Peut-être que l'AARO a conclu un "partenariat" avec les Archives Nationales pour récupérer les dossiers du vieux Project Blue Book de l'Air Force, mais l'AARO semble penser qu'il n'y a que 65778 pages dans les dossiers Blue Book (parmi 7000 plus grands dossiers numériques), au lieu du véritable total de 130000 pages.
L'AARO sait-il qu'il y a 130000 pages de dossiers sur les PANs de l'Air Force sur microfilm aux Archives Nationales (ainsi que d'autres archives qui n'ont jamais été mises sur microfilm) ?
Tout ce qu'il y a à faire est d'examiner le site Fold3 Ancestry.com, accessible sur Internet depuis ,
pour trouver son total de pages Blue Book de 129658 pages (arrondi à 130000) que le précédesseur de Fold3 a numérisé à
partir du microfilmBlue Book à la NARA (voir copie d'écran internet Fold3 ci-dessous). (Le nombre de pages inclut près de
6000 pages de l'AFOSI, certaines en doublon des archives et publiées avec Blue Book.) Et encore une fois, il est documenté que de nombreux
fichiers et archives manquent dans Blue Book, many with exact
file numbers that determined investigators such as Jan Aldrich have documented over the
years.
Did AARO somehow miss half of Blue Book’s files–some 64,000 pages–in its supposedly “thorough”, “complete”, and “accurate” history ? Did someone lose 64,000 pages of Blue Book UFO files? Did AARO investigate where these apparently missing Blue Book files disappeared or how the accounting error arose if it is just that?
Even aside from missing half of Blue Book’s files, which therefore could not be reviewed for history, AARO’s review of Air Force AARO history is so cursory that AARO seems to merely rehash old Blue Book press releases .
AARO claims it established 6 Lines of Effort (“LOEs” they call them) to prepare a complete
and accurate
history of the UAP “record” of government investigations (just not of UAP sightings as
Congress also wanted): (1) open source, (2) classified, (3) personal interviewing, (4) National Archives, (5) private
companies, and (6) intelligence/nat sec agencies .
But obviously, AARO’s Six Lines of Effort were unmindful of 64,000 missing pages of Blue Book UFO files that only they at AARO were missing – while the rest of the world has, and has had, access to the pages through the Fold3 website since or by going to the microfilms at the National Archives or buying copies (all available since ). Additionally, as will be explained further below, AARO seems completely unaware of the existence of numerous important US government UAP investigation programs, activities, sightings, and radar/sensor-tracking incidents.