Unraveling the Enigma: Advanced UFO Technology and Mysterious Alien Bases in Alaska
Jim Schnabel wrote about the role of the US intelligence community in the controversial issue of psychic surveillance, which was most prevalent in the 1970s. His book “Remote Viewers” was published in 1997. According to Schnabel, Alaska’s Mount Hayes was a significant location for one of the aliens’ greatest bases, specifically in relation to the abilities of a skilled remote viewer in the realm of UFO phenomena.
Pat Price claimed that the aliens residing deep within Mount Hayes resembled humans, except for their eyes, heart, lungs, and blood. Price asserted that these aliens used thought transfer to control the motor functions of humans, which he found alarming. Price also attributed the unusual behavior and malfunctioning of Soviet and American space objects to the location. Despite the conflicting narratives, it is evident that the US military had a strong interest in UFO activity in Alaska during the early years. Declassified FBI data reveals astonishing UFO sightings reported in Alaska between 1947 and 1950.
In August 1947, the FBI in Anchorage received an extraordinary UFO sighting report involving two military personnel. Initially, the sighting was reported by one police officer who quickly informed his partner. The object appeared spherical in shape, rather than saucer-like, and had a diameter estimated to be two to three feet. It did not leave a visible vapor trail in the sky. The first officer determined that the UFO was flying at an altitude of over ten thousand feet by comparing it with the cloud patterns in the area.
The second officer provided nearly identical testimony, except he believed the object was approximately ten feet in diameter and at an altitude of 3-4 thousand feet rather than ten thousand. However, both officers agreed that the object was unusual, and one officer noted that it was flying against the wind. These reports were followed by another sighting in July 1947 near Bethel, Alaska, where a pilot observed a flying object resembling a “flying wings” aircraft without fuselage, exhibiting no noise or emissions.
As the 1940s progressed, the FBI continued to receive and document UFO claims. One significant account involved multiple UFO sightings in Alaskan airspace over two days in early 1950. The FBI received a sensitive intelligence assessment from a US Navy source, reporting unexplained aerial phenomena near Kodiak. Naval personnel, including Lieutenant Smith, reported radar contacts and sightings of unidentified airborne objects. Lieutenant Smith and his crew observed a strange craft flying overhead at speeds of approximately 1,800 mph. They attempted to intercept and circle it but were unsuccessful due to the object’s speed and mobility.
Similar encounters were reported by Lieutenant Barco, Causer, and Patrol Squadron One the following day. The object was described as having two orange lights circling a central point, appearing as a reddish-orange ball of fire, or a pulsating orange-yellow projectile-shaped flame.
The official reports concluded that the encounters could not be attributed to weather balloons and suggested that they might be phenomena like meteorites, although the nature of these events remained undetermined. Despite this, the claims made by Pat Price regarding an extraterrestrial presence in Alaska’s Mount Hayes area require further investigation, considering the unusual events experienced by military personnel in Kodiak in January 1950.