In recent decades, some UFO researchers have claimed extraterrestrials have conducted human experiments with the support of the US military in an underground base in Dulce, New Mexico.
Phil Schneider, a government employee, said he had met aliens. The truth about the above information is still up for debate, but the stories surrounding it have been recorded in detail. The witnesses The desert town of Dulce in New Mexico, USA, with less than 3,000 residents, does not even have traffic lights, yet is a place that attracts ufologists and conspiracy theorists to visit and find understand. They believe that beneath this village is a secret seven-story military facility, known as Dulce Base, dedicated to alien research. While mysterious stories revolving around the deserts of this region are nothing new, information about an alien base has attracted the attention of the public. It all started in the mid-1970s, when a New Mexico State cop named Gabriel Valdez reported on a disturbing cattle mutilation. Accordingly, he saw a “sophisticated spacecraft” flying in the sky near the supposed Dulce Base and then discovered a mutilated cow with a dead fetus inside. He asserted that the fetus was not an unborn calf, but a strange hybrid animal that “looks like a human, a monkey and a frog”. There is no sign that the cow was killed by a wild animal. Political scientist Michael Barkun, author of the popular book A Culture of Conspiracy, which includes Valdez’s account, notes that cattle mutilation is common. related to nearby UFO sightings. The above claims went viral and were followed in 1979 by the revelations of Paul Bennewitz, a physicist and businessman in Albuquerque, a large New Mexico city. Bennewitz said intercepted the electronic signals at Dulce, which he believes emanate from the depths of the earth and are aimed too high for human activity. With growing interest in cattle mutilation and claims of electronic signals, the legend of Dulce Base was born. In 1982, Bennewitz first talked about the existence of the secret base. He even published an article titled “Project Beta” in 1988, detailing how to infiltrate the military facility. By May 1990, John Lear claimed to have obtained “four independent confirmations” that the seven-story underground structure was real. Lear is a former pilot and government employee, and the son of the owner of LearJet, an American business jet maker, so many people believe his claims. Lear goes even further, describing the various alien breeds that are said to have visited Earth. Lear’s story is the basis for subsequent claims about the alien base in New Mexico. However, not long after that, Phil Schneider really overshadowed Bennewitz and Lear’s claims with a strange story about the secret alien base. A self-described former government employee and explosives expert, Schneider said he was involved in the construction of Base Dulce. In his 1995 presentation, he revealed that in the early stages of the project, the army encountered alien entities below the ground and a gunfight took place. He lost several fingers in this battle because of alien laser weapons. According to Schneider, about 60 people were killed in the conflict beneath the desert before a peace deal was settled. However, there is no evidence that what he claims is reliable. In 1996, Schneider committed suicide, taking the mysteries of Dulce Base to his grave.
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