Roswell Alien: The Secret Diary May Hide the Key to What Really Happened

The "indestructible debris not made by human hands" and a testimony that has been hidden since 1947

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What does the US Air Force intelligence officer Jesse Marcel write in his diary, a diary that was to be kept secret forever?

It was July 7, 1947 when something wrecked near Roswell, New Mexico they would bequeath the most glorious mystery of the modern world.

Whether it was the greatest discovery of the universe, a well-crafted prank or the most massive cover-up operation of all time, this remains open, as final or easy answers do not fit.

What was originally the wreckage of a flying saucer with extraterrestrial beings inside it soon turned into an experimental meteorological balloon.

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As we know from the huge impact that the Roswell incident was to have in the following years, a farmer discovered some strange ruins on his ranch in New Mexico and on July 7 asked for the help of the authorities.

A research team from the neighboring air base was immediately dispatched to the spot to study what is believed to have taken place on July 2nd.

At the same time, as we later learned, a second site carried the largest percentage of debris. It was this place that was kept virtually secret.

However, the rumors about the fall of an Unidentified Flying Object gave and took among the inhabitants of this small southwestern town long before the members of the Air Force arrived at the spot.

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Jesse Marcel, camped at Roswell Base, was one of the men sent to investigate.

In fact, in the first official announcement of the army, there was talk of "flying disc", But then they took them back and talked about a flying meteorological device.

And yet, not everyone was exactly convinced…

What happened that day: the official version

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When the mysterious object was found in the desert near Roswell Military Base in New Mexico (RAAF) that July 1947, Lt. Jesse Marcel oversaw the small detachment sent to pick up the wreckage.

A spokesman for the 509th Battle Wing Camp at Roswell Base Lieutenant Walter Hot, was called in the early morning hours of July 8 by the base commander to issue the fatal press release, informing the public that the U.S. Air Force had just retrieved a flying saucer from a nearby ranch.

The announcement naturally attracted the attention of both the national and international press. But the Air Force withdrew it later that day, now talking about an experimental meteorological balloon that had crashed on a neighboring farm.

On July 8, Walter Hot, under the direct orders of Colonel Blanchard, published the history of the press release, which reads: lucky enough to have access to a flying saucer. "

The Press of USA "The Air Force has captured a flying saucer on a Roswell ranch," writes the Denver Post, which also hosts Hot's brief statement: "When this [announcement] came out on the news, the world is more or less over, as far as I was concerned, of course. "My phone rang and rang and rang."

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As the press release travels around the world, new orders from the commander arrive at his office. Now he is being asked to tell a completely different story, that the wreckage belongs to an experimental high-altitude meteorological balloon and not to UFOs.

The lieutenant actually publishes the new press release and becomes a pole of fierce criticism from the American press. The war that is being waged against him makes him a red flag for everyone. As for himself, he keeps his mouth shut. He is also an acting officer.

After all, we are in a time when Hot has not yet said that he saw the flying saucer and the alien corpses with his own eyes. But he would do so later, shedding new light on the case that conspiracy theorists loved from the beginning, apparently taking a good pass from the US Air Force's strategic fold.

Hot eventually became the subject of ridicule and criticism in a series of incidents that would have become known as "Roswell's Alien."

Although in the years that followed he would constantly change the extent of his involvement with the case, the lieutenant consistently argued that "in no way" could the high-ranking officers handling the case confuse an Earth meteorological device with an alien spacecraft.

And of course he was talking about Jesse Marcel…

What does the diary that was kept hidden say?

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Officer Marcel's family recently revealed the existence of his secret diary, which was compiled at the time of the investigation.

According to the codified written material, whatever it was that fell into the deserts of New Mexico was located on the morning of July 3, 1947 by farmer Mac Brasel. He found debris scattered in a large radius around the country road.

Brazel had even told the press that the wreckage was made of "paper materials", wrapped in "glossy foil". But he also described things made of "light wood and plastic". He also said that some of the wreckage bore strange symbols.

It was Brasel who informed the local sheriff, who addressed the nearby air base. Marcel's grandson, Jesse, also now says that his grandfather "examined the indestructible debris in the field and concluded that it was not made by human hands."

If Marcel's diary is indeed authentic, a true testimony, then it tells a completely different story. Harmonized with the first official version.

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"The government claimed that they had withdrawn a UFO, they issued and announced about it", says the former agent of CIA, Ben Smith, who dealt extensively with the Roswell mystery, "no other government in the world has said '' we found a spaceship '' and the next day there is suddenly a new press release saying '' don't worry, it was just a weather balloon ' '' ».

It is also extremely interesting that Marcel's diary is written in a coded language that only he understood. This is proof for some that something is hidden where not everyone wanted to know.

Marcel was also the man who sparked interest in Roswell's incident. Which was forgotten by everyone and he was the one who in an interview in 1978, thirty years later, spoke explicitly about covering up the event, according to a tribute of Time magazine in 1997.

In a matter of course, a few weeks before Roswell, fighter pilot Kenneth Arnold reported an encounter in the air with more than one mysterious object.

The pilot described them as "white spheres leaping like flying saucers" in the ethers. Roswell may now be the most infamous extraterrestrial contact, but Arnold's testimony is the first mention of UFOs in the USA.

Marcel and Hot

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Like Hot, who changed his deposits several times, Marcel seems to have done the same. There are, for example, photos in newspapers of the time showing him posing next to parts of what appears to be a high-altitude meteorological balloon.

Of course, in the light of Hot's first announcement, there are many who see other things. The revelation of Marcel's grandchildren about a secret diary at the end of 2020 just did not go unnoticed.

The History Channel immediately undertook to look into it and promised to tell us all about the documentary "Roswell: The First Witness". Everyone is waiting for the decryption of the diary, which will definitely shed more light on the historically complex story.

A story that in the minds of most has been immortalized in the way the local newspaper Roswell Daily Record wanted it on July 8, 1947:

"The information office of the 509th Combat Wing at Roswell Air Base announced today at noon that the base is in possession of a Flying Disc." The newspaper did not play Walter Hot's press release, despite statements by the head of the on-site investigation, Jesse Marcel.

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Then of course Pentagon and the Air Force changed the announcement, now talking about an experimental meteorological device developed by New York University.

Marcel died on June 24, 1986, but his story lives on through his grandchildren, Jesse Marcel III and John Marcel, who told the Daily Mail exclusively on December 10 that their grandfather had neither taken anything back nor changed them. never his testimony.

"They made him the scapegoat," said grandson Jesse, stressing that his grandfather was forced to deny what he actually saw in Roswell. "He was in charge of intelligence in Roswell, New Mexico, and he was following orders."

The diary passed from grandfather to father and now to grandchildren, without anyone knowing what the incomprehensible characters mean. Smith, who has seen it and it is his team that analyzes it, only said that it reveals the change in the mental state of the officer.

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"There are gaps in calendar which is not clear, but can be a secret code ω I look at it in a neutral way. "I want to unravel the truth behind the myth," Smith said of a year-long investigation. "If I thought there was no more to this story, I would not be dealing with it.

Marcel was not a random U.S. Army officer. He had played an active role in the atomic bombs dropped by the United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, and the following year oversaw Operation Crossroads, the infamous nuclear test at Bikini Atoll.

A well-known and brilliant soldier, he obviously knew what he saw. According to his two grandchildren, when he returned to the base with the debris, he tried with a drill to drill a hole in the "foil". Not only did he not succeed, but the drill broke as well.

According to the grandchildren, the grandfather also brought a piece to his house and his son looked at it with awe. They still remember their father telling them the story: "He shone and saw a purple light inside, with a seal symbol." The little one called his father to come and see him.

"My grandfather said, 'You could be the first person on Earth to see an alien inscription,'" Jesse's grandson says of Grandpa Jesse, who later joked to his son, "He probably tells you how to use it." boat toilet ".

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But there is one more thing, that despite the fact that Marcel never said that he saw with his own eyes an alien being in Roswell, he claimed in the historic interview 30 years later that at that time there were several flying saucer falls and other officers "told me how they saw something alive or something that was once alive. "

The same was said by Hot, decades later, not only did he see it alien ship in a shed of the base, but also the alien corpses themselves.

"I think it was an extremely well-designed cover-up," Hot said bluntly in 1997 about the Air Force's "misrepresentation." So he spent the last 15 years of his life trying to shed light on a story that had been obscured by conspiracy theorists until then.

In 2002, he signed an affidavit detailing his encounter with the dead aliens, providing satisfying information about both the boat and the creatures' trunks with the bulging heads.

The full revelation of Hot came only after his death, when a torment was published in 2007 based on his revelations and spoke of "the majestic cover of 60 years".

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Hot wrote in 1989, when he still said he did not know anything about the incident, that "I had not heard of it until Jess [Jesse Marcel] was thrown into the shed."

So Marcel told him: "It was something he had never seen and did not believe he was from this planet. I trust his judgment and knowledge. "I think there is a huge cover here."

Hot was even called to testify in May 1993 about what he had seen that landmark day. It reads: "I believe that Colonel Blansard saw the material, because he seemed sure of what it was. There is no way he could have confused it with a meteorological balloon! "There is no way that Marcel Marcel was so wrong."

If Marcel, one of the intelligence chiefs at the time of the US bombing of World War II, was how to keep secrets.

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