Secrets of Area 51 to be revealed ‘in 2025’ by project expert


Area 51’s ‘out of this world’ UFO secrets could be revealed next year.

Jim Goodall, an aviation journalist with first-hand sources who had worked at a designated location, gave interviews in the mid-1990s where he was involved. discussed the state-of-the-art technology in the area that would ‘make George Lucas jealous.’

‘One gentleman spent 12 of his 30 years in black programs at Groom Lake (as Area 51 is also known),’ Goodall explained in the excavations written interview.

“I asked him, ‘Can you really tell me what’s going on out there?”” he continued.

‘ And he said, ‘Well, there is a lot going on there that I can’t tell you until 2025.”

The mention of ‘2025’ may mean President Bill Clinton’s executive orderwhich set a 25-year timer for the ‘automatic declassification’ of government secrets.

This means that many of the top-secret projects from the 1990s could soon be scrapped.

Area 51 is one of the military bases within the US Air Force’s Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR), a military training facility located in the Mojave Desert in Nevada.

The shroud of secrecy surrounding Area 51 has fueled many conspiracy theories about its true purpose, including claims that it is a captured or fallen UFO.

Above, a satellite view of Area 51. The United States Air Force base is located far from Edwards Air Force Base, within the Nevada Test and Training Range.

Above, a satellite view of Area 51. The United States Air Force base is located far from Edwards Air Force Base, within the Nevada Test and Training Range.

UFO enthusiasts are pouring over Goodall's comments (pictured) made in the mid-1990s, citing his unknown sources. An Area 51 source told him, 'I can't tell you until 2025. But we have things in the Nevada desert that would make George Lucas jealous'.

UFO enthusiasts are pouring over Goodall’s comments (pictured) made in the mid-1990s, citing his unknown sources. An Area 51 source told him, ‘I can’t tell you until 2025. But we have things in the Nevada desert that would make George Lucas jealous’.

In an interview that has since surfaced, Goodall also described conversations with a ‘security expert’ and US Air Force master sergeant who worked at the Nevada test site.

The engineer allegedly told him: ‘We’ve got stuff out there that’s not really in this world… better than Star Trek.’ or anything you see in the movies.’

When Goodall asked his anonymous source, ‘Do you believe in UFOs?’ the answer was no doubt.

‘He looked at me with a straight face, one by one, and said, ‘Absolutely. Appropriately. They are there,” Goodall recalled in the article documents.

‘I said, ‘Can you add to that?’ And he replied, ‘No, I can’t.’

From his vantage point at Area 51 in the Nevada desert, Goodall watched closely and heard first-hand stories of strange art that is not well understood.

‘There is a stealthy or less stealthy electric warplane. It’s called “Excalibur,” he said in an interview.

‘There is a plane designed to fly very high, very high, very slow and incredibly quiet,’ he added.

A rendering of an egg-shaped metal UFO appears. 'X-rays couldn't penetrate it; it appeared on the X-ray as a solid object. They tried to open it and get inside; he couldn't,

A rendering of an egg-shaped metal UFO appears. ‘X-rays couldn’t penetrate it; it appeared on the X-ray as a solid object. They tried to open it and get inside; he couldn’t,” said Taber

Goodall also discussed how witnesses near the Skunk Works site reported seeing three triangular-shaped ships that were ‘unsound,’ although flying at very low altitudes.

He then shared reports about the plane that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had from San Francisco Bay Area TRACON (Traffic Control) in Oakland, California.

The craft, which have been sighted at least eight times since 1986, are said to be flying in airspace at speeds in excess of 10,000 kilometers per hour.

“And it’s a very large plane at that,” he added.

Goodall’s stories echo those of Ben Rich, former head of Lockheed Martin’s classified Skunk Works division.

‘Ben Rich told me twice before he died,’ Goodall said, ‘We have things at Area 51 that you and the best minds in the world can’t think of for 30 or 40 years – and he won. ‘Show them to fifty other people.’

Rich died on January 5, 1995.

But Goodall said today that Area 51 has become more difficult to break into than it was in the 1990s – which would indicate that it will keep its secrets beyond 2025, which is close to Rich’s 50-year window.

“The cover is really tight today,” Goodall told a Las Vegas TV reporter George Knapp in 2019. ‘Security around Area 51 is more than we’ve seen.’

In 2021, civilian pilot and sports photographer Gabe Zeifman took this photo of a tricycle while flying his plane over the Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR), past Papoose Dry Lake, and over Groom Lake which is home to Area 51.

In 2021, civilian pilot and sports photographer Gabe Zeifman took this photo of a tricycle while flying his plane over the Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR), past Papoose Dry Lake, and over Groom Lake which is home to Area 51.

Above: a group of aircraft

Above: a group of “top secret” aircraft produced by Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works for the US military over the years.

Last year, Eric Taber is an aviation expert told DailyMail.com that his close relative who works as an Area 51 contractor, Sam Urquhart, has revealed that he once worked on the creation of strange ‘egg-shaped’ aircraft at. amazing desert background.

These egg-shaped metal UFO it was kept at Area 51 in the 1980s, after the CIA discovered alien technology in the desert, according to Taber.

It was egg-shaped, about the size of an SUV, smooth and seamless, metallic-looking, silver-gray, with no controls, no bends, no exhaust, and no markings or markings on the outside. ,’ Taber was told by his late uncle Urquhart.

Other claims of extraterrestrial intelligence living in Area 51 include the so-called ‘Fluxliner’ or Alien Reproductive Vehicle (ARV)a man-made spacecraft discovered by an astronaut in 1988.

In 2021, Gabriel Zeifman photographed a three-dimensional craft that was either a UFO or a man-made craft capable of high altitude flight.

The ship was parked in a 120-foot wide and 320-foot long Area 51 formerly known as Hangar 19.

Security company managers to War They think the triangle may have been a real plane, the Martin Marietta X-24B.

‘Despite its odd and fascinating appearance,’ the site said, ‘many of the things that leave the Bridegroom under the mystery test seem strange, mostly historical.’

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