
PARANET FILENAME:
DULCEDOC.REP
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