TREAT
TREAT (Tactical Reconnaissance Engineering Assessment Team) is an alleged clandestine US government unit described by Edgar Fouché as what some would call the "Men in Black." Fouché learned of TREAT through his close source Gerald, a former NSA investigator and TREAT team member, who worked under cover for the Department of Energy and NSA while the NSA controlled all his movements.
Public Mentions
Only one publicly available mention of TREAT has been identified. In a letter to Steven Greer dated August 31, 1997, written by an unknown sender, Liechtenstein Crown Prince Hans Adam II was accused of funding TREAT. The letter states that "Adam's funding should be focused on his support for TREAT and its GRD, who is wed to a former US Army General, ex-head of Army Intelligence and Security Command." The general referenced is Major General Albert Stubblebine, founder and commander of the US Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM). Stubblebine allegedly intimidated Greer to discontinue investigating UFO black projects and once personally offered him $2 billion to cease his disclosure activities.
Possible INSCOM Connection
The association of TREAT with Stubblebine and Army INSCOM suggests the unit may have operated as an Army-housed intelligence and counterintelligence body focused on UFO-related matters, including monitoring personnel at classified facilities and potentially conducting field operations related to UAP encounters or crash retrievals.