Many more aliens were on the way, however. Cooper reports that in 1953, 10 more flying saucers crashed and 26 dead aliens and 4 live ones were recovered. The newly elected President Eisenhower was in a fix because of all this, and turned to Nelson Rockefeller; together they developed a plan to “wrestle and beat the alien problem.”

In the meantime, astronomers had found that large objects, first thought to be asteroids, were fast approaching earth. The objects were, in fact, more alien spaceships. The government subsequently used radio communications and “computer binary language” to arrange a landing, which resulted in diplomatic relations between the U.S. and this second race of aliens, who left a “hostage” as a “pledge that they would return and formalize a treaty.”

But yet the third race of aliens–enemies of the second race–was arriving as well. After they landed at an Air Force Base in Florida, they “offered to help us with our spiritual development,” but in exchange, they wanted us to dismantle our nuclear weapons. Needless to say, we didn’t take them up on the offer.

By 1954, the second race of aliens had landed and met with Eisenhower to sign a formal treaty. The U.S. Government received an alien ambassador during this meeting, whose name was “His Omnipotent Highness Krill,” but “in the American tradition of disdain for royal titles he was secretly called Original Hostage Crlll, or Krill.” Cooper says that this meeting was filmed and that the films still exist. Later, Krlll “gave lots of information, scientific data, some of which was published in the open scientific literature under the name of O.H. Krill, after being sanitized. …Krill is still alive.”

See also  William Cooper Exhibit 2

Cooper knows all the details of the treaty with the extraterrestrials. It stated that we wouldn’t interfere in their affairs and they wouldn’t interfere in ours; we would keep their presence a secret, and they would furnish us with their technological advances; they were allowed to abduct human beings on a limited basis for medical examination and monitoring of our development, as long as they didn’t harm anyone in the process; there would also be a swapping of 16 personnel each, for educational purposes; underground bases would be constructed for the humanoid guests. One of these underground bases, a “super-Top Secret facility,” was built at Groom Lake in Nevada, code-named “Area 51.” Cooper adds,

“According to documentation, that I read, at least 600 alien beings actually resided full time at this site along with an unknown number of scientists and CIA personnel.”

All these crashed and orbiting saucers, three alien races, treaties, and a coverup of the whole thing, required almost the entire U.S. government to deal with it all. But international groups, such as the Bilderbergers (which now controls the world) and the Trilateral Commission (formed in secret before 1973) became involved as well; in fact, the main reason these groups were formed was to deal with the alien question. Cooper adds that “the name of the Trilateral Commission was taken from the alien flag known as the Trilateral Insignia.”

Cooper’s version of the now-famous “MJ-12″ story is as follows: Eisenhower established a permanent committee, made up of future members of the One World Government, which became known as Majesty Twelve (MJ-12). This group would “oversee and conduct all covert activities concerned with the alien question.

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Among its 19 members were Nelson Rockefeller, Allen Dulles, John Foster Dulles, J. Edgar Hoover, George Bush, and Dr. Edward Teller. Since George Bush was on MJ-12, he obviously knew the alien secret while President. But the general policy was to keep the alien presence so secret that even the President didn’t know. Kennedy did find out, however, and the reason he was assassinated was because, you, guessed it–he was about to divulge the alien secret to the American People.

William Cooper–the biggest whistleblower of them all–has not yet gone the way of Kennedy and Forrestal. The reason for this, Cooper says, is that this would show the world that what he says is true. All the conspirators can do at this point is harass and discredit him. The reason he is having conflicts with the larger UFO research community is that most UFO researchers, including Stanton Friedman, William Moore, Philip Klass, John Keel, Charles Berlitz, Budd Hopkins, Dr. J. Allen Hynek (now deceased) and even horror novelist Whitley Strieber, are really working for the CIA and the Office of Naval Intelligence.

Even UFO Magazine, with its obviously slim budget, is financed and controlled by the CIA. And, though Jacques Vallee isn’t mentioned in this particular blacklist, after one meeting and several phone conversations, he too joined the ranks of the accused.

Besides the fact that they’re all famous for being involved in the UFO question, about the only thing these people have in common is that they don’t agree with Bill Cooper. But, since Cooper knows the truth, questioning his information is tantamount to blasphemy. I have seen three accounts of Bill Cooper from among those on that list; two from UFO magazine, and one from Jacques Vallee. Both Vallee and UFO reveal simple details that show the obvious falsity of key elements in Cooper’s story. When presented with these details, Cooper brushes them aside, sticks to his story, and eventually becomes enraged.

See also  William Cooper Exhibit 4

Perhaps the most embarrassing weakness in Cooper’s story is his claim that he saw a document authored by “O.H. Krill,” whom Cooper identifies as the alien ambassador to the United States. Apparently this document is well known in the UFO field. According to UFO magazine, it was conceived by John Grace a.k.a “Val Valerian,” head of the Nevada Aerial Research organization.

The name “O.H. Krill” was an inside joke; a woman who appeared on the TV special, UFOs: It Has Begun, had channeled an entity name CRYLLL, and Grace had “just pulled the O.H. out of thin air.” During the time when Cooper was teaming up with John Lear, Cooper told a TV interviewer that he’d seen an O.H. Krill document in the early 70’s. Lear apparently turned “beet red,” pulled Cooper aside, and tried to tell him that O.H. Krill was just a joke.

Cooper stuck to his story, however, and replied that he really did see that document in 1972. Lear subsequently dropped the issue, but then “began to wonder just how much of Bill Cooper was real.

Part 4

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