A tactical HUD showing UFO flight telemetry and the critical failure status of a Project Redlight test flight.
THINK ABOUTIT SUMMARY:
Project Redlight: Testing Recovered Alien Craft at Area 51
Project/Group Name: Project Redlight
Mission: To conduct test flights of recovered extraterrestrial craft to master their propulsion and control systems.
Date Started: 1954. Ended: 1962–1963 (Officially terminated/re-designated).
Who or Whom Started It: MJ-12 oversight committee.
Part of what Government Agency: Joint military-intelligence operation centered at the Nevada Test Site.
Location: Area 51 (Dreamland), Groom Lake, Nevada.
Special Features/Characteristics:
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Recovered Hardware: Utilized fully intact or partially repaired craft from previous Project Pluto recoveries.
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Lethal Risk: Involved human test pilots attempting to operate vehicles without a full understanding of non-human ergonomics or gravity-drive interfaces.
Summary/Description: Established in 1954, Redlight was the tactical follow-up to recovery operations. Its primary goal was to get a recovered alien craft in the air. While initial tests were considered “somewhat successful,” the project was plagued by instability. In 1962, a recovered craft exploded mid-air, killing the human pilots and leading to the project’s immediate suspension. The project remained dormant until an agreement was reached for extraterrestrial assistance, eventually transitioning into a new phase.
Related to: Snowbird, Project Pluto, Galileo, and Area 51.
Source: Behold a Pale Horse (William Cooper); Matrix II (Val Valerian).
Other Details: Whistleblowers suggest that the failure of Project Redlight proved that human avionics were insufficient to bridge the gap to alien technology without “direct assistance,” leading to the diplomatic protocols of Plato.
“The initial project was successful in that we flew a recovered craft, but it blew up in the air and the pilots were killed—the project was suspended until the aliens agreed to help.”