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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 Role in the Study of UFOs, 1947-90
An extraordinary 95 percent of all Americans have at least heard or read
something about Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs), and 57 percent believe they
are real.
(1)
Former US Presidents Carter and Reagan claim to have
seen a UFO. UFOlogists--a neologism for UFO buffs--and private UFO organizations
are found throughout the United States. Many are convinced that the US
Government, and particularly CIA, are engaged in a massive conspiracy and
coverup of the issue. The idea that CIA has secretly concealed its research into
UFOs has been a major theme of UFO buffs since the modern UFO phenomena emerged
in the late 1940s.
(2)
In late 1993, after being pressured by UFOlogists for the release of
additional CIA information on UFOs,
(3)
DCI R. James Woolsey ordered another review of all Agency files on UFOs.
Using CIA records compiled from that review, this study traces CIA interest and
involvement in the UFO controversy from the late 1940s to 1990. It
chronologically examines the Agency's efforts to solve the mystery of UFOs, its
programs that had an impact on UFO sightings, and its attempts to conceal CIA
involvement in the entire UFO issue. What emerges from this examination is that,
while Agency concern over UFOs was substantial until the early 1950s, CIA has
since paid only limited and peripheral attention to the phenomena.
Background
The emergence in 1947 of the Cold War confrontation between the United States
and the Soviet Union also saw the first wave of UFO sightings. The first report
of a "flying saucer" over the United States came on 24 June 1947, when Kenneth
Arnold, a private pilot and reputable businessman, while looking for a downed
plane sighted nine disk-shaped objects near Mt. Rainier, Washington, traveling
at an estimated speed of over 1,000 mph. Arnold's report was followed by a flood
of additional sightings, including reports from military and civilian pilots and
air traffic controllers all over the United States. (4)
In 1948, Air Force Gen. Nathan Twining, head of the Air Technical
Service Command, established Project SIGN (initially named Project SAUCER) to
collect, collate, evaluate, and distribute within the government all information
relating to such sightings, on the premise that UFOs might be real and of
national security concern.
(5)
The Technical Intelligence Division of the Air Material Command (AMC) at
Wright Field (later Wright-Patterson Air Force Base) in Dayton, Ohio, assumed
control of Project SIGN and began its work on 23 January 1948. Although at first
fearful that the objects might be Soviet secret weapons, the Air Force soon
concluded that UFOs were real but easily explained and not extraordinary. The
Air Force report found that almost all sightings stemmed from one or more of
three causes: mass hysteria and hallucination, hoax, or misinterpretation of
known objects. Nevertheless, the report recommended continued military
intelligence control over the investigation of all sightings and did not rule
out the possibility of extraterrestrial phenomena.
(6)
Amid mounting UFO sightings, the Air Force continued to collect and evaluate
UFO data in the late 1940s under a new project, GRUDGE, which tried to alleviate
public anxiety over UFOs via a public relations campaign designed to persuade
the public that UFOs constituted nothing unusual or extraordinary. UFO sightings
were explained as balloons, conventional aircraft, planets, meteors, optical
illusions, solar reflections, or even "large hailstones." GRUDGE officials found
no evidence in UFO sightings of advanced foreign weapons design or development,
and they concluded that UFOs did not threaten US security. They recommended that
the project be reduced in scope because the very existence of Air Force official
interest encouraged people to believe in UFOs and contributed to a "war
hysteria" atmosphere. On 27 December 1949, the Air Force announced the project's
termination.
(7)
With increased Cold War tensions, the Korean war, and continued UFO
sightings, USAF Director of Intelligence Maj. Gen. Charles P. Cabell ordered
a new UFO project in 1952. Project BLUE BOOK became the major Air Force effort
to
study the UFO phenomenon throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
(8)
The task of identifying and explaining UFOs continued to fall on the Air
Material Command at Wright-Patterson. With a small staff, the Air Technical
Intelligence Center (ATIC) tried to persuade the public that UFOs were not
extraordinary.
(9)
Projects SIGN, GRUDGE, and BLUE BOOK set the tone for
the official US Government position regarding UFOs for the next 30 years.
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