Area 51: The CIA's Secret (2014) Movie Script

A short flight from Las Vegas,
deep in the Nevada desert,
lies Area 51
the CIA's secret.
A giant clandestine base
that remained unacknowledged
and disavowed by the U.S. government
for almost sixty years.
But in August of 2013,
the CIA finally admits this place is real,
and today, Richard Coe,
a former U.S. Air Force pilot,
is heading straight toward it.
They just picked us up back on radar.
They lost us for a little
while because of the terrain.
Coe is providing a legal tour
of the perimeter of Area 51,
some of the most
heavily restricted airspace on Earth,
and he's being tracked by the Air Force.
They obviously
want to keep an eye on us,
because anytime civilians are operating
so close to restricted airspace
they prefer to obviously know
where we are, and what our intentions are.
Located at Groom Lake,
Area 51 is surrounded by
restricted airspace,
covering 440 square miles.
But as we get closer and closer,
I anticipate they're gonna get
more and more curious
about what we're doing over there.
He's 12 miles out, and at 10,000 feet,
America's heavily guarded
secret base comes into view.
8, 6, 2 Kilo Juliet say destination.
Are you familiar with restricted airspace?
Entering any
controlled airspace in the U.S.
post-9/11 is high risk.
But out here, security is tighter than
almost anywhere else in the country.
The box that surrounds
America's top secret base
is designated 4-8-0-8 north.
And the tower now issues
an explicit order
for the pilot to change course.
Skyline 6 Kilo Juliet,
turn North immediately,
sir, for restricted airspace.
But it's not just
the airspace around Area 51
that's heavily guarded.
Aerospace historian Peter Merlin
has been researching Area 51
for the last 30 years.
Not just anyone can get into Area 51.
It's surrounded by harsh desert,
but also restricted military land.
There is no fence.
There are just orange posts
marking the border,
and they're hard to see.
Area 51 is obscured
from the road by mountains,
and is protected by a security cordon
radiating at least ten miles
from the hidden base.
Even on public land,
activity here is monitored
by the military.
Any vehicles driving down
the Groom Lake road are
detected by magnetic sensors.
Each one sends an electronic
signal to the guard-house,
alerting them so that they
know where you're coming from,
and how fast you're
making progress down the road.
13 miles past this point
is one of these security outposts.
So this is the boundary of Area 51.
We've got security guards
watching us from the hilltop.
Warning signs telling us
not to go any further.
There are orange posts
that mark the boundary itself.
No fences, no gates, and cameras
watching us from the hilltops.
We don't want to cross this line.
If we do, we'll be arrested.
But according to one
former Area 51 security guard,
trespassers in the past
faced a worse outcome.
If they demonstrate
they were going to try to penetrate,
you know, they, they gave me
the all clear to waste 'em.
But what's going on here
in the Nevada desert?
Why is the U.S. government
trying so hard to keep people out?
Finally, the truth has emerged
in declassified documents
just published in August 2013.
According to a report released by the CIA,
Area 51 was created in 1955
for a single purpose:
to test a top secret aircraft project,
codenamed "Aquatone."
"Aquatone" is the Cold War
codename for the U-2,
an aircraft built to spy
over the Soviet Union
at a time when Soviet premier
Nikita Khrushchev
publicly boasts about his country's
nuclear capability.
They were bragging about their missiles.
They were bragging about their bombers.
They were bragging about this and that,
uh, that got our government's attention.
In the 1950s,
U.S. reconnaissance aircraft
are vulnerable to Soviet fighters
and surface to air missiles.
Flying spy missions behind enemy lines
in conventional aircraft is too risky,
so the covert "Aquatone" project
is designed to fly outside the range
of Soviet air defenses.
Capable of flying at 70,000 feet,
13 miles above the Earth,
the U-2 has a range of 3,000 miles.
More than enough to operate
behind enemy lines.
I did not know the name of the aircraft,
or what it looked like,
but I knew one thing about it.
It's a high flyer.
Tony Bevacqua
joins the secret venture
in 1957 as a pilot.
Well, in this locker is a lifesaver
that we wore in the U-2
called the partial pressure suit.
The partial pressure suit kept you alive.
If you lost pressurization,
these outside hoses blow up
and squeeze these even tighter,
and that's what prevents
the blood from boiling.
In addition to life support systems,
the CIA's spy plane
carries 700 pounds
of the latest photo imaging equipment.
With this technology,
the U.S. can, in theory,
get its eyes inside the
Soviet Union undetected.
But to test the new reconnaissance jet,
the CIA working with the
U.S. Air Force,
needs a remote location.
Groom Lake was selected
because it was in a very sparsely
populated area of Nevada.
It looks very much like
what you see behind us.
It's a flat, featureless plain
of hard packed clay.
It can support the weight of any aircraft,
so it's a perfect natural landing field.
In 1955,
construction of America's
secret base begins.
The airfield that emerged
from the primordial lake bed,
began with a 5,000-foot-long runway.
Then they needed hangars,
so three hangars were built,
along with a few warehouses,
administration buildings, a chow hall,
and rudimentary accommodations
for the workers,
consisting of, essentially,
a trailer park.
Named after a simple grid reference
on an atomic energy commission map,
the newly created Area 51
is seen here in a 3D rendering
of the earliest known
high-altitude photograph
that shows the layout of
the CIA's top secret base...
the place where Tony Bevacqua
arrives to work on the U-2.
When I got off there at Groom Lake,
I see a runway, a little tower,
a couple hangars,
a community center-type, uh, building.
We slept in trailers,
and, uh, there were
two or three of us in each one.
No TV, no radio.
It was pretty sparse.
Given the secrecy of the CIA project,
all of the people
selected to work at Area 51
are subject to intense scrutiny.
Security there was absolutely
very tight. Very tight.
Being informed on what
you can talk about or not talk about
starts right at the very beginning.
It's just that way.
You don't talk about
anything that's classified.
To ensure secrecy,
and to protect the real purpose
of the U-2 spy plane,
the CIA creates a cover story.
It announces that the high-flying U-2
is going to be flown out of a place called
"Watertown Strip, Nevada"
on weather observation missions.
But in the late 1950s,
CIA documents confirm
that U-2 operations at Area 51
are disrupted by another top secret
government program.
On the edge of the Nevada testing range,
the home of America's nuclear program,
Area 51 lies downwind
of radioactive fallout.
One of the things
that started bothering me
about working up there
is that it's directly northeast
of weapons test.
The prevailing winds
in Las Vegas are from the southwest,
and when they were doing
above-ground testing,
all this radioactive dust
would fly into the air,
and of course there was
plenty to worry about
due to fallout.
For more than two years,
as America tests nuclear warheads,
just 30 miles to the southwest,
the CIA's secret airstrip in Nevada
remains largely unoccupied,
too dangerous due to nuclear fallout.
But despite the interruptions at the base,
the CIA starts a new project:
one that will define
the future of Area 51.
Today, America's stealth aircraft
have a reputation for near
invisibility to enemy radar.
But back in the late '50s,
the only way to achieve stealth
is flying at extreme altitude.
King of these birds is the CIA's U-2.
But on May 1st, 1960,
America's top secret spying mission
over the Soviet Union is blown
when a USSR surface to air missile
downs a high-flying U-2
piloted by Francis Gary Powers.
We now know that the CIA
predicted this might happen.
The CIA knew that Soviet
surface to air missile technology
was going to catch up
to the point where it could shoot down
a high flyer like the U-2.
It was no longer enough to
have an airplane
that could just fly several times
the height of a normal airplane.
A CIA stealth program,
codenamed "Project Rainbow,"
is green-lit to camouflage the U-2.
In an effort to make the U-2
less vulnerable to Soviet radar,
the test team at Area 51
applied a layer of
radar absorbent material
to the fuselage of the U-2 prototype.
It consisted of a conductive grid pattern
on a flexible sheet,
which was attached
to a layer of honeycomb
glued to the surface of
the aircraft's skin.
The grid pattern earned the material
the nickname "wallpaper."
But adding "wallpaper"
adds weight to the aircraft,
and reduces its ability to fly high,
making it more vulnerable
to Soviet defenses.
Because the "wallpaper"
was not a huge success,
the CIA began looking into the idea
of a successor to the U-2.
An airplane that would
be able to fly higher and faster,
and be less visible to radar.
Unlike the U-2,
the CIA's next aircraft project,
codenamed "Oxcart,"
has stealthy capabilities
engineered into it from day one.
They told us that
this program was so classified
that the documents weren't even marked,
because if somebody accidentally
had a folder that blew out of their hands
and the papers went
blowing down the street,
that if it said "secret" on it,
everybody'd wanna know what it was.
But if it didn't have
any markings whatsoever,
the people would just sweep it up
and throw it into a trash can,
and not worry about the fact
that it was classified.
Details of this CIA operation
were top secret for decades.
But now, with the recent
release of CIA documents,
it's okay for men who worked
on the so-called Oxcart program
to reveal some of their
experiences at Area 51.
One of them is Thornton TD Barnes.
It took me 3 months
to be cleared for the project.
At that particular time,
Oxcart was the most important thing
the United States was doing.
We were developing the stealth plane,
something no one else
had been able to do.
They told us "we do not
want you to record it."
"Do not talk about it. It doesn't exist."
Secrecy is all-important,
because Project Oxcart's new jet,
called the A-12,
is equipped with
state-of-the-art materials
to reduce its visibility to radar.
A-12 was the
best aircraft ever built,
and it was so far ahead of anything else
that people had on the boards.
Designed to fly at 90,000 feet,
and at speeds faster than
a speeding bullet,
the CIA's A-12 spy-plane
is built to withstand temperatures
hundreds of degrees greater than the U-2.
Peter Law, a thermodynamic
engineer at Lockheed,
worked on the high-flying aircraft
at the company's legendary
Skunk Works factory
in Burbank, California.
When you're
flying the speed of the U-2,
everything's too cold.
Now, when you fly the speed of the A-12,
now it's too hot.
The only metal
light enough and strong enough
to withstand the high temperatures
Lockheed's A-12
is exposed to is titanium--
in short supply in the United States.
Ironically, back then,
the Soviet Union
is the only reliable place
to source the titanium they need.
So the CIA creates a series
of dummy companies
to buy the material directly
from its Cold War enemy.
Russia supplied the titanium
that made the A-12s.
Of course, they didn't know that.
That was another amazing thing
for us as engineers. Wow.
We're making something
out of their material
to go take pictures over their country,
and, uh, they probably wouldn't have been
too eager to sell us that titanium
if they knew where it was going.
Lockheed engineers design the A-12
to be difficult to spot on radar,
but to test it out, they need to
evaluate its radar cross section.
Radar cross section
is the key to stealth.
An airplane presents a
certain signature to the radar,
depending on how reflective it is.
You could have a small aircraft
that's extremely reflective,
and looks large on radar,
or a large aircraft that's
not particularly reflective,
that looks relatively small on radar.
The key to stealth is
making the radar signature
as small as possible.
At Area 51,
the radar signature of an aircraft
is evaluated on a pylon,
affectionately called "the pole,"
a covert facility situated
at the northeast end
of the Area 51 complex.
On the top of this sixty-foot structure,
a full-scale model of the A-12
is subjected to 18 months of testing.
We had all these radar...
Every radar known to man at the time
looking at the object we had on the pole,
and we would could record the returns
of the pattern or the signature.
We'd get the reflections
off of that object,
and we could rotate it.
We could tilt it,
and that's what we were doing
to develop stealth.
Even for those
cleared to work on the A-12 project,
access to the radar facilities at Area 51
is strictly on a need-to-know basis.
People were not allowed in my building
because we were doing things there
that they had no need to know.
I didn't have the level of clearance
that the people needed
to be able to deal with signatures.
That was the highest level of security,
and they didn't ask me about
the thermal part of it.
Even though they needed to know an answer,
I didn't have a need to know
that they existed.
That's how compartmented things were.
It was a culture,
and we thought nothing of it.
You just didn't ask.
To support the
CIA's top secret Oxcart project,
the development of its A-12 spy-plane,
Area 51 needs some major changes.
The CIA decided to
invest a great deal of money
to build up the base.
That included adding a brand new runway,
8,500 feet long, made of concrete,
with a 6,000 foot extension
onto the lake bed.
In addition,
three new hangars are built
on the north side of the base.
These are designated
hangar 4, 5 and 6.
The A-12, Project Oxcart,
turned Area 51, which was essentially
a temporary facility,
into a permanent one.
By February 1962,
Area 51 is now equipped to deal with
a working prototype of the A-12,
but first,
the secret plane has to get there.
The aircraft can't fly until
it's been tested at Area 51,
so Lockheed and the CIA
have to figure out
how to move it over 300 miles
from the factory in Burbank, California
to Area 51 in Nevada.
And they have to keep it a secret.
They put it
in what they call a box.
105 feet long and 35 feet wide.
And they had the aircraft inside of it.
Area 51 security guard Tom Stanks
joins the convoy of
California Highway Patrol
and CIA operatives
who accompany the aircraft,
as these remarkable photographs show,
widening the road, cutting down trees,
and removing signposts,
so the enormous truck can pass.
We always parked
in an area that was remote
on the sides of the roads.
The times that we stopped overnight
is when the questions would be asked.
I know at one time we had
two children on bikes,
and they said, "What have
you got in that thing?"
I said, "Flying saucer."
They said, "Yeah?"
I said, "Yeah, that's right.
Flying saucer."
And, "I don't believe you."
I said, "Well, maybe it's not."
In total,
eighteen convoys are needed
to deliver the CIA's A-12s
to the test site.
Tom Stanks is no longer
cleared for access to Area 51,
so today, this is as far
as he can take us.
Well, here we are.
We made it three days
from Burbank, California to here.
This is where the Nevada test site is,
and not too far down the road
is where the
Nevada Highway Patrol leaves us,
and the Mercury patrol catches us,
and they take us to the Area 51 test site.
60 years ago,
57 miles down this road,
the CIA's top secret aircraft
arrives at Area 51,
and so begins a new chapter
in the development of stealth.
By early 1960,
America is playing technological catch-up
with its archenemy, the Soviet Union.
Intelligence gathering is
the new battleground of the Cold War,
and over 50 years later,
documents now reveal
that the Central Intelligence Agency
at Area 51
goes to extreme lengths to
keep its A-12 airplane project,
codenamed "Oxcart," under wraps.
In 1962, Las Vegas resident Tom Stanks
works as a security guard
at the test site.
His job: to make sure that only those
with the right credentials
get access to the base.
They had the planes coming in
in the morning and leaving
in the afternoon.
And just like any airport or airline,
everyone had a badge.
They took
the badge away from you
so it couldn't be tampered with,
and when you came back the next day,
they would match the badge to your face.
I remember guards
being very fussy about
taking it away from you before you left,
giving it back to you,
comparing it every time.
Jules Kabat is just 22
when he is recruited to work at Area 51.
Like everyone employed to
work on special projects at the base,
he needs to be cleared for access,
a process that takes months to complete.
Because they didn't have much
in the way of computers back then,
they had to do it the old fashioned way,
with legwork.
So, I remember neighbors,
friends saying they were
visited by the FBI,
or some other agency,
to see whether or not
I was a foreign agent.
The need for this intense security
is driven by one factor.
Declassified documents
released by the CIA
show that in the early 1960s,
Area 51 is focused on getting its A-12
stealth plane project,
codenamed "Oxcart,"
out of development and into operation...
a project so sensitive that
even the aircraft have code names.
We didn't call the planes "planes."
We called them "articles."
That was the terminology
that we used for 'em.
Each had a different article number.
The first one was article 121.
,We had article 127, 131.
Different article numbers.
At every level, the A-12 program
is protected by acronyms
and misinformation.
Even the identity of the A-12 pilots.
They had pseudo names entirely.
They did not use their real names.
The CIA got the names off
of gravestones in Europe,
and assigned them to the pilots.
But Oxcart's
need to know security
means even the "drivers"
as the pilots are called,
are not cleared to know everything.
The pilot did not even know
what his mission was.
All he knew is at a certain point
along this flight,
he has flipped this switch,
make this turn to this angle,
go so long, turn here, turn here,
come home, and not say anything about it.
These precautions are necessary.
By the 1960s, the Soviet Union
has leapfrogged the U.S.
in the Cold War battle
for military espionage.
In 1957,
the Soviet Union launches Sputnik One,
becoming the first nation on Earth
to put a man-made object in space.
Until two days ago,
that sound had never
been heard on this Earth.
Suddenly, it has become as much
a part of 20th century life
as the whir of your vacuum cleaner.
The world's first artificial satellite
is an aluminum sphere
about the size of a beach ball.
Inside, a battery pack and basic radio
sends out a repeating pulse.
But although it doesn't
actually do very much,
it catches the world's attention,
and America, off-guard.
When Sputnik launched,
we heard that little satellite going over.
"Beep, beep, beep, beep."
We realized we've got a problem.
They're ahead of us.
We didn't know how far ahead.
In the years that follow,
the Soviets launch more and more
sophisticated satellites,
many of them flying
over the United States,
and worryingly for those
on the Oxcart program,
photographing Area 51.
We had the A-12 prototype
on the pole for 18 months.
But every time a satellite
would come over,
we knew that morning
what time it would be
coming over the horizon.
Our intelligence was that good,
and we would have to take it off the pole
and run it into a building
until the satellite passed.
But even these precautions
have their limitations.
Ironically,
we learned many, many years later
that they had gotten the shape of the A-12
from the shadow,
because the ground was cooler
underneath it.
We'd moved the plane;
it was gone,
but they could tell that
it had been sitting there
because of the difference in the heat.
By the late 1960's,
Soviet satellites aren't the only things
adding new impetus to technology
development at Area 51.
The Vietnam War is in full swing,
and for American fighters,
the Soviet-built MiG aircraft
is proving to be a real handful.
We knew the Russians
had come up with something
that was great.
It's, it's whacking us. This--
It's knocking our pilots out of the sky.
We thought it was a super plane.
Now, the CIA dossier
published in August 2013,
lifts the lid on an Area 51 project
that's been hidden from the public
for the last fifty years.
Declassified CIA documents
contain a previously censored history
of why and how Area 51
grew out of the Nevada desert,
and reveal a revolving picture
of the nature of the work
carried out there.
Area 51 is not really an airbase.
It's a laboratory.
It's a technological laboratory.
It's where we were
exploiting enemy technology,
and analyzing the
capabilities of Soviet Union.
In 1968,
this "laboratory" becomes
America's base of operations
for a major new initiative:
to test and evaluate
its enemies' jet fighters,
a program that grows out of U.S. losses
in the early years of the Vietnam War.
For every Russian-built MiG-21
American pilots shoot down
in the conflict,
nine U.S.-built F-4 fighters
are being destroyed.
In 1968, the U.S. acquires a MiG-21
that has been flown to Israel
by an Iraqi defector.
The CIA secretly ships it to Area 51
for evaluation testing
under the codename "Have Doughnut."
The first time
I saw this baby was in 1968.
One just like this, Groom Lake, Area 51.
We pretty well tore it down
and looked at everything.
The radios, the hydraulics,
uh, the engines.
Everything about this plane,
we examined it.
The results of the MiG-21 evaluation
at Area 51 are clear.
It isn't the aircraft that's the problem.
We realized
it wasn't necessarily the planes.
It was our people
did not know how to fight.
Simple as that.
Now, Area 51
becomes the birthplace
of a new top secret initiative:
training American fighter pilots
how to defeat Soviet MiGs in a dogfight.
We realized that it took
ten missions in the war zone
for a pilot to become experienced enough
that he might survive the war.
So we decided with
what we learned at Area 51,
let's give these pilots
those ten missions
in Nevada before we send them
to the war zone.
To support this new program,
Area 51 undergoes a new
construction phase.
For the third time in its short life,
more facilities are added.
Five more hangars are constructed
at the south end of the test site.
And to prevent any sightings
of the top secret
U.S.-flown MiGs out at Groom,
the airspace directly above the range
is closed...
permanently.
But despite extensive measures
to ensure the secrecy of the MiG training
and combat operations at Area 51,
its cover is almost blown in 1974...
when Skylab astronauts unwittingly
photograph the base from space.
The Skylab incident
marks a watershed moment
in the life of Area 51.
By the mid-1970s,
the agency's U-2 and A-12 projects
are winding down at the test site.
Advances in satellite technology
make high-flying spy planes redundant.
Now, the U.S. Air Force
takes control of the base.
That was a huge moment
in the history of Area 51.
We're transitioning from
use by the intelligence community
to the Department of Defense,
ushering in one of the most
significant advancements
in military technology:
the stealth revolution.
When the U.S. Air Force
takes control of Area 51 in 1978,
it's in the middle of the most
highly classified project
ever to have been through the test site.
The most exciting plane
that I worked on at Area 51
was the Have Blue.
The prototypes when they
brought that thing in,
it looked like something we'd never
seen before in our lives.
The flat-faceted
fuselage of the Have Blue
is a revolutionary design.
And it needs to be.
The experimental jet is designed
with one goal in mind:
stealth.
Unlike the A-12,
which can be seen on radar
but compensates by
flying in the stratosphere
at supersonic speeds,
the Have Blue, a sub-sonic jet,
is designed to be
virtually invisible to radar.
When it took its radar tests,
the people that were inside
that weren't cleared
were looking at the radar and said,
"Well, your, your model must have
fallen off the, uh,
off that, uh, pole out there,
because there's nothing up there anymore."
Not bad for
an aircraft 38 feet long,
and with a wingspan of 22.
This success sees the U.S. Air Force
green-light production
of an operational aircraft,
designated the F-117.
But creating the world's first aircraft
virtually invisible to radar
has an impact on those
who work at Area 51.
Some employees claim
the disposal of anti-radar coatings
used on the jet harms their health,
an allegation that forces the president
of the United States to take action.
Area 51.
Since its creation in 1955,
the exotic nature of the
CIA aircraft tested here
break aviation records,
flying higher and faster
than any aircraft before.
During the Cold War,
these clandestine jets
flying from the secretive base
fuel a raft of UFO sightings,
firing the imagination of Americans
already steeped in '50s UFO culture.
The recent sightings
are in no way connected
with any secret developments
by any agency of the Unites States.
But denials that Area 51
is at the heart of a UFO conspiracy
fuels speculation,
and in the 1980s,
it reaches fever pitch with the
extraordinary claims
of this man.
Hi. I'm Bob Lazar.
During late 1988 and early '89,
I worked on the propulsions systems
of extra-terrestrial vehicles
for the United States government.
Lazar's claims about Area 51
makes the base one of the most
talked about locations
in the world.
But the unwanted attention
can't come at a worse time
for the U.S. Air Force.
Area 51 is right at the heart
of its most highly classified project yet:
stealth.
The level of
secrecy surrounding stealth
is considered to be
comparable to or exceeding
that of the Manhattan Project:
development of the atomic bomb.
Stealth was absolutely vital
to the future of military technology.
The creation of what
becomes the F-117 stealth bomber
takes Area 51 into new era
of stealth technology.
In particular, the development of
radar absorbing materials,
or RAM.
The concept of RAM is not classified,
but its composition
was one of the hottest secrets
at all of the era.
To this day,
the Defense Department
considers RAM to be top secret.
Radar absorbing material,
as the name suggests,
is a class of materials
used to disguise a vehicle,
or structure, from radar.
Experts surmise that the F-117's RAM
is made up of sheets
about the thickness of linoleum,
and a paint containing tiny spheres
coated with iron ferrite,
which vibrate when hit by radar waves.
The exact make-up of this
radar absorbent material
is still top secret,
but according to this man,
RAM is the reason he's dying.
Well, these pills here
are, uh, vitamin D-3 pills,
which are supposed to be very good for
stimulating, uh, cell growth in
the, the lungs and things like that.
The doctors told me that
I might live to be 64.
That means I only have a year left.
Fred Dunham,
a former Area 51 security guard,
suffers from chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease,
a condition he says he developed
overseeing the disposal of barrels of RAM
in burn pits at Area 51 in the 1980s.
The drums contained carbon fiber resin,
and sealants for making the wings,
uh, and different parts of the aircraft,
that were very hazardous when
they were burned.
No satellite images of Area 51
that show these burn pits
are known to exist,
but according to Dunham's description,
it is possible to plot them
onto a map of the base.
They were just west
of the south gate control point.
There was at least six,
maybe seven burn pits
that were right within 300 yards
of the base population.
According to Dunham,
each burn lasts 24 hours,
and happens twice a week
for a three-year period
through the mid-'80s,
exposing him to clouds of toxic fumes.
It was like someone had burned
a bunch of rubber tires.
Uh, the soot that was in the air
was unbelievable.
Dunham believes
his breathing problems
come from the soot and the fumes.
DUNHAM,
I'm a non-smoker,
and the doctor told me
that my lungs look like
the lungs of an 80-year-old man
who had smoked four packs
of cigarettes every day.
In the '90s,
the former security guard,
along with others,
brings a case against the state
for medical compensation.
But the case is rejected when
President Clinton signs a determination
which excludes Groom Lake
from any investigation,
on the grounds of national security.
For nearly 60 years,
the true story of Area 51
was hidden from the public.
But the release of CIA documents in 2013
helps change that.
These documents
from various government agencies,
finally declassified,
confirm the existence of Area 51
as an official entity,
and we can at last begin to
unravel its secrets.
Those documents,
along with satellite imagery,
are now helping to map
how top secret programs at Area 51
have changed the base,
a place we now know
continuously evolves
in line with national priorities,
and with each program that comes along.
If you looked at the aerial
and satellite photographs
taken over the years,
you can see the changes.
New runways. New hangars.
More infrastructure.
It's constantly growing
and changing and building.
This is not a static facility.
It's extremely dynamic.
As Area 51 has changed,
so, too, has its role.
Area 51 is not really in
the common sense, an airbase.
Area 51 is the proving ground.
That's where we can say it works,
or it doesn't work.
You know, a lot of the missions
will not touch down there.
They will just fly over the base,
and we can evaluate
what they have come up with.
It's a proof of concept facility.
It's where we prove this will work
or this will not work.
Created in the '50s to test the U-2,
the CIA's secret base has given the U.S.
the edge over its enemies
for more than half a century.
Area 51 is the place
where we have developed
all of our stealth technologies,
from the early advances of the A-12
through the modern era.
Every U.S. stealth aircraft
has been tested at Area 51
in one way or another.
These programs include
the B-2, advanced cruise missile systems,
the Air Force's latest operational
strike aircraft,
the Raptor, and drones,
now commonplace in combat zones
across the world.
The Raptor, unlike the F-117,
is still an operational aircraft.
But it, like all of the
U.S. Air Force stealth programs
carried out at Groom Lake in
the 1980s and 1990s,
remains highly classified.
Today we know about
the programs like the U-2,
Oxcart, the stealth fighter,
and other demonstrators have come
since then. Tacit Blue. The Bird of Prey.
But there are so many other projects,
both manned and unmanned,
that we may not hear about for decades.
Area 51 is light years ahead.
There's no one even coming
close to the technology
we have developed out there.
And it will continue,
but that's the only way
that we can remain free, safe,
and be superior, is Area 51.
It's clear that
the CIA story of Area 51
has played a key role in keeping
America safe from its enemies.
Beginning with the U-2 and A-12 projects,
America's secret base
saved lives in Vietnam.
The "Have Doughnut" program
completely turned around
the kill ratio in Vietnam
from 9 to 1 against us.
We'd lost over 8,000 helicopters alone,
knocked down by the MiGs,
and we completely turned that around
to the point today
we hadn't lost a plane to
air to air combat in several wars.
Not years, but wars.
And it's a trend
that continues with the F-117,
an aircraft that fought successfully
in not one,
but two wars in Iraq,
with no losses.
When you start off
with an experimental program,
you have to cross your fingers
that everybody knows what they're doing,
and it's gonna work out right.
And of course, we were amazed
that it could do so well
with bullets flying through the air,
and missiles and everything coming up.
We were all wondering, "Oh, my God.
How can anything survive
all that stuff in the air?"
Now, nearly 60 years after its creation,
Area 51 is still at the forefront
of military technology development.
We may not know what projects
are being developed there,
but for those who have
played a part in its story,
the need for these secret projects
is still as great as ever.
I'm sure that there's
something else going on out there.
I'm glad that we're doing it,
and I don't have a need to know about it,
but I'm glad somebody's
going to the next step.
We did our best.
Now somebody else has
the project that's gonna be
doing something in the future,
and I'm glad this country is doing things
that we don't know about.
Just like we were doing things
that they didn't know about.
Captioned by Point.360