“The government, in the case of a very large and public project with substantial corroborating evidence, has in fact lied to us and the whole thing is fabricated” is an extraordinary claim that requires substantial evidence in the absence of major leaks. Or, at least some evidence. Without clear and powerful supporting evidence, it is rational to assume this claim is wrong, because it is really, really complicated and requires a lot of things to go right.
I don’t think any of your counterexamples contradict that.
TL;DR of my other response to this:
“The government, in the case of a very large and public project with substantial corroborating evidence, has in fact lied to us and the whole thing is fabricated” is an extraordinary claim that requires substantial evidence in the absence of major leaks. Or, at least some evidence. Without clear and powerful supporting evidence, it is rational to assume this claim is wrong, because it is really, really complicated and requires a lot of things to go right.
I don’t think any of your counterexamples contradict that.