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The Roswell Report: Case Closed

Chapter 2: Foreword
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About This Book

A government investigation compiles archival records, witness statements, technical analyses, and interviews to determine the origin of alleged flying saucer debris and reports of bodies in rural New Mexico. The report examines purported crash sites, hospital accounts, and Air Force high-altitude projects, comparing witness testimony to documented balloon tests and dummy-drop operations such as Mogul, High Dive, and Excelsior. It concludes that recovered material and related accounts are consistent with military balloon operations and routine aircraft incidents rather than extraterrestrial vehicles, and it includes appendices presenting launch and landing tables, signed statements, interview transcripts, and a selected bibliography.

Foreword

The “Roswell Incident” has assumed a central place in American folklore since the events of the 1940s in a remote area of New Mexico. Because the Air Force was a major player in those events, we have played a key role in executing the General Accounting Office’s tasking to uncover all records regarding that incident.

Our objective throughout this inquiry has been simple and consistent: to find all the facts and bring them to light. If documents were classified, declassify them; where they were dispersed, bring them into a single source for public review.

In July 1994, we completed the first step in that effort and later published The Roswell Report: Fact vs. Fiction in the New Mexico Desert. This volume represents the necessary follow-on to that first publication and contains additional material and analysis. I think that with this publication we have reached our goal of a complete and open explanation of the events that occurred in the Southwest many years ago.

Beyond that achievement, this inquiry has shed fascinating light into the Air Force of that era and revitalized our appreciation for the dedication and accomplishments of the men and women of that time. As we celebrate the Air Force’s 50th Anniversary, it is appropriate to once again reflect on the sacrifices made by so many to make ours the finest air and space force in history.

SHEILA E. WIDNALL
Secretary of the Air Force