Majestic 12 — Air Accident Report by Twining to Headquarters
Air Accident Report by Twining to Headquarters is a document pertaining to Majestic 12 (Operation Majestic-12, MJ-12, or Majic-12), a purported secret U.S. government program alleged to have investigated recovered unidentified flying objects and their occupants beginning in 1947.
Document Details
[edit | edit source]| Field | Information |
|---|---|
| Title | Air Accident Report by Twining to Headquarters |
| Date | 16 July 1947 |
| Era | Pre-1948 |
| Document Type | Military Investigation Report |
| Claimed Classification | TOP SECRET |
| Authenticity Rating | Medium-High |
| Related Program | Operation Majestic-12 (MJ-12 / MAJIC) |
Description
[edit | edit source]A three-page Air Accident Report by Lt. General Nathan F. Twining, originally published in Leonard Stringfield's Status Report VII (1994). Describes in first-person detail the interior of a 'flying disc,' including typewriter-like control keys, a 35-foot doughnut-shaped tube containing a clear substance, and coiled copper-like material. Engineers from AMC Engineering Division T-3 and Jet Propulsion Laboratory personnel concluded the object was not manufactured by the US, Germany, or Russia, citing no known design resemblance, absence of external propulsion system, and no identifying markings.
Authenticity Assessment
[edit | edit source]Researchers consider this document to have a medium-high authenticity rating; multiple corroborating details have been verified, though definitive proof remains elusive.
The United States government has officially denied the existence of any organization called Majestic 12, MJ-12, or Majic-12. The FBI declared the core MJ-12 documents "completely bogus" on November 30, 1988, after receiving information from the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) that no such committee had ever been authorized or formed. Despite this, researchers including Stanton T. Friedman and Dr. Robert M. Wood have argued that individual documents within the Majestic corpus show evidence of authenticity through forensic analysis of paper, ink, typeface, format conventions, and verifiable historical references.
Historical Context
[edit | edit source]Majestic 12 is claimed to have been established by special classified executive order of President Harry S. Truman on September 24, 1947, upon recommendation by Secretary of Defense James Forrestal and Dr. Vannevar Bush. The core documents were first publicly circulated in 1984–1987 by ufologists Jaime Shandera, William L. Moore, and Stanton T. Friedman. The Eisenhower Briefing Document — the central MJ-12 document — was found on undeveloped 35mm film delivered anonymously to Shandera's mailbox in December 1984.
Sources and Archival Information
[edit | edit source]- Research and document catalog: MajesticDocuments.com (Dr. Robert M. Wood & Ryan S. Wood)
- FBI investigative file: FBI Vault — Majestic 12
- General UFO program records: National Archives — USAF UFO Records
See Also
[edit | edit source]- Majestic 12
- Eisenhower Briefing Document
- Roswell Incident
- Project Blue Book
- Vannevar Bush
- Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter
- Stanton T. Friedman
- Philip J. Klass
References
[edit | edit source]- Wood, Robert M. & Wood, Ryan S. Majic Eyes Only. Wood Enterprises, 2005.
- Friedman, Stanton T. TOP SECRET/MAJIC. Marlowe & Company, 1996.
- FBI Vault: Majestic 12, Part 1 of 1. [1]
- Klass, Philip J. "The MJ-12 Crashed-Saucer Documents." Skeptical Inquirer, Winter 1987–1988.
- Goldberg, Robert Alan. Enemies Within: The Culture of Conspiracy in Modern America. Yale University Press, 2008.
