HomeUFO & AliensRetired Intelligence Veteran Reveals Locations of Alleged Alien Bases Hidden in Remote Mountains Around the World
Retired Intelligence Veteran Reveals Alleged Alien Bases

Retired Intelligence Veteran Reveals Alleged Alien Bases

Stories about secret alien bases have circulated for decades. The topic returned to the spotlight after comments made by former U.S. Army intelligence veteran Lin Buchanan.

During an appearance on the American Alchemy podcast, Buchanan discussed several locations. He claimed they were once connected to investigations involving alleged extraterrestrial activity.

The interview quickly attracted attention among UFO researchers. It was later highlighted by the Daily Mail. Buchanan’s statements focused on several remote locations around the world. He claimed these sites were examined during the years of the controversial Stargate project.

Buchanan is best known for his involvement in military remote-viewing programs. During the Cold War, U.S. intelligence agencies funded a series of experiments. Researchers wanted to know whether certain individuals could gather information about distant locations using psychic abilities.

The effort eventually became known as the Stargate project. The program operated for years and involved people who claimed they could observe distant targets without physically visiting them.

According to Buchanan, the story did not begin with him. He said one of the earliest people to report possible alien bases was Pat Price. Price was a former police officer involved in government-sponsored remote-viewing experiments during the 1970s.

According to Buchanan, Price described several unusual locations. He believed they were connected to non-human activity. The claims attracted enough interest to trigger further investigation.

Additional work was reportedly conducted. Researchers wanted to know whether other participants would describe the same places. Buchanan later became one of the individuals asked to focus on those locations.

YouTube Video. “I Operated a UFO… It’s Not What You Think” -Army Sergeant Lyn Buchanan.

Mountains, UFOs and Claims of Hidden Facilities

Among the sites mentioned by Buchanan were Mount Hayes in Alaska, Mount Zeil in Australia, Mount Inyangani in Zimbabwe, and an area in the Pyrenees. The mountain range lies between Spain and France.

These locations are remote and sparsely populated. That fact has helped fuel speculation for years. Some UFO enthusiasts believe such areas would be ideal places to hide secret facilities.

Buchanan claimed that each site appeared to serve a different purpose. In his account, the Alaska location functioned as an intelligence-gathering center. The Australian site was allegedly connected to the arrival of unidentified craft. The Zimbabwe location was described as a repair center for advanced vehicles.

Supporters of remote viewing often point to stories like these as evidence of unusual phenomena. Skeptics disagree. They argue that no physical evidence has ever been presented to support the existence of hidden alien facilities.

Official reviews of the Stargate project reached similar conclusions. The program continued for years and received government funding. However, later assessments found no reliable proof that remote viewing could produce intelligence information with consistent accuracy.

The project was eventually shut down. Many of its documents were later declassified. Those records continue to attract interest from researchers and UFO enthusiasts.

That has not stopped public interest. Claims involving UFOs, secret underground structures, and possible extraterrestrial life continue to generate debate. Every few years, stories connected to the Stargate program return to the spotlight and find a new audience.

For now, Buchanan’s claims remain exactly that — claims. No confirmed evidence has been produced. There is no proof that alien bases exist beneath remote mountains in Alaska, Australia, Zimbabwe, or the Pyrenees.

Even so, the story continues to attract people interested in UFO mysteries and unexplained phenomena. Decades after the Stargate project ended, questions about alien visitors and hidden bases remain part of modern folklore.

Sources: Daily Mail, American Alchemy podcast.

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