Astronaut Gordon Cooper & UFOs 

  Courtesy of Terry Colvin

   To many UFO enthusiasts, Gordon   
   Cooper is a legend. An original

   Mercury astronaut, he was one of   
   those clear-eyed, ambitious,

   optimistic, straight-arrow Americans   
   with "the right stuff," as Tom

   Wolfe put it -- men  who made the U.S.    space program synonymous
   with success and national pride. But
   unlike many of his fellow astro-

   nauts, Gordon Cooper has said for
   decades that he believes at least

   some UFOs are alien spacecraft.

   With the assistance of a mutual friend, I met Gordon Cooper at his
   office in Van Nuys, California on February 8.

   He isn't as big as I expected, neither in height nor build.  (In retrospect,
   it occurs to me that large size would be no asset in the space program.)
   At 68, he is balding. He still has the signature grin, toothy and slightly
   cock-eyed. He has sharp blue eyes. He speaks quietly, clearly and
   concisely.  We simply pulled up a few chairs around his desk and started
   talking.

   I said I had enjoyed Dennis Quaid's film portrayal of Cooper in "The
   Right Stuff," and asked how he had liked it. "I liked it. He did a pretty
   good job," he said. "So did you think of yourself as a hotdog back then?"
   I  asked.    "Yes, I guess so."

We talked about the space
program. He had gone up in
Mercury 9 in
May, 1963
and completed 22 orbits, an
American record at the time.


Then in August, 1965, he went
up again in Gemini 5 with Charles
"Pete"
Conrad and stayed aloft
eight days, going 122 orbits, a
world record.
They had purposely
set out to get ahead of the Soviets
in at least a
symbolic way.  It was
a turning point in the space race.
We were
already headed for
the moon.  We got there. The
Soviets never did.

   Cooper was going to go to the moon, but Alan Shepherd went instead,
   and then  the Apollo program was cancelled. Cooper was going to go
   to Mars, too.  Few Americans even know that NASA was well along
   on plans for a manned Mars mission, with a landing projected for 1981.
   Cooper was in line for commander of the mission. It would have been a
   nuclear powered spacecraft, assembled in earth orbit after parts were
   sent aloft on a series of Saturn 1-Bs. The nuclear engines were ready,
   Cooper said. A lot of the spacecraft was ready.  They were still working
   on the lander and then that program was cancelled, too.
   "By Senator Proxmire. The worst enemy America ever had." 

   I asked about his famous UFO sighting. It was in 1951 over
   Germany.  He and several other pilots were flying F-86 jets --
   "We were super-sonic,  barely," he said -- when they looked up
   and saw what appeared to be a large group of "double lenticular
   shaped" aircraft, classic flying saucers, flying  in formation.
   He said these craft were much higher than his plane could go,
   though he couldn't tell how high. They were going faster too,
   but he couldn't tell how much faster. Over the next two or three
   days, he and other pilots saw "several hundred" of these craft.
   Cooper said they flew formation maneuvers very much like his own
   squadron would fly. He and the other witnesses were uniformly
   convinced they were seeing a technology that wasn't human.

   Cooper and his fellow pilots reported the sightings to their superiors.
   In due course, the official explanation was relayed back down.
   "High flying seed pods."

   Though the UFO subject frequently must endure strange episodes
   of official denial and obfuscation, this offering of "seed pods" in
   answer to Cooper's sighting struck me as one of the wackiest I've
   heard. "You knew this was crazy," I said to him. "How could you
   put up with it?"

   His answer was simple. "I was in the Air Force. I wanted to fly."

   But Cooper had already made up his own mind that UFOs
   represented visitations  from elsewhere, and in time he made his
   position clear. He wrote a letter to the United Nations in 1978.
   It said, in part, "I do believe UFOs exist and that the truly
   unexplained ones are from some other technically advanced
   civilization... I believe that these extraterrestrial vehicles and
   their crews are visiting this planet from other planets, which are
   obviously a little more advanced than we are here on earth... I
   feel that we need to have a top-level, coordinated program to
   scientifically collect and analyze data from all over the earth
   concerning any type of encounter, and to determine how best to
   interface with these visitors in a friendly fashion."

   Cooper was convinced by 1978 that these visitors, most of
   them at least, were friendly. He holds to that view today.

  COOPER PART 2





     
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