GUEST INFO
Larry Hancock is a board member of the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies, and did his formal training is in history and cultural anthropology. Larry spent a career first in the United States Air Force, and then as a strategic analyst and consultant. After his retirement, his lifelong scholarly interests and his nature as a "document geek" led him to author several books on Cold War history, international relations, and national security, as well as several edited collections of CIA, FBI and military documents. He has been a board member of the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a major online interactive history archive. His most recent works include an books on covert action and deniable warfare ("Shadow Warfare"), command and control practices ("Surprise Attack"), and the national intelligence problem of UFOs ("Unidentified").
QUESTIONS
- How do people in the intelligence and security world think differently about UAP from people doing history, or empirical science?
- What are the assumptions, methods, and values at the foundation of how the intel and security worlds study UAP?
- If we were writing a history of the relationship between the subject of UFOs/UAP and national security, where would it start? In what direction would it be heading today?
- How can we know where to draw the line between reasonable and unreasonable ideas about what various government agencies might know about the UAP subject?
LINKS
- Unidentified: The National Intelligence Problem of UFOs https://amzn.to/4eHUlbd