Full Disclosure Colorado Springs

Truth, Technology, and Equality through Disclosure

Category: Controversy

Corey Goode’s DIA Documents: The Unreported AATIP Revealing

In a recent meeting with Corey Goode I shared with him some some information about the connection between the Defense Intelligence Agency documents that he posted to his site last December (apparently coming to him through an insider at the DIA), and the AATIP program initially revealed by the NY Times article from last December titled “Glowing Auras and Black Money: The Pentagon’s Mysterious U.F.O. Program.” That bombshell news article went up at noon of Dec 16th, 2017, to reach publication on the front page of the NY Times on Dec 17th, with many major media reporting on the story shortly thereafter.

There was another significant AATIP story from December 17th, however, that very few have yet discussed.

On the evening of Sunday, December 17th, I received a Skype message from Corey Goode asking me about the best way to share document files on social media. He sent me a link to DIA “Defense Intelligence Reference Documents” (DIRDs) that were already published and downloadable on his website (spherebeingalliance.com) on December 17th (the server timezone marked it as the 18th), stating that he would be releasing these documents to the public soon, apparently not aware that they were already accessible to the public on his site through website navigation. I feel that it was a mysterious synchronicity that these documents were accidentally made public on Dec 17th a few days before Corey had intended to announce them, given that they represented the first release to the public of official documents now proven to have been generated by the AATIP program itself, the DoD program disclosed widely on that same day through separate channels.

This is the link Corey sent me, the website post of the documents on SphereBeingAlliance.com.

The documents were titled Traversable Wormholes, Stargates & Negative Energy by Dr. Eric W Davis, and Warp Drive, Dark energy & The Manipulation of Extra Dimensions by Dr. Richard K. Obousy and Dr. Eric W Davis.

Shortly after I downloaded these documents on December 17th I began searching for different key phrases from the documents to check if I could find any trace of them already existing online. I found no trace of them anywhere else online. John Greenewald of The Black Vault, who has done extensive work in obtaining government documents through FOIA requests, also reported doing the same kind of search in December of 2017 and said that he could only trace these documents back to Corey Goode.

These DIA “reference” documents that Corey claimed to have received from one of his inside sources were dated 2009 and labeled as being associated with the “Defense Intelligence Agency, Defense Warning Office’s Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications (AAWSA) Program.”

Beginning around April 2018, an increasing number of researchers began discussing the possibility that AATIP was actually called “AAWSAP” and that that fact might explain the ongoing difficulty of researchers in finding any trace of a program named AATIP through FOIA or NSA Intellipedia searches.

One reason that researchers made this connection was a statement by Mr. Paul Dean of “UFOs – Documenting The Evidence” that he had been “contacted by someone who claimed to be in a senior defense program leadership role. He stated that the UFO program on everyone’s lips was not officially called the “Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program” (AATIP). This was, apparently, a loose, almost ad hoc term for one part of a somewhat larger defense program. The true name of the overall program, or at least the official starting title, was the “Advanced Aerospace Weapons Systems Application Program” (AAWSAP), or something extremely similar.”

A second, more commonly cited reason for researchers increasingly suspecting the AAWSAP/AATIP connection, however, turned out to be the use of the AAWSAP name on the documents released by Corey Goode himself, although Corey’s role in this connection was almost never explicitly cited by researchers.

Swedish researcher Roger Glassel, is cited as having discovered that a Scientist named Dr. Eric Davis was publicly claiming to be connected with the AATIP program. Roger and others searched through publicly available titles of Eric’s work which led them to discover the documents that Corey had posted, which clearly linked Dr. Davis with the AAWSAP program title.

According to Keith Basterfield’s post on the subject, UK researcher Isaac Koi shared on a discussion forum on April 30th that he was able to make contact with Dr. Eric Davis to get a confirmation that Dr. Davis did indeed author one the AAWSAP (DIRD) documents that Corey had released, which Isaac had discovered by searching through the titles of studies that Dr. Davis had himself listed on the EarthTech.org publications page.

Dr. Eric Davis stated:

“I don’t know how you got two of my DIRD reports” – “Yes! All of my DIRD reports are in the set of 38 total” [in reference to the list of 38 studies commissioned by the AASWAP/AATIP programs].

In July of 2018, George Knapp of I-Team (Las Vegas local news) reported on a document he obtained which listed the titles of all 38 of the AAWSAP/AATIP/DIRD documents, where the studies by Dr. Eric Davis were also clearly listed.

The list of all 38 DIRD reports is found in this PDF published by George Knapp, also clearly revealing the documents released in December 2017 by Corey.

Though these various documents may have still left room open for speculation of fabrication, it seems we have now received a final confirmation of these facts from Luis Elizondo himself. On August 30th, 2018, the TTSA YouTube channel released a video of a talk by Luis Elizondo addressing questions and finally explaining the discrepancy between the AASWAP and AATIP naming, stating that AAWSAP was the original program name that changed to AATIP in 2008, a change of name which also corresponded to a change in the scope of the project in order to “focus more narrowly” on specific aspects of its original mission. Luis stated that it was because he did not get involved heading up the program until it was named AATIP that he originally chose not to mention the AAWSAP name previously.

Also in that video, Elizondo confirmed the legitimacy of the document that listed the 38 studies, one of which was classified and blacked out.

Elizondo also stated that most of the material related to AATIP and presumably the 38 DIRDs were often intentionally marked as “FOIA exempt” unfortunately, and states this marking was about keeping their research “out of the hands of foreign adversaries.” This means that it may be up to other insiders to actually get the documentation released in an unofficial manner if it is ever to see the light of day.

This has required alternative sources such as Corey Goode to initiate this process of AATIP document dropping, doing so before TTSA itself even released a single document to the public substantiating the program.

This simple fact led people like John Greenewald to ask in his report on this subject:

“I saw these documents back in late December and early January, but dismissed them as they are largely sourced/credited to Corey Goode, a very controversial figure to begin with. If they are genuine (and they may be) these documents do not appear that they were released under any official channels. So the biggest question is, “How did Corey get them?”  I have not found an ‘older’ source, but am open if anyone else has.”

With all of this evidence considered, it would seem that Corey Goode has at least one authentic inside source in the DIA, or is in some way closely connected to such a source, a fact that many AATIP researchers have had apparent difficulty in mentioning and honestly reporting on, no doubt due to the controversial nature of some of Corey’s other claims and what this evidence might mean for those seeking to validate any of Corey’s additional claims of receiving information from apparent government insiders.

At this point it seems that the proper question to be asking is not how Corey Goode received these documents so much as WHY Corey Goode was trusted or selected as a source to be delivering these documents during the same time period that Luis Elizondo and TTSA were assisting with the mainstream media widely disclosing this same program (albeit sans-documentation). Could it be that there are multiple factions within the intelligence agencies working towards their own version of “disclosure” with different belief systems and/or agendas?

Let’s keep pushing for a full disclosure, and stay grateful for all those on the front lines assisting in the unveiling of the greatest suppressed truths of human history.

Mike Waskosky
September 7th 2018

Note: Thanks to Dr. Michael Salla for picking up this story on his website, and for doing his “Due Diligence” to confirm the legitimacy of at least one other of Corey’s insider contacts: https://exopolitics.org/dia-confirms-list-of-exotic-propulsion-papers-corroborating-insider-testimony/

Steven Greer’s Cosmic False Flag Lecture

I’ve listened to around half of this and didn’t hear anything that seemed new, but it provides helpful clarity to Greer’s viewpoints. Greer is clearly genuine with his reasoning here. I think it is the last 20 or 30 minutes of the second hour where he is essentially talking about Corey Goode. In the third hour, the Q&A portion, he expands heavily on his “biggest fear” which relates to his belief that negative information about ETs could lead to people to wanting to fight a cosmic WW3 out of fear. I will likely try to put together a better response to this, since Greer seems to contradict himself in a number of ways to justify his fear. His tendency to assume people will always react with fear about certain information, and then targeting that information with labels, does not seem as valuable as would teaching more about the reasons why fear would be unjustified in any situation.

In this other recent talk, Greer’s focus on the importance of supporting the evolution of consciousness regardless of our belief systems seems to be a far more valuable avenue of discourse.

It seems possible that Greer’s reasons about why we should not be afraid rely too heavily on assumptions about our visitors, and too little on his knowledge about the nature of our true identity as conscious co-creators.

Mike

Jay Weidner Talks Bill Tompkins with Kerry Cassidy

It is interesting how much respect Kerry has for Bill Tompkins based on her
own personal undisclosed knowledge, and also Jay Weidner who is the
creative director at Gaia TV. Jay seems to say use the phrase “my sources”
when referring to Corey Goode’s information, yet Corey Goode never comes
up. (Kerry has come out against Corey Goode in the past which is why I
found this great rapport wonderful to see.)

Mike

Salla & Greer, Exopolitics versus Exospin: A Response to Dr Steven Greer

exopolitics.org/repost-exopolitics-versus-exospin-a-response-to-dr-steven-greer

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