Source: The Las Vegas Sun [NV]

Date: Sept 5 1998
Tim Dahlberg [AP]

LAS VEGAS – The F-117 stealth fighter flew secret nighttime tests there. So did the U-2 and other spy planes. UFO buffs believe the government studies aliens in a top-security area on its northern fringe.

Military mysteries aside, it’s no secret Nellis Air Force Base range can be a deadly place.

The crash of two helicopters about 25 miles south of the top-secret Area 51 section of the range in the early morning darkness Friday was the latest deadly mishap in an area where pilots and crew practice dangerous war games nearly every day high above the desert floor.

Though Area 51 and its secret programs are steeped in mystery, the war games played out are no secret to the small towns bordering the range, which are routinely buzzed by pilots engaging in simulated dogfights in the restricted airspace.

The range, 5,200 square miles of desert and dry mountains is the home of Red Flag exercises, which pit Air Force pilots and those from other countries against pilots trained in re-creating tactics of former Soviet bloc fighters.

Air Force officials say the unit the helicopters were assigned to flew in Red Flag exercises as recently as Thursday, but that the two downed helicopters were not involved in Red Flag at the time of the crash.

Fatal crashes involving various Air Force planes date back four decades, but the grimmest moment may have come Jan. 18, 1982, when four pilots of the Air Force Thunderbirds demonstration team slammed their T-38 jets into the ground while practicing on an auxiliary field north of Las Vegas.

See also  2007: New Top Secret Construction at Area 51

Just a few months earlier, a C-130 crashed while practicing nighttime landings at the field, killing seven people.

Area 51, on the northern edge of the range, is shrouded in mystery. It is here the government has tested some of America’s most exotic aircraft, including the U-2 and SR-71 Blackbird high-altitude spy or reconnaissance planes, F-117 stealth fighter and now the top-secret Aurora, another spy plane.

The military has refused to acknowledge the existence of the heavily-guarded Area 51, 85 miles northwest of Las Vegas near a spot called Groom Lake.

UFO buffs claim a purported alien found in the crash of a space vehicle near Roswell, N.M., July 8, 1947, was taken to Area 51. The government has denied the wreckage found in the New Mexico desert was that of a spacecraft.

The lore figured in the 1996 blockbuster movie “Independence Day,” which showed a top-secret underground lab at Area 51 conducting alien autopsies and studying a flying saucer.

The Nevada Department of Transportation, mindful of the growing interest in this remote area, recently named the 92-mile stretch of state route 375 the “Extraterrestrial Highway,” and is planning to post special road signs.

Souvenir shops around Las Vegas peddle T-shirts, keychains, and other trinkets featuring space aliens with bulbous heads.

Several former workers at Area 51 are suing the government, claiming they were harmed by burning of toxic materials at the base, but say their case is stymied by an executive order from President Clinton blocking the release of information about activities there. They went to the U.S. Supreme Court last month, appealing a court order protecting the information.

See also  1998: Area 51: Alive, Well & Expanding?

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