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Background
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Early CIA Concerns, 1947-52
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The Robertson Panel, 1952-53
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The 1950s: Fading CIA Interest in UFOs
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CIA U-2 and OXCART as UFOs
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The 1960s: Declining CIA Involvement and Mounting Controversy
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The 1970s and1980s: The UFO Issue Refuses To Die
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CIA Reference Notes
CIA's U-2 and OXCART as UFOs
In November 1954, CIA had entered into the world of high technology with its
U-2 overhead reconnaissance project. Working with Lockheed's Advanced
Development facility in Burbank, California, known as the Skunk Works, and Kelly
Johnson, an eminent aeronautical engineer, the Agency by August 1955 was testing
a high-altitude experimental aircraft--the U-2. It could fly at 60,000 feet; in
the mid-1950s, most commercial airliners flew between 10,000 feet and 20,000
feet. Consequently, once the U-2 started test flights, commercial pilots and air
traffic controllers began reporting a large increase in UFO sightings.
(44)
The early U-2s were silver (they were later painted black) and reflected the
rays from the sun, especially at sunrise and sunset. They often appeared as
fiery objects to observers below. Air Force BLUE BOOK investigators aware of the
secret U-2 flights tried to explain away such sightings by linking them to
natural phenomena such as ice crystals and temperature inversions. By checking
with the Agency's U-2 Project Staff in Washington, BLUE BOOK investigators were
able to attribute many UFO sightings to U-2 flights. They were careful, however,
not to reveal the true cause of the sighting to the public.
According to later estimates from CIA officials who worked on the U-2 project
and the OXCART (SR-71, or Blackbird) project, over half of all UFO reports from
the late 1950s through the 1960s were accounted for by manned reconnaissance
flights (namely the U-2) over the United States.
(45)
This led the Air Force to make misleading and deceptive statements
to the public in order to allay public fears and to protect an extraordinarily
sensitive national security project. While perhaps justified, this deception
added fuel to the later conspiracy theories and the coverup controversy of the
1970s. The percentage of what the Air Force considered unexplained UFO sightings
fell to 5.9 percent in 1955 and to 4 percent in 1956.
(46)
At the same time, pressure was building for the release of the Robertson
panel report on UFOs. In 1956, Edward Ruppelt, former head of the Air Force BLUE
BOOK project, publicly revealed the existence of the panel. A best-selling book
by UFOlogist Donald Keyhoe, a retired Marine Corps major, advocated release of
all government information relating to UFOs. Civilian UFO groups such as the
National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) and the Aerial
Phenomena Research Organization (APRO) immediately pushed for release of the
Robertson panel report.
(47)
Under pressure, the Air Force approached CIA for permission to
declassify and release the report. Despite such pressure, Philip Strong, Deputy
Assistant Director of OSI, refused to declassify the report and declined to
disclose CIA sponsorship of the panel. As an alternative, the Agency prepared a
sanitized version of the report which deleted any reference to CIA and avoided
mention of any psychological warfare potential in the UFO controversy.
(48)
The demands, however, for more government information about UFOs did not let
up. On 8 March 1958, Keyhoe, in an interview with Mike Wallace of CBS, claimed
deep CIA involvement with UFOs and Agency sponsorship of the Robertson panel.
This prompted a series of letters to the Agency from Keyhoe and Dr. Leon
Davidson, a chemical engineer and UFOlogist. They demanded the release of the
full Robertson panel report and confirmation of CIA involvement in the UFO
issue. Davidson had convinced himself that the Agency, not the Air Force,
carried most of the responsibility for UFO analysis and that "the activities of
the US Government are responsible for the flying saucer sightings of the last
decade." Indeed, because of the undisclosed U-2 and OXCART flights, Davidson was
closer to the truth than he suspected. CI, nevertheless held firm to its policy
of not revealing its role in UFO investigations and refused to declassify the
full Robertson panel report.
(49)
In a meeting with Air Force representatives to discuss how to handle future
inquires such as Keyhoe's and Davidson's, Agency officials confirmed their
opposition to the declassification of the full report and worried that Keyhoe
had the ear of former DCI VAdm. Roscoe Hillenkoetter, who served on the board of
governors of NICAP. They debated whether to have CIA General Counsel Lawrence R.
Houston show Hillenkoetter the report as a possible way to defuse the situation.
CIA officer Frank Chapin also hinted that Davidson might have ulterior motives,
"some of them perhaps not in the best interest of this country," and suggested
bringing in the FBI to investigate.
(50)
Although the record is unclear whether the FBI ever instituted an
investigation of Davidson or Keyhoe, or whether Houston ever saw Hillenkoetter
about the Robertson report, Hillenkoetter did resign from the NICAP in 1962.
(51)
The Agency was also involved with Davidson and Keyhoe in two rather famous
UFO cases in the 1950s, which helped contribute to a growing sense of public
distrust of CIA with regard to UFOs. One focused on what was reported to have
been a tape recording of a radio signal from a flying saucer; the other on
reported photographs of a flying saucer. The "radio code" incident began
innocently enough in 1955, when two elderly sisters in Chicago, Mildred and
Marie Maier, reported in the Journal of Space Flight their experiences
with UFOs, including the recording of a radio program in which an unidentified
code was reportedly heard. The sisters taped the program and other ham radio
operators also claimed to have heard the "space message." OSI became interested
and asked the Scientific Contact Branch to obtain a copy of the recording.
(52)
Field officers from the Contact Division (CD), one of whom was Dewelt Walker,
made contact with the Maier sisters, who were "thrilled that the government was
interested," and set up a time to meet with them.
(53)
In trying to secure the tape recording, the Agency officers
reported that they had stumbled upon a scene from Arsenic and Old Lace.
"The only thing lacking was the elderberry wine," Walker cabled Headquarters.
After reviewing the sisters' scrapbook of clippings from their days on the
stage, the officers secured a copy of the recording.
(54)
OSI analyzed the tape and found it was nothing more than Morse code from a US radio station.
The matter rested there until UFOlogist Leon Davidson talked with the Maier
sisters in 1957. The sisters remembered they had talked with a Mr. Walker who
said he was from the US Air Force. Davidson then wrote to a Mr. Walker,
believing him to be a US Air Force Intelligence Officer from Wright-Patterson,
to ask if the tape had been analyzed at ATIC. Dewelt Walker replied to Davidson
that the tape had been forwarded to proper authorities for evaluation, and no
information was available concerning the results. Not satisfied, and suspecting
that Walker was really a CIA officer, Davidson next wrote DCI Allen Dulles
demanding to learn what the coded message revealed and who Mr. Walker was.
(55)
The Agency, wanting to keep Walker's identity as a CIA employee
secret, replied that another agency of the government had analyzed the tape in
question and that Davidson would be hearing from the Air Force.
(56)
On 5 August, the Air Force wrote Davidson saying that Walker "was
and is an Air Force Officer" and that the tape "was analyzed by another
government organization." The Air Force letter confirmed that the recording
contained only identifiable Morse code which came from a known US-licensed radio
station.
(57)
Davidson wrote Dulles again. This time he wanted to know the identity of the
Morse operator and of the agency that had conducted the analysis. CIA and the
Air Force were now in a quandary. The Agency had previously denied that it had
actually analyzed the tape. The Air Force had also denied analyzing the tape and
claimed that Walker was an Air Force officer. CIA officers, under cover,
contacted Davidson in Chicago and promised to get the code translation and the
identification of the transmitter, if possible.
(58)
In another attempt to pacify Davidson, a CIA officer, again under cover and
wearing his Air Force uniform, contacted Davidson in New York City. The CIA
officer explained that there was no super agency involved and that Air Force
policy was not to disclose who was doing what. While seeming to accept this
argument, Davidson nevertheless pressed for disclosure of the recording message
and the source. The officer agreed to see what he could do.
(59)
After checking with Headquarters, the CIA officer phoned Davidson
to report that a thorough check had been made and, because the signal was of
known US origin, the tape and the notes made at the time had been destroyed to
conserve file space.
(60)
Incensed over what he perceived was a runaround, Davidson told the CIA
officer that "he and his agency, whichever it was, were acting like Jimmy Hoffa
and the Teamster Union in destroying records which might indict them."
(61)
Believing that any more contact with Davidson would only encourage
more speculation, the Contact Division washed its hands of the issue by
reporting to the DCI and to ATIC that it would not respond to or try to contact
Davidson again.
(62)
Thus, a minor, rather bizarre incident, handled
poorly by both CIA and the Air Force, turned into a major flap that added fuel
to the growing mystery surrounding UFOs and CIA's role in their investigation.
Another minor flap a few months later added to the growing questions
surrounding the Agency's true role with regard to flying saucers. CIA's concern
over secrecy again made matters worse. In 1958, Major Keyhoe charged that the
Agency was deliberately asking eyewitnesses of UFOs not to make their sightings
public.
(63)
The incident stemmed from a November 1957 request from OSI to the CD to
obtain from Ralph C. Mayher, a photographer for KYW-TV in Cleveland, Ohio,
certain photographs he took in 1952 of an unidentified flying object. Harry
Real, a CD officer, contacted Mayher and obtained copies of the photographs for
analysis. On 12 December 1957, John Hazen, another CD officer, returned the five
photographs of the alleged UFO to Mayher without comment. Mayher asked Hazen for
the Agency's evaluation of the photos, explaining that he was trying to organize
a TV program to brief the public on UFOs. He wanted to mention on the show that
a US intelligence organization had viewed the photographs and thought them of
interest. Although he advised Mayher not to take this approach, Hazen stated
that Mayher was a US citizen and would have to make his own decision as to what
to do.
(64)
Keyhoe later contacted Mayher, who told him his story of CIA and the
photographs. Keyhoe then asked the Agency to confirm Hazen's employment in
writing, in an effort to expose CIA's role in UFO investigations. The Agency
refused, despite the fact that CD field representatives were normally overt and
carried credentials identifying their Agency association. DCI Dulles's aide,
John S. Earman, merely sent Keyhoe a noncommittal letter noting that, because
UFOs were of primary concern to the Department of the Air Force, the Agency had
referred his letter to the Air Force for an appropriate response. Like the
response to Davidson, the Agency reply to Keyhoe only fueled the speculation
that the Agency was deeply involved in UFO sightings. Pressure for release of
CIA information on UFOs continued to grow.
(65)
Although CIA had a declining interest in UFO cases, it continued to monitor
UFO sightings. Agency officials felt the need to keep informed on UFOs if only
to alert the DCI to the more sensational UFO reports and flaps.
(66)
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