Area 51 spy plane and other aviation
tales
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio (CNN) -- It looks
like an upside-down bathtub with wings, pretty odd for a spy jet that was among
the nation's most highly classified pieces of military hardware.
As I
stand in front of the plane code-named Tacit Blue at the National Museum of the
U.S. Air Force, near Dayton, Ohio, I'm reminded that it still holds a bit of
mystery.
Engineers made fun of Tacit Blue's design by
nicknaming it the Whale, but the program -- declassified in 1996 -- was deadly
serious. It was all about stealth. Pentagon Cold War strategists desperately
wanted to build planes that could evade Soviet radar.
And so the Air
Force launched a "black program" to develop Tacit Blue and tested it at a secret
government airbase in Nevada called "Area 51," according to CIA documents
released in 2013.
The program, which lasted from 1978 to 1985, aimed to
develop a single-seater jet for battlefield surveillance.
Before last
year's document release, the government never acknowledged the existence of Area
51. For decades, a fenced-off area surrounding Nevada's Groom Lake was rumored
to be a testing ground for some of the nation's most secret
technology.
Two retired Air Force test pilots who flew Tacit Blue in the
early 1980s, Ken Dyson and Russ Easter, spoke about why this plane was important
and what set it apart.
Although the plane flew 135 times and was never
put into production, without Tacit Blue, there would have been no B-2 Spirit
bomber. The plane proved that aircraft with curved surfaces could evade
radar.
"The airplane flew pretty solid, I'd say," Dyson
remembered.
Could sightings of Tacit Blue have contributed to UFO
reports?
"I'm not aware of any circumstance like that," Easter said.
Dyson also says no.
But Cynda Thomas, widow of the first Tacit Blue test
pilot Richard G. "Dick" Thomas, said she was with her husband in Los Angeles
when an airline pilot accosted her husband during a test pilots' banquet at the
Beverly Hilton.
As she remembers it, "The pilot came over, and he said,
'Mr. Thomas, I'm so-and-so, and I fly for Continental, and I'm sure I saw you
flying the Tacit Blue -- and you know, I reported you as a UFO.' "
"Airline
pilots have, over the past, reported some stuff that could have been black
aircraft in flight tests," Dyson said.
"One and a half" Tacit Blue planes
were built, Dyson said, so that "if we lost one, we could have a second one up
and flying in short order." What happened to the other half of Tacit Blue? "I
think it was done away with -- with total respect to secrecy."
Mechanical
remnants from a related black program called Have Blue "are buried at Groom
Lake," according to a 2011 Air Force report. Groom Lake is inside Area 51,
according to those released CIA documents.
"I don't know anything at all
about that Have Blue stuff and wouldn't answer it if I did," said Dyson, who
also tested Have Blue airplanes.
Dyson is aware of the CIA documents but
said he didn't want to talk about Groom Lake or Area 51 or to even mention those
places by name. "That's just because of the secrecy that was drilled into me,"
he said.
Maintaining Tacit Blue's secrets and preventing leaks, Dyson
said, was proof of the success of a tightly knit and dedicated team. Pursuing a
career centered around a secret job takes discipline.
"My wife had no clue
what I was doing for a long time," Dyson said. "I just didn't talk about it to
her or to anyone else who wasn't cleared on the program. It just wasn't
done."
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