| 
			
 
 
  
			by Gerald K. Hainesfrom
			
			CIA Website
 
			  
				
					
						| 
						Gerald K. Haines is 
						the 
						 
						National Reconnaissance Office historian. |  
			  
			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 cover-up 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.
 
			
 Early CIA 
			Concerns, 1947-52
 
			CIA closely monitored the Air Force effort, aware of the mounting 
			number of sightings and increasingly concerned that UFOs might pose 
			a potential security threat. (10)
 
			  
			Given the distribution of the sightings, CIA officials in 1952 
			questioned whether they might reflect "midsummer madness.'' 
			(11)  
			  
			Agency officials 
			accepted the Air Force's conclusions about UFO reports, although 
			they concluded that, 
				
				"since there is a remote possibility 
				that they may be interplanetary aircraft, it is necessary to 
				investigate each sighting." (12)
				 
			A massive buildup of sightings over the 
			United States in 1952, especially in July, alarmed the Truman 
			administration. On 19 and 20 July, radar scopes at Washington 
			National Airport and Andrews Air Force Base tracked mysterious 
			blips. On 27 July, the blips reappeared. The Air Force scrambled 
			interceptor aircraft to investigate, but they found nothing. The 
			incidents, however, caused headlines across the country.  
			  
			The White House wanted to know what was 
			happening, and the Air Force quickly offered the explanation that 
			the radar blips might be the result of "temperature inversions." 
			Later, a Civil Aeronautics Administration investigation confirmed 
			that such radar blips were quite common and were caused by 
			temperature inversions. (13)
 Although it had monitored UFO reports for at least three years, 
			CIA reacted to the new rash of sightings by forming a special 
			study group within the Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI) 
			and the Office of Current Intelligence (OCI) to review 
			the situation. (14)
 
			  
			Edward Tauss, acting chief of OSI's Weapons and Equipment 
			Division, reported for the group that most UFO sightings could be 
			easily explained. Nevertheless, he recommended that the Agency 
			continue monitoring the problem, in coordination with ATIC. He also 
			urged that CIA conceal its interest from the media and the public, 
			"in view of their probable alarmist tendencies" to accept such 
			interest as confirming the existence of UFOs. 
			(15)
 Upon receiving the report, Deputy Director for Intelligence (DDI)
			Robert Amory, Jr. assigned responsibility for the UFO 
			investigations to OSI's Physics and Electronics Division, with A. 
			Ray Gordon as the officer in charge. 
			(16) Each branch in the division was to 
			contribute to the investigation, and Gordon was to coordinate 
			closely with ATIC.
 
			  
			Amory, who asked the group to focus on 
			the national security implications of UFOs, was relaying DCI 
			Walter Bedell Smith's concerns. 
			(17) Smith wanted to know whether or not the Air 
			Force investigation of flying saucers was sufficiently objective and 
			how much more money and manpower would be necessary to determine the 
			cause of the small percentage of unexplained flying saucers.  
			  
			Smith believed, 
				
				"there was only one chance in 10,000 
				that the phenomenon posed a threat to the security of the 
				country, but even that chance could not be taken."  
			According to Smith, it was CIA's 
			responsibility by statute to coordinate the intelligence effort 
			required to solve the problem. Smith also wanted to know what use 
			could be made of the UFO phenomenon in connection with US 
			psychological warfare efforts. (18)
			
 Led by Gordon, the CIA Study Group met with Air Force 
			officials at Wright-Patterson and reviewed their data and findings. 
			The Air Force claimed that 90 percent of the reported sightings were 
			easily accounted for. The other 10 percent were characterized as "a 
			number of incredible reports from credible observers."
 
			  
			The Air Force rejected the theories that 
			the sightings involved US or Soviet secret weapons development or 
			that they involved "men from Mars"; there was no evidence to support 
			these concepts. The Air Force briefers sought to explain these UFO 
			reports as the misinterpretation of known objects or little 
			understood natural phenomena. (19) 
			Air Force and CIA officials agreed that outside knowledge of Agency 
			interest in UFOs would make the problem more serious. 
			(20)  
			  
			This concealment of CIA interest 
			contributed greatly to later charges of a CIA conspiracy and 
			cover-up.
 
			  
			Amateur 
			photographs of alleged UFOs
 Passoria, New Jersey, 31 July 
			1952
 Sheffield, England, 4 March 1962
 & Minneapolis, Minnesota, 20 October 1960
 
 The CIA Study Group also searched the Soviet press for UFO 
			reports, but found none, causing the group to conclude that the 
			absence of reports had to have been the result of deliberate Soviet 
			Government policy.
 
			  
			The group also envisioned the USSR's possible use 
			of UFOs as a psychological warfare tool. In addition, they worried 
			that, if the US air warning system should be deliberately overloaded 
			by UFO sightings, the Soviets might gain a surprise advantage in any 
			nuclear attack. (21)
			
 Because of the tense Cold War situation and increased Soviet 
			capabilities, the CIA Study Group saw serious national 
			security concerns in the flying saucer situation. The group believed 
			that the Soviets could use UFO reports to touch off mass hysteria 
			and panic in the United States. The group also believed that the 
			Soviets might use UFO sightings to overload the US air warning 
			system so that it could not distinguish real targets from phantom 
			UFOs.
 
			  
			H. Marshall Chadwell, Assistant 
			Director of OSI, added that he considered the problem of such 
			importance,  
				
				"that it should be brought to the 
				attention of the National Security Council, in order that a 
				communitywide coordinated effort towards it solution may be 
				initiated." (22)
				 
			Chadwell briefed DCI Smith on the 
			subject of UFOs in December 1952. He urged action because he was 
			convinced that, 
				
				"something was going on that must 
				have immediate attention" and that "sightings of unexplained 
				objects at great altitudes and traveling at high speeds in the 
				vicinity of major US defense installations are of such nature 
				that they are not attributable to natural phenomena or known 
				types of aerial vehicles."  
			He drafted a memorandum from the DCI to 
			the National Security Council (NSC) and a proposed NSC 
			Directive establishing the investigation of UFOs as a priority 
			project throughout the intelligence and the defense research and 
			development community. (23) 
			 
			  
			Chadwell also urged Smith to establish an external research project 
			of top-level scientists to study the problem of UFOs. 
			(24) 
			  
			After this briefing, Smith directed DDI 
			Amory to prepare a NSC Intelligence Directive (NSCID) 
			for submission to the NSC on the need to continue the investigation 
			of UFOs and to coordinate such investigations with the Air Force.
			(25)
 
			
 The Robertson 
			Panel, 1952-53
 
			On 4 December 1952, the Intelligence Advisory Committee (IAC) 
			took up the issue of UFOs. (26)
 
			  
			Amory, as acting chairman, presented DCI Smith's request to the 
			committee that it informally discuss the subject of UFOs.  
			  
			Chadwell 
			then briefly reviewed the situation and the active program of the 
			ATIC relating to UFOs. The committee agreed that the DCI should 
			"enlist the services of selected scientists to review and appraise 
			the available evidence in the light of pertinent scientific 
			theories" and draft an NSCID on the subject. 
			(27) Maj. Gen. John A. 
			Samford, Director of Air Force Intelligence, offered full 
			cooperation. (28) 
 At the same time, Chadwell looked into British efforts in this area. 
			He learned the British also were active in studying the UFO 
			phenomena. An eminent British scientist, R. V. Jones, headed 
			a standing committee created in June 1951 on flying saucers. Jones' 
			and his committee's conclusions on UFOs were similar to those of 
			Agency officials: the sightings were not enemy aircraft but 
			misrepresentations of natural phenomena.
 
			  
			The British noted, however, 
			that during a recent air show RAF pilots and senior military 
			officials had observed a "perfect flying saucer." Given the press 
			response, according to the officer, Jones was having a most 
			difficult time trying to correct public opinion regarding UFOs. The 
			public was convinced they were real. 
			(29) 
 In January 1953, Chadwell and H. P. Robertson, a noted 
			physicist from the California Institute of Technology, put together 
			a distinguished panel of nonmilitary scientists to study the UFO 
			issue.
 
			  
			It included: 
				
					
					
					Robertson as chairman
					
					Samuel A. Goudsmit, a nuclear 
					physicist from the Brookhaven National Laboratories
					
					Luis Alvarez, a high-energy 
					physicist
					
					Thornton Page, the deputy 
					director of the Johns Hopkins Operations Research Office and 
					an expert on radar and electronics
					
					Lloyd Berkner, a director of the 
					Brookhaven National Laboratories and a specialist in 
					geophysics (30)
					 
			The charge to the panel was to review 
			the available evidence on UFOs and to consider the possible dangers 
			of the phenomena to US national security.  
			  
			The panel met from 14 to 
			17 January 1953. It reviewed Air Force data on UFO case histories 
			and, after spending 12 hours studying the phenomena, declared that 
			reasonable explanations could be suggested for most, if not all, 
			sightings.  
			  
			For example, after reviewing 
			motion-picture film taken of a UFO sighting near Tremonton, Utah, on 
			2 July 1952 and one near Great Falls, Montana, on 15 August 1950, 
			the panel concluded that the images on the Tremonton film were 
			caused by sunlight reflecting off seagulls and that the images at 
			Great Falls were sunlight reflecting off the surface of two Air 
			Force interceptors. (31)
			
 The panel concluded unanimously that there was no evidence of a 
			direct threat to national security in the UFO sightings. Nor could 
			the panel find any evidence that the objects sighted might be 
			extraterrestrials. It did find that continued emphasis on UFO 
			reporting might threaten "the orderly functioning" of the government 
			by clogging the channels of communication with irrelevant reports 
			and by inducing "hysterical mass behavior" harmful to constituted 
			authority.
 
			  
			The panel also worried that potential enemies 
			contemplating an attack on the United States might exploit the UFO 
			phenomena and use them to disrupt US air defenses. 
			(32)
 To meet these problems, the panel recommended that the National 
			Security Council debunk UFO reports and institute a policy of public 
			education to reassure the public of the lack of evidence behind UFOs.
 
			  
			It suggested using the mass media, advertising, business clubs, 
			schools, and even
			
			the Disney corporation to get the 
			message across. Reporting at the height of McCarthyism, the panel 
			also recommended that such private UFO groups as the Civilian 
			Flying Saucer Investigators in Los Angeles and the Aerial 
			Phenomena Research Organization in Wisconsin be monitored for 
			subversive activities. (33)
			
 The Robertson Panel's conclusions 
			were strikingly similar to those of the earlier Air Force project 
			reports on SIGN and GRUDGE and to those of the CIA's own OSI Study 
			Group. All investigative groups found that UFO reports indicated no 
			direct threat to national security and no evidence of visits by 
			extraterrestrials.
 
 Following the Robertson panel findings, the Agency abandoned efforts 
			to draft an NSCID on UFOs. (34)
			The Scientific Advisory Panel on UFOs (the Robertson panel) 
			submitted its report to the IAC, the Secretary of Defense, the 
			Director of the Federal Civil Defense Administration, and the 
			Chairman of the National Security Resources Board.
 
			  
			CIA officials said no further 
			consideration of the subject appeared warranted, although they 
			continued to monitor sightings in the interest of national security.
			Philip Strong and Fred Durant from OSI also briefed 
			the Office of National Estimates on the findings. 
			(35)  
			  
			CIA officials wanted 
			knowledge of any Agency interest in the subject of flying saucers 
			carefully restricted, noting not only that the Robertson panel 
			report was classified but also that any mention of CIA sponsorship 
			of the panel was forbidden.  
			  
			This attitude would later cause the 
			Agency major problems relating to its credibility. 
			(36)
 
			
 The 1950s: 
			Fading CIA Interest in UFOs
 
			After the report of the Robertson panel, Agency officials put 
			the entire issue of UFOs on the back burner.
 
			  
			In May 1953, Chadwell 
			transferred chief responsibility for keeping abreast of UFOs to 
			OSI's Physics and Electronic Division, while the Applied Science 
			Division continued to provide any necessary support. 
			(37) Todos M. Odarenko, 
			chief of the Physics and Electronics Division, did not want to take 
			on the problem, contending that it would require too much of his 
			division's analytic and clerical time.  
			  
			Given the findings of the Robertson 
			panel, he proposed to consider the project "inactive" and to devote 
			only one analyst part-time and a file clerk to maintain a reference 
			file of the activities of the Air Force and other agencies on UFOs. 
			Neither the Navy nor the Army showed much interest in UFOs, 
			according to Odarenko. (38)
 A nonbeliever in UFOs, Odarenko sought to have his division relieved 
			of the responsibility for monitoring UFO reports. In 1955, for 
			example, he recommended that the entire project be terminated 
			because no new information concerning UFOs had surfaced. Besides, he 
			argued, his division was facing a serious budget reduction and could 
			not spare the resources. (39) 
			Chadwell and other Agency officials, however, continued to worry 
			about UFOs. Of special concern were overseas reports of UFO 
			sightings and claims that German engineers held by the Soviets were 
			developing a "flying saucer" as a future weapon of war. 
			(40)
 
 To most US political and military leaders, the Soviet Union by the 
			mid-1950s had become a dangerous opponent. Soviet progress in 
			nuclear weapons and guided missiles was particularly alarming. In 
			the summer of 1949, the USSR had detonated an atomic bomb.
 
			  
			In August 
			1953, only nine months after the United States tested a hydrogen 
			bomb, the Soviets detonated one. In the spring of 1953, a top secret 
			RAND Corporation study also pointed out the vulnerability of SAC 
			bases to a surprise attack by Soviet long-range bombers. Concern 
			over the danger of a Soviet attack on the United States continued to 
			grow, and UFO sightings added to the uneasiness of US policymakers.
 Mounting reports of UFOs over eastern Europe and Afghanistan also 
			prompted concern that the Soviets were making rapid progress in this 
			area. CIA officials knew that the British and Canadians were already 
			experimenting with "flying saucers." Project Y was a 
			Canadian-British-US developmental operation to produce a 
			nonconventional flying-saucer-type aircraft, and Agency officials 
			feared the Soviets were testing similar devices. 
			(41)
 
 Adding to the concern was a flying saucer sighting by US Senator 
			Richard Russell and his party while traveling on a train in the 
			USSR in October 1955.
 
			  
			After extensive interviews of Russell and his 
			group, however, CIA officials concluded that Russell's sighting did 
			not support the theory that the Soviets had developed saucer-like or 
			unconventional aircraft. Herbert Scoville, Jr., the Assistant 
			Director of OSI, wrote that the objects observed probably were 
			normal jet aircraft in a steep climb. 
			(42)
 Wilton E. Lexow, head of the CIA's Applied Sciences Division, 
			was also skeptical. He questioned why the Soviets were continuing to 
			develop conventional-type aircraft if they had a "flying saucer."
			(43)
 
			  
			Scoville asked Lexow to assume 
			responsibility for fully assessing the capabilities and limitations 
			of nonconventional aircraft and to maintain the OSI central file on 
			the subject of UFOs.
 
			
 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) 
			(U)
 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 cover-up 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)
 
 
			
 The 1960s: 
			Declining CIA Involvement and Mounting Controversy
 
			In the early 1960s, Keyhoe, Davidson, and other UFOlogists 
			maintained their assault on the Agency for release of UFO 
			information.
 
			  
			Davidson now claimed that CIA,  
				
				"was solely responsible for creating 
				the Flying Saucer furor as a tool for cold war psychological 
				warfare since 1951."  
			Despite calls for Congressional hearings 
			and the release of all materials relating to UFOs, little changed.
			(67)
 In 1964, however, following high-level White House discussions on 
			what to do if an alien intelligence was discovered in space and a 
			new outbreak of UFO reports and sightings, DCI John McCone 
			asked for an updated CIA evaluation of UFOs. Responding to McCone's 
			request, OSI asked the CD to obtain various recent samples and 
			reports of UFO sightings from NICAP.
 
			  
			With Keyhoe, one of the 
			founders, no longer active in the organization, CIA officers met 
			with Richard H. Hall, the acting director. Hall gave the 
			officers samples from the NICAP database on the most recent 
			sightings. (68)
 After OSI officers had reviewed the material, Donald F. 
			Chamberlain, OSI Assistant Director, assured McCone that little 
			had changed since the early 1950s. There was still no evidence that 
			UFOs were a threat to the security of the United States or that they 
			were of "foreign origin." Chamberlain told McCone that OSI still 
			monitored UFO reports, including the official Air Force 
			investigation, Project BLUE BOOK. 
			(69)
 
 At the same time that CIA was conducting this latest internal review 
			of UFOs, public pressure forced the Air Force to establish a special 
			ad hoc committee to review BLUE BOOK. Chaired by Dr. Brian O'Brien, 
			a member of the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board, the panel 
			included 
			Carl Sagan, the famous 
			astronomer from Cornell University.
 
			  
			Its report offered nothing new. It 
			declared that UFOs did not threaten the national security and that 
			it could find "no UFO case which represented technological or 
			scientific advances outside of a terrestrial framework." The 
			committee did recommend that UFOs be studied intensively, with a 
			leading university acting as a coordinator for the project, to 
			settle the issue conclusively. (70)
 The House Armed Services Committee also held brief hearings 
			on UFOs in 1966 that produced similar results. Secretary of the Air 
			Force Harold Brown assured the committee that most sightings 
			were easily explained and that there was no evidence that "strangers 
			from outer space" had been visiting Earth. He told the committee 
			members, however, that the Air Force would keep an open mind and 
			continue to investigate all UFO reports. 
			(71)
 
 Following the report of its O'Brien Committee, the House hearings on 
			UFOs, and Dr. Robertson's disclosure on a CBS Reports program that 
			CIA indeed had been involved in UFO analysis, the Air Force in July 
			1966 again approached the Agency for declassification of the entire 
			Robertson panel report of 1953 and the full Durant report on the 
			Robertson panel deliberations and findings.
 
			  
			The Agency again 
			refused to budge.  
			  
			Karl H. Weber, Deputy Director of 
			OSI, wrote the Air Force that,  
				
				"We are most anxious that further 
				publicity not be given to the information that the panel was 
				sponsored by the CIA."  
			Weber noted that there was already a 
			sanitized version available to the public. 
			(72) 
			  
			Weber's response was rather shortsighted 
			and ill considered. It only drew more attention to the 13-year-old 
			Robertson panel report and CIA's role in the investigation of UFOs. 
			The science editor of The Saturday Review drew nationwide attention 
			to the CIA's role in investigating UFOs when he published an article 
			criticizing the "sanitized version" of the 1953 Robertson panel 
			report and called for release of the entire document. 
			(73)
 Unknown to CIA officials, Dr. James E. McDonald, a noted 
			atmospheric physicist from the University of Arizona, had already 
			seen the Durant report on the Robertson panel proceedings at 
			Wright-Patterson on 6 June 1966. When McDonald returned to 
			Wright-Patterson on 30 June to copy the report, however, the Air 
			Force refused to let him see it again, stating that it was a CIA 
			classified document. Emerging as a UFO authority, McDonald publicly 
			claimed that the CIA was behind the Air Force secrecy policies and 
			cover-up.
 
			  
			He demanded the release of the full Robertson panel report 
			and the Durant report. (74)
 Bowing to public pressure and the recommendation of its own O'Brien 
			Committee, the Air Force announced in August 1966 that it was 
			seeking a contract with a leading university to undertake a program 
			of intensive investigations of UFO sightings. The new program was 
			designed to blunt continuing charges that the US Government had 
			concealed what it knew about UFOs.
 
			  
			On 7 October, the University of Colorado 
			accepted a $325,000 contract with the Air Force for an 18-month 
			study of flying saucers. Dr. Edward U. Condon, a physicist at 
			Colorado and a former Director of the National Bureau of Standards, 
			agreed to head the program. Pronouncing himself an "agnostic" on the 
			subject of UFOs, Condon observed that he had an open mind on the 
			question and thought that possible extraterritorial origins were 
			"improbable but not impossible." (75) 
			  
			Brig. Gen. Edward Giller, USAF, 
			and Dr. Thomas Ratchford from the Air Force Research and 
			Development Office became the Air Force coordinators for the 
			project.
 In February 1967, Giller contacted Arthur C. Lundahl, 
			Director of CIA's National Photographic Interpretation Center 
			(NPIC), and proposed an informal liaison through which NPIC 
			could provide the Condon Committee with technical advice and 
			services in examining photographs of alleged UFOs. Lundahl and DDI
			R. Jack Smith approved the arrangement as a way of 
			"preserving a window" on the new effort. They wanted the CIA and 
			NPIC to maintain a low profile, however, and to take no part in 
			writing any conclusions for the committee. No work done for the 
			committee by NPIC was to be formally acknowledged. 
			(76)
 
 Ratchford next requested that Condon and his committee be allowed to 
			visit NPIC to discuss the technical aspects of the problem and to 
			view the special equipment NPIC had for photo-analysis. On 20 
			February 1967, Condon and four members of his committee visited NPIC. 
			Lundahl emphasized to the group that any NPIC work to assist the 
			committee must not be identified as CIA work.
 
			  
			Moreover, work performed by NPIC would 
			be strictly of a technical nature. After receiving these guidelines, 
			the group heard a series of briefings on the services and equipment 
			not available elsewhere that CIA had used in its analysis of some 
			UFO photography furnished by Ratchford. Condon and his committee 
			were impressed. (77)
 Condon and the same group met again in May 1967 at NPIC to hear an 
			analysis of UFO photographs taken at Zanesville, Ohio. The analysis 
			debunked that sighting. The committee was again impressed with the 
			technical work performed, and Condon remarked that for the first 
			time a scientific analysis of a UFO would stand up to investigation.
			(78)
 
			  
			The group also 
			discussed the committee's plans to call on US citizens for 
			additional photographs and to issue guidelines for taking useful UFO 
			photographs. In addition, CIA officials agreed that the Condon 
			Committee could release the full Durant report with only minor 
			deletions.
 In April 1969,
			
			Condon and his committee released their 
			report on UFOs. The report concluded that little, if 
			anything, had come from the study of UFOs in the past 21 years and 
			that further extensive study of UFO sightings was unwarranted. It 
			also recommended that the Air Force special unit, Project BLUE 
			BOOK, be discontinued. It did not mention CIA participation in 
			the Condon committee's investigation. 
			(79)
 
			  
			A special panel established by the 
			National Academy of Sciences reviewed the Condon report and 
			concurred with its conclusion that "no high priority in UFO 
			investigations is warranted by data of the past two decades."  
			  
			It concluded its review by declaring,
			 
				
				"On the basis of present knowledge, 
				the least likely explanation of UFOs is the hypothesis of 
				extraterrestrial visitations by intelligent beings."  
			Following the recommendations of the 
			Condon Committee and the National Academy of Sciences, 
			the Secretary of the Air Force, Robert C. Seamans, Jr., 
			announced on 17 December 1969 the termination of BLUE BOOK.
			(80)
 
			
 The 1970s and 
			1980s - The UFO Issue Refuses To Die
 
			The Condon report did not satisfy many UFOlogists, who considered it 
			a cover-up for CIA activities in UFO research. Additional 
			sightings in the early 1970s fueled beliefs that the CIA was somehow 
			involved in a vast conspiracy.
 
			  
			On 7 June 1975, William Spaulding, 
			head of a small UFO group, Ground Saucer Watch (GSW), 
			wrote to CIA requesting a copy of the Robertson panel report and all 
			records relating to UFOs. (81)
			 
			  
			Spaulding was convinced that the Agency 
			was withholding major files on UFOs. Agency officials provided 
			Spaulding with a copy of the Robertson panel report and of the 
			Durant report. (82)
 On 14 July 1975, Spaulding again wrote the Agency questioning the 
			authenticity of the reports he had received and alleging a CIA 
			cover-up of its UFO activities.
 
			  
			Gene Wilson, CIA's 
			Information and Privacy Coordinator, replied in an attempt to 
			satisfy Spaulding,  
				
				"At no time prior to the formation 
				of the Robertson Panel and subsequent to the issuance of the 
				panel's report has CIA engaged in the study of the UFO 
				phenomena."  
			The Robertson panel report, according to 
			Wilson, was "the summation of Agency interest and involvement in 
			UFOs." Wilson also inferred that there were no additional documents 
			in CIA's possession that related to UFOs. Wilson was ill informed.
			(83)
 In September 1977, Spaulding and GSW, unconvinced by Wilson's 
			response, filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 
			lawsuit against the Agency that specifically requested all UFO 
			documents in CIA's possession. Deluged by similar FOIA requests for 
			Agency information on UFOs, CIA officials agreed, after much legal 
			maneuvering, to conduct a "reasonable search" of CIA files for UFO 
			materials. (84)
 
			  
			Despite an Agency-wide unsympathetic 
			attitude toward the suit, Agency officials, led by Launie Ziebell 
			from the Office of General Counsel, conducted a thorough search for 
			records pertaining to UFOs. Persistent, demanding, and even 
			threatening at times, Ziebell and his group scoured the Agency. They 
			even turned up an old UFO file under a secretary's desk. 
			 
			  
			The search 
			finally produced 355 documents totaling approximately 900 pages. On 
			14 December 1978, the Agency released all but 57 documents of about 
			100 pages to GSW. It withheld these 57 documents on national 
			security grounds and to protect sources and methods. 
			(85)
 Although the released documents produced no smoking gun and revealed 
			only a low-level Agency interest in the UFO phenomena after the 
			Robertson panel report of 1953, the press treated the release in a 
			sensational manner. The New York Times, for example, claimed 
			that the declassified documents confirmed intensive government 
			concern over UFOs and that the Agency was secretly involved in the 
			surveillance of UFOs. (86)
 
			  
			GSW then sued for the release of the 
			withheld documents, claiming that the Agency was still holding out 
			key information. (87) 
			It was much like the John F. Kennedy assassination issue. No matter 
			how much material the Agency released and no matter how dull and 
			prosaic the information, people continued to believe in a Agency 
			cover-up and conspiracy.
 DCI Stansfield Turner was so upset when he read The New 
			York Times article that he asked his senior officers, "Are we in 
			UFOs?"
 
			  
			After reviewing the records, Don Wortman, Deputy 
			Director for Administration, reported to Turner that there was,
			 
				
				"no organized Agency effort to do 
				research in connection with UFO phenomena nor has there been an 
				organized effort to collect intelligence on UFOs since the 
				1950s."  
			Wortman assured Turner that the Agency 
			records held only "sporadic instances of correspondence dealing with 
			the subject," including various kinds of reports of UFO sightings. 
			There was no Agency program to collect actively information on UFOs, 
			and the material released to GSW had few deletions. 
			(88) 
			  
			Thus assured, Turner had the General 
			Counsel press for a summary judgment against the new lawsuit by GSW. 
			In May 1980, the courts dismissed the lawsuit, finding that the 
			Agency had conducted a thorough and adequate search in good faith.
			(89)
 During the late 1970s and 1980s, the Agency continued its low-key 
			interest in UFOs and UFO sightings. While most scientists now 
			dismissed flying saucers reports as a quaint part of the 1950s and 
			1960s, some in the Agency and in the Intelligence Community shifted 
			their interest to studying parapsychology and psychic phenomena 
			associated with UFO sightings.
 
			  
			CIA officials also looked at the UFO 
			problem to determine what UFO sightings might tell them about Soviet 
			progress in rockets and missiles and reviewed its 
			counterintelligence aspects.  
			  
			Agency analysts from the Life Science 
			Division of OSI and OSWR officially devoted a small amount of 
			their time to issues relating to UFOs. These included 
			counterintelligence concerns that the Soviets and the KGB were using 
			US citizens and UFO groups to obtain information on sensitive US 
			weapons development programs (such as the Stealth aircraft), the 
			vulnerability of the US air-defense network to penetration by 
			foreign missiles mimicking UFOs, and evidence of Soviet advanced 
			technology associated with UFO sightings.
 CIA also maintained Intelligence Community coordination with other 
			agencies regarding their work in parapsychology, psychic phenomena, 
			and "remote viewing" experiments. In general, the Agency took a 
			conservative scientific view of these unconventional scientific 
			issues.
 
			  
			There was no formal or official UFO project within the 
			Agency in the 1980s, and Agency officials purposely kept files on 
			UFOs to a minimum to avoid creating records that might mislead the 
			public if released. (90)
 The 1980s also produced renewed charges that the Agency was still 
			withholding documents relating to
			
			the 1947 Roswell incident, in which 
			a flying saucer supposedly crashed in New Mexico, and the surfacing 
			of documents which purportedly revealed the existence of a top 
			secret US research and development intelligence operation 
			responsible only to the President on UFOs in the late 1940s and 
			early 1950s.
 
			  
			UFOlogists had long argued that, 
			following a flying saucer crash in New Mexico in 1947, the 
			government not only recovered debris from the crashed saucer but 
			also four or five alien bodies. According to some UFOlogists, the 
			government clamped tight security around the project and has refused 
			to divulge its investigation results and research ever since. 
			(91) 
			  
			In September 1994, the US Air Force 
			released a new report on the Roswell incident that concluded that 
			the debris found in New Mexico in 1947 probably came from a once top 
			secret balloon operation, Project MOGUL, designed to monitor 
			the atmosphere for evidence of Soviet nuclear tests. 
			(92)
 Circa 1984, a series of documents surfaced which some UFOlogists 
			said proved that President Truman created a top secret committee in 
			1947, Majestic-12, to secure the recovery of UFO wreckage from 
			Roswell and any other UFO crash sight for scientific study and to 
			examine any alien bodies recovered from such sites. Most if not all 
			of these documents have proved to be fabrications. Yet the 
			controversy persists. (93)
 
 Like the JFK assassination conspiracy theories, the UFO issue 
			probably will not go away soon, no matter what the Agency does or 
			says.
 
			  
			The belief that we are not alone in the 
			universe is too emotionally appealing and the distrust of our 
			government is too pervasive to make the issue amenable to 
			traditional scientific studies of rational explanation and evidence.
 
			
 Notes
 
				
				(1) See the 1973 Gallup Poll results 
				printed in The New York Times, 29 November 1973, p. 45 and 
				Philip J. Klass, UFOs: The Public Deceived (New York: Prometheus 
				Books, 1983), p. 3.
 (2) See Klass, UFOs, p. 3; James S. Gordon, "The UFO 
				Experience," Atlantic Monthly (August 1991), pp. 82-92; David 
				Michael Jacobs, The UFO Controversy in America (Bloomington: 
				Indiana University Press, 1975); Howard Blum, Out There: The 
				Government's Secret Quest for Extraterrestrials (New York: Simon 
				and Schuster, 1990); Timothy Good, Above Top Secret: The 
				Worldwide UFO Cover-Up (New York: William Morrow, 1987); and 
				Whitley Strieber, Communion: The True Story (New York: Morrow, 
				1987).
 
 (3) In September 1993 John Peterson, an acquaintance of 
				Woolsey's, first approached the DCI with a package of heavily 
				sanitized CIA material on UFOs released to UFOlogist Stanton T. 
				Friedman. Peterson and Friedman wanted to know the reasons for 
				the redactions. Woolsey agreed to look into the matter. See 
				Richard J. Warshaw, Executive Assistant, note to author, 1 
				November 1994; Warshaw, note to John H. Wright, Information and 
				Privacy Coordinator, 31 January 1994; and Wright, memorandum to 
				Executive Secretariat, 2 March 1994. (Except where noted, all 
				citations to CIA records in this article are to the records 
				collected for the 1994 Agency-wide search that are held by the 
				Executive Assistant to the DCI).
 
 (4) See Hector Quintanilla, Jr., "The Investigation of UFOs," 
				Vol. 10, No. 4, Studies in Intelligence (fall 1966): pp.95-110 
				and CIA, unsigned memorandum, "Flying Saucers," 14 August 1952. 
				See also Good, Above Top Secret, p. 253. During World War II, US 
				pilots reported "foo fighters" (bright lights trailing US 
				aircraft). Fearing they might be Japanese or German secret 
				weapons, OSS investigated but could find no concrete evidence of 
				enemy weapons and often filed such reports in the "crackpot" 
				category. The OSS also investigated possible sightings of German 
				V-1 and V-2 rockets before their operational use during the war. 
				See Jacobs, UFO Controversy, p. 33. The Central Intelligence 
				Group, the predecessor of the CIA, also monitored reports of 
				"ghost rockets" in Sweden in 1946. See CIG, Intelligence Report, 
				9 April 1947.
 
 (5) Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, p. 156 and Quintanilla, "The 
				Investigation of UFOs," p. 97.
 
 (6) See US Air Force, Air Material Command, "Unidentified Aerial 
				Objects: Project SIGN, no. F-TR 2274, IA, February 1949, Records 
				of the US Air Force Commands, Activities and Organizations, 
				Record Group 341, National Archives, Washington, DC.
 
 (7) See US Air Force, Projects GRUDGE and BLUEBOOK Reports 1- 12 
				(Washington, DC; National Investigations Committee on Aerial 
				Phenomena, 1968) and Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, pp. 50-54.
 
 (8) See Cabell, memorandum to Commanding Generals Major Air 
				Commands, "Reporting of Information on Unconventional Aircraft," 
				8 September 1950 and Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, p. 65.
 
 (9) See Air Force, Projects GRUDGE and BLUE BOOK and Jacobs, The 
				UFO Controversy, p. 67.
 
 (10) See Edward Tauss, memorandum for Deputy Assistant Director, 
				SI, "Flying Saucers," 1 August 1952. See also United Kingdom, 
				Report by the "Flying Saucer" Working Party, "Unidentified 
				Flying Objects," no date (approximately 1950).
 
 (11) See Dr. Stone, OSI, memorandum to Dr. Willard Machle, OSI, 
				15 March 1949 and Ralph L. Clark, Acting Assistant Director, OSI, 
				memorandum for DDI, "Recent Sightings of Unexplained Objects," 
				29 July 1952.
 
 (12) Stone, memorandum to Machle. See also Clark, memorandum for 
				DDI, 29 July 1952.
 
 (13) See Klass, UFOs, p. 15. For a brief review of the 
				Washington sightings see Good, Above Top Secret, pp. 269-271.
 
 (14) See Ralph L. Clark, Acting Assistant Director, OSI, 
				memorandum to DDI Robert Amory, Jr., 29 July 1952. OSI and OCI 
				were in the Directorate of Intelligence. Established in 1948, 
				OSI served as the CIA's focal point for the analysis of foreign 
				scientific and technological developments. In 1980, OSI was 
				merged into the Office of Science and Weapons Research. The 
				Office of Current Intelligence (OCI), established on 15 January 
				1951 was to provide all-source current intelligence to the 
				President and the National Security Council.
 
 (15) Tauss, memorandum for Deputy Assistant Director, SI (Philip 
				Strong), 1 August 1952.
 
 (16) On 2 January 1952, DCI Walter Bedell Smith created a Deputy 
				Directorate for Intelligence (DDI) composed of six overt CIA 
				organizations--OSI, OCI, Office of Collection and Dissemination, 
				Office National Estimates, Office of Research and Reports, and 
				the Office of Intelligence Coordination--to produce intelligence 
				analysis for US policymakers.
 
 (17) See Minutes of Branch Chief's Meeting, 11 August 1952.
 
 (18) Smith expressed his opinions at a meeting in the DCI 
				Conference Room attended by his top officers. See Deputy Chief, 
				Requirements Staff, FI, memorandum for Deputy Director, Plans, 
				"Flying Saucers," 20 August 1952, Directorate of Operations 
				Records, Information Management Staff, Job 86-00538R, Box 1.
 
 (19) See CIA memorandum, unsigned, "Flying Saucers," 11 August 
				1952.
 
 (20) See CIA, memorandum, unsigned, "Flying Saucers," 14 August 
				1952.
 
 (21) See CIA, memorandum, unsigned, "Flying Saucers," 19 August 
				1952.
 
 (22) See Chadwell, memorandum for Smith, 17 September 1952 and 
				24 September 1952, "Flying Saucers." See also Chadwell, 
				memorandum for DCI Smith, 2 October 1952 and Klass, UFOs, pp. 
				23-26.
 
 (23) Chadwell, memorandum for DCI with attachments, 2 December 
				1952. See also Klass, UFOs, pp. 26-27 and Chadwell, memorandum, 
				25 November 1952.
 
 (24) See Chadwell, memorandum, 25 November 1952 and Chadwell, 
				memorandum, "Approval in Principle - External Research Project 
				Concerned with Unidentified Flying Objects," no date. See also 
				Philip G. Strong, OSI, memorandum for the record, "Meeting with 
				Dr. Julius A. Stratton, Executive Vice President and Provost, 
				MIT and Dr. Max Millikan, Director of CENIS." Strong believed 
				that in order to undertake such a review they would need the 
				full backing and support of DCI Smith.
 
 (25) See Chadwell, memorandum for DCI, ""Unidentified Flying 
				Objects," 2 December 1952. See also Chadwell, memorandum for 
				Amory, DDI, "Approval in Principle - External Research Project 
				Concerned with Unidentified Flying Objects," no date.
 
 (26) The IAC was created in 1947 to serve as a coordinating body 
				in establishing intelligence requirements. Chaired by the DCI, 
				the IAC included representatives from the Department of State, 
				the Army, the Air Force, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the FBI, and 
				the AEC.
 
 (27) See Klass, UFOs, p. 27.
 
 (28) See Richard D. Drain, Acting Secretary, IAC, "Minutes of 
				Meeting held in Director's Conference Room, Administration 
				Building, CIA," 4 December 1952.
 
 (29) See Chadwell, memorandum for the record, "British Activity 
				in the Field of UFOs," 18 December 1952.
 
 (30) See Chadwell, memorandum for DCI, "Consultants for Advisory 
				Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects," 9 January 1953; Curtis 
				Peebles, Watch the Skies! A Chronicle of the Flying Saucer Myth 
				(Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994). pp. 
				73-90; and Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, pp. 91-92.
 
 (31) See Fred C. Durant III, Report on the Robertson Panel 
				Meeting, January 1953. Durant, on contract with OSI and a past 
				president of the American Rocket Society, attended the Robertson 
				panel meetings and wrote a summary of the proceedings.
 
 (32) See Report of the Scientific Panel on Unidentified Flying 
				Objects (the Robertson Report), 17 January 1953 and the Durant 
				report on the panel discussions.
 
 (33) See Robertson Report and Durant Report. See also Good, 
				Above Top Secret, pp. 337-38, Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, p. 
				95, and Klass, UFO's, pp. 28-29.
 
 (34) See Reber, memorandum to IAC, 18 February 1953.
 
 (35) See Chadwell, memorandum for DDI, "Unidentified Flying 
				Objects," 10 February 1953; Chadwell, letter to Robertson, 28 
				January 1953; and Reber, memorandum for IAC, "Unidentified 
				Flying Objects," 18 February 1953. On briefing the ONE, see 
				Durant, memorandum for the record, "Briefing of ONE Board on 
				Unidentified Flying Objects," 30 January 1953 and CIA Summary 
				disseminated to the field, "Unidentified Flying Objects," 6 
				February 1953.
 
 (36) See Chadwell, letter to Julius A. Stratton, Provost MIT, 27 
				January 1953.
 
 (37) See Chadwell, memorandum for Chief, Physics and Electronics 
				Division/OSI (Todos M. Odarenko), "Unidentified Flying Objects," 
				27 May 1953.
 
 (38) See Odarenko, memorandum to Chadwell, "Unidentified Flying 
				Objects," 3 July 1953. See also Odarenko, memorandum to Chadwell, 
				"Current Status of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOB) Project," 
				17 December 1953.
 
 (39) See Odarenko, memorandum, "Unidentified Flying Objects," 8 
				August 1955.
 
 (40) See FBIS, report, "Military Unconventional Aircraft," 18 
				August 1953 and various reports, "Military-Air, Unconventional 
				Aircraft," 1953, 1954, 1955.
 
 (41) Developed by the Canadian affiliate of Britain's A. V. Roe, 
				Ltd., Project Y did produce a small-scale model that hovered a 
				few feet off the ground. See Odarenko, memorandum to Chadwell, 
				"Flying Saucer Type of Planes" 25 May 1954; Frederic C. E. Oder, 
				memorandum to Odarenko, "USAF Project Y," 21 May 1954; and 
				Odarenko, T. M. Nordbeck, Ops/SI, and Sidney Graybeal, ASD/SI, 
				memorandum for the record, "Intelligence Responsibilities for 
				Non-Conventional Types of Air Vehicles," 14 June 1954.
 
 (42) See Reuben Efron, memorandum, "Observation of Flying Object 
				Near Baku," 13 October 1955; Scoville, memorandum for the 
				record, "Interview with Senator Richard B. Russell," 27 October 
				1955; and Wilton E. Lexow, memorandum for information, "Reported 
				Sighting of Unconventional Aircraft," 19 October 1955.
 
 (43) See Lexow, memorandum for information, "Reported Sighting 
				of Unconventional Aircraft," 19 October 1955. See also Frank C. 
				Bolser, memorandum for George C. Miller, Deputy Chief, SAD/SI, 
				"Possible Soviet Flying Saucers, Check On;" Lexow, memorandum, 
				"Possible Soviet Flying Saucers, Follow Up On," 17 December 
				1954; Lexow, memorandum, "Possible Soviet Flying Saucers," 1 
				December 1954; and A. H. Sullivan, Jr., memorandum, "Possible 
				Soviet Flying Saucers," 24 November 1954.
 
 (44) See Gregory W. Pedlow and Donald E. Welzenbach, The Central 
				Intelligence Agency and Overhead Reconnaissance: The U-2 and 
				OXCART Programs, 1954-1974 (Washington, DC: CIA History Staff, 
				1992), pp. 72-73.
 
 (45) See Pedlow and Welzenbach, Overhead Reconnaissance, pp. 
				72-73. This also was confirmed in a telephone interview between 
				the author and John Parongosky, 26 July 1994. Parongosky oversaw 
				the day-to-day affairs of the OXCART program.
 
 (46) See Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, p. 135.
 
 (47) See Peebles, Watch the Skies, pp. 128-146; Ruppelt, The 
				Report on Unidentified Flying Objects (New York: Doubleday, 
				1956); Keyhoe, The Flying Saucer Conspiracy (New York: Holt, 
				1955); and Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, pp. 347-49.
 
 (48) See Strong, letter to Lloyd W. Berkner; Strong, letter to 
				Thorton Page; Strong, letter to Robertson; Strong, letter to 
				Samuel Goudsmit; Strong, letter to Luis Alvarez, 20 December 
				1957; and Strong, memorandum for Major James F. Byrne, Assistant 
				Chief of Staff, Intelligence Department of the Air Force, 
				"Declassification of the `Report of the Scientific Panel on 
				Unidentified Flying Objects,'" 20 December 1957. See also 
				Berkner, letter to Strong, 20 November 1957 and Page, letter to 
				Strong, 4 December 1957. The panel members were also reluctant 
				to have their association with the Agency released.
 
 (49) See Wilton E. Lexow, memorandum for the record, "Comments 
				on Letters Dealing with Unidentified Flying Objects," 4 April 
				1958; J. S. Earman, letter to Major Lawrence J. Tacker, Office 
				of the Secretary of the Air Force, Information Service, 4 April 
				1958; Davidson, letter to Berkner, 8 April 1958; Berkner, letter 
				to Davidson, 18 April 1958; Berkner, letter to Strong, 21 April 
				1958; Davidson, letter to Tacker, 27 April 1958; Davidson, 
				letter to Allen Dulles, 27 April 1958; Ruppelt, letter to 
				Davidson, 7 May 1958; Strong, letter to Berkner, 8 May 1958; 
				Davidson, letter to Berkner, 8 May 1958; Davidson, letter to 
				Earman, 16 May 1958; Davidson, letter to Goudsmit, 18 May 1958; 
				Davidson, letter to Page, 18 May 1958; and Tacker, letter to 
				Davidson, 20 May 1958.
 
 (50) See Lexow, memorandum for Chapin, 28 July 1958.
 
 (51) See Good, Above Top Secret, pp. 346-47; Lexow, memorandum 
				for the record, "Meeting with the Air Force Personnel Concerning 
				Scientific Advisory Panel Report on Unidentified Flying Objects, 
				dated 17 January 1953 (S)," 16 May 1958. See also La Rae L. 
				Teel, Deputy Division Chief, ASD, memorandum for the record, 
				"Meeting with Mr. Chapin on Replying to Leon Davidson's UFO 
				Letter and Subsequent Telephone Conversation with Major Thacker, 
				[sic]" 22 May 1958.
 
 (52) See Edwin M. Ashcraft, Chief, Contact Division 
				(Scientific), memorandum to Chief, Chicago Office, "Radio Code 
				Recording," 4 March 1955 and Ashcraft, memorandum to Chief, 
				Support Branch, OSI, 17 March 1955.
 
 (53) The Contact Division was created to collect foreign 
				intelligence information from sources within the United States. 
				See the Directorate of Intelligence Historical Series, The 
				Origin and Development of Contact Division, 11 July 19461 July 
				1965 (Washington, DC; CIA Historical Staff, June 1969).
 
 (54) See George O. Forrest, Chief, Chicago Office, memorandum to 
				Chief, Contact Division for Science, 11 March 1955.
 
 (55) See Support Division (Connell), memorandum to Dewelt E. 
				Walker, 25 April 1957.
 
 (56) See J. Arnold Shaw, Assistant to the Director, letter to 
				Davidson, 10 May 1957.
 
 (57) See Support (Connell) memorandum to Lt. Col. V. Skakich, 27 
				August 1957 and Lamountain, memorandum to Support (Connell), 20 
				December 1957.
 
 (58) See Lamountain, cable to Support (Connell), 31 July 1958.
 
 (59) See Support (Connell) cable to Skakich, 3 October 1957 and 
				Skakich, cable to Connell, 9 October 1957.
 
 (60) See Skakich, cable to Connell, 9 October 1957.
 
 (61) See R. P. B. Lohmann, memorandum for Chief, Contact 
				Division, DO, 9 January 1958.
 
 (62) See Support, cable to Skakich, 20 February 1958 and Connell 
				(Support) cable to Lamountain, 19 December 1957.
 
 (63) See Edwin M. Ashcraft, Chief, Contact Division, Office of 
				Operations, memorandum for Austin Bricker, Jr., Assistant to the 
				Director, "Inquiry by Major Donald E. Keyhoe on John Hazen's 
				Association with the Agency," 22 January 1959.
 
 (64) See John T. Hazen, memorandum to Chief, Contact Division, 
				12 December 1957. See also Ashcraft, memorandum to Cleveland 
				Resident Agent, "Ralph E. Mayher," 20 December 1957. According 
				to this memorandum, the photographs were viewed at "a high level 
				and returned to us without comment." The Air Force held the 
				original negatives. The CIA records were probably destroyed.
 
 (65) The issue would resurface in the 1970s with the GSW FOIA 
				court case.
 
 (66) See Robert Amory, Jr., DDI, memorandum for Assistant 
				Director/Scientific Intelligence, "Flying Saucers," 26 March 
				1956. See also Wallace R. Lamphire, Office of the Director, 
				Planning and Coordination Staff, memorandum for Richard M. 
				Bissell, Jr., "Unidentified Flying Saucers (UFO)," 11 June 1957; 
				Philip Strong, memorandum for the Director, NPIC, "Reported 
				Photography of Unidentified Flying Objects," 27 October 1958; 
				Scoville, memorandum to Lawrence Houston, Legislative Counsel, 
				"Reply to Honorable Joseph E. Garth," 12 July 1961; and Houston, 
				letter to Garth, 13 July 1961.
 
 (67) See, for example, Davidson, letter to Congressman Joseph 
				Garth, 26 June 1961 and Carl Vinson, Chairman, House Committee 
				on Armed Services, letter to Rep. Robert A. Everett, 2 September 
				1964.
 
 (68) See Maxwell W. Hunter, staff member, National Aeronautics 
				and Space Council, Executive Office of the President, memorandum 
				for Robert F. Parkard, Office of International Scientific 
				Affairs, Department of State, "Thoughts on the Space Alien Race 
				Question," 18 July 1963, File SP 16, Records of the Department 
				of State, Record Group 59, National Archives. See also F. J. 
				Sheridan, Chief, Washington Office, memorandum to Chief, Contact 
				Division, "National Investigation Committee on Aerial Phenomena 
				(NICAP)," 25 January 1965.
 
 (69) Chamberlain, memorandum for DCI, "Evaluation of UFOs," 26 
				January 1965.
 
 (70) See Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, p. 199 and US Air Force, 
				Scientific Advisory Board, Ad Hoc Committee (O'Brien Committee) 
				to Review Project BLUE BOOK, Special Report (Washington, DC: 
				1966). See also The New York Times, 14 August 1966, p. 70.
 
 (71) See "Congress Reassured on Space Visits," The New York 
				Times, 6 April 1966.
 
 (72) Weber, letter to Col. Gerald E. Jorgensen, Chief, Community 
				Relations Division, Office of Information, US Air Force, 15 
				August 1966. The Durant report was a detailed summary of the 
				Robertson panel proceedings.
 
 (73) See John Lear, "The Disputed CIA Document on UFOs," 
				Saturday Review (September 3, 1966), p. 45. The Lear article was 
				otherwise unsympathetic to UFO sightings and the possibility 
				that extraterritorials were involved. The Air Force had been 
				eager to provide Lear with the full report. See Walter L. 
				Mackey, Executive Officer, memorandum for DCI, "Air Force 
				Request to Declassify CIA Material on Unidentified Flying 
				Objects (UFO)," 1 September 1966.
 
 (74) See Klass, UFOs, p. 40, Jacobs, The UFO Controversy, p. 214 
				and Everet Clark, "Physicist Scores `Saucer Status,'" The New 
				York Times, 21 October 1966. See also James E. McDonald, 
				"Statement on Unidentified Flying Objects," submitted to the 
				House Committee on Science and Astronautics, 29 July 1968.
 
 (75) Condon is quoted in Walter Sullivan, "3 Aides Selected in 
				Saucer Inquiry," The New York Times, 8 October 1966. See also 
				"An Outspoken Scientist, Edward Uhler Condon," The New York 
				Times, 8 October 1966. Condon, an outgoing, gruff scientist, had 
				earlier become embroiled in a controversy with the House 
				Unamerican Activities Committee that claimed Condon was "one of 
				the weakest links in our atomic security." See also Peebles, 
				Watch the Skies, pp. 169-195.
 
 (76) See Lundahl, memorandum for DDI, 7 February 1967.
 
 (77) See memorandum for the record, "Visit of Dr. Condon to NPIC, 
				20 February 1967," 23 February 1967. See also the analysis of 
				the photographs in memorandum for Lundahl, "Photo Analysis of 
				UFO Photography," 17 February 1967.
 
 (78) See memorandum for the record, "UFO Briefing for Dr. Edward 
				Condon, 5 May 1967," 8 May 1967 and attached "Guidelines to UFO 
				Photographers and UFO Photographic Information Sheet." See also 
				Condon Committee, Press Release, 1 May 1967 and Klass, UFOs, p. 
				41. The Zaneville photographs turned out to be a hoax.
 
 (79) See Edward U. Condon, Scientific Study of Unidentified 
				Flying Objects (New York: Bantam Books, 1969) and Klass, UFOs, 
				p. 41. The report contained the Durant report with only minor 
				deletions.
 
 (80) See Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense, News Release, 
				"Air Force to Terminate Project BLUEBOOK," 17 December 1969. The 
				Air Force retired BLUEBOOK records to the USAF Archives at 
				Maxwell Air Force Base in Alabama. In 1976 the Air Force turned 
				over all BLUEBOOK files to the National Archives and Records 
				Administration, which made them available to the public without 
				major restrictions. Some names have been withheld from the 
				documents. See Klass, UFOs, p. 6.
 
 (81) GSW was a small group of UFO buffs based in Phoenix, 
				Arizona, and headed by William H. Spaulding.
 
 (82) See Klass, UFOs, p. 8.
 
 (83) See Wilson, letter to Spaulding, 26 March 1976 and GSW v. 
				CIA Civil Action Case 78-859.
 
 (84) GSW v. CIA Civil Action Case 78-859, p. 2.
 
 (85) Author interview with Launie Ziebell, 23 June 1994 and 
				author interview with OSI analyst, 21 July 1994. See also 
				affidavits of George Owens, CIA Information and Privacy Act 
				Coordinator; Karl H. Weber, OSI; Sidney D. Stembridge, Office of 
				Security; and Rutledge P. Hazzard, DS&T; GSW v. CIA Civil Action 
				Case 78-859 and Sayre Stevens, Deputy Director for National 
				Foreign Assessment, memorandum for Thomas H. White, Assistant 
				for Information, Information Review Committee, "FOIA Litigation 
				Ground Saucer Watch," no date.
 
 (86) See "CIA Papers Detail UFO Surveillance," The New York 
				Times, 13 January 1979; Patrick Huyghe, "UFO Files: The Untold 
				Story," The New York Times Magazine, 14 October 1979, p. 106; 
				and Jerome Clark, "UFO Update," UFO Report, August 1979.
 
 (87) Jerome Clark, "Latest UFO News Briefs From Around the 
				World," UFO Update, August 1979 and GSW v. CIA Civil Action No. 
				78-859.
 
 (88) See Wortman, memorandum for DCI Turner, "Your Question, 
				`Are we in UFOs?' Annotated to The New York Times News Release 
				Article," 18 January 1979.
 
 (89) See GSW v. CIA Civil Action 78-859. See also Klass, UFOs, 
				pp. 10-12.
 
 (90) See John Brennan, memorandum for Richard Warshaw, Executive 
				Assistant, DCI, "Requested Information on UFOs," 30 September 
				1993; Author interviews with OSWR analyst, 14 June 1994 and OSI 
				analyst, 21 July 1994. This author found almost no documentation 
				on Agency involvement with UFOs in the 1980s.
 
 There is a DIA Psychic Center and the NSA studies 
				parapsychology, that branch of psychology that deals with the 
				investigation of such psychic phenomena as clairvoyance, 
				extrasensory perception, and telepathy. The CIA reportedly is 
				also a member of an Incident Response Team to investigate UFO 
				landings, if one should occur. This team has never met. The lack 
				of solid CIA documentation on Agency UFO-related activities in 
				the 1980s leaves the entire issue somewhat murky for this 
				period.
 
 Much of the UFO literature presently focuses on contactees and 
				abductees. See John E. Mack, Abduction, Human Encounters with 
				Aliens (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1994) and Howard 
				Blum, Out There (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1990).
 
 (91) See Charles Berlitz and William L. Moore, The Roswell 
				Incident (New York: Berkeley Books, 1988); Moore, "The Roswell 
				Incident: New Evidence in the Search for a Crashed UFO," 
				(Burbank, California: Fair Witness Project, 1982), Publication 
				Number 1201; and Klass, UFOs, pp. 280-281. In 1994 Congressman 
				Steven H. Schiff (R-NM) called for an official study of the 
				Roswell incident. The GAO is conducting a separate investigation 
				of the incident. The CIA is not involved in the investigation. 
				See Klass, UFOs, pp. 279-281; John H. Wright, Information and 
				Privacy Coordinator, letter to Derek Skreen, 20 September 1993; 
				and OSWR analyst interview. See also the made-for-TV film, 
				Roswell, which appeared on cable TV on 31 July 1994 and Peebles, 
				Watch the Skies, pp. 245-251.
 
 (92) See John Diamond, "Air Force Probes 1947 UFO Claim Findings 
				Are Down to Earth," 9 September 1994, Associated Press release; 
				William J. Broad, "Wreckage of a `Spaceship': Of This Earth (and 
				U.S.)," The New York Times, 18 September 1994, p. 1; and USAF 
				Col. Richard L. Weaver and 1st Lt. James McAndrew, The Roswell 
				Report, Fact Versus Fiction in New Mexico Desert (Washington, 
				DC: GPO, 1995).
 
 (93) See Good, Above Top Secret; Moore and S. T. Friedman, 
				"Philip Klass and MJ-12: What are the Facts," (Burbank 
				California: Fair-Witness Project, 1988), Publication Number 
				1290; Klass, "New Evidence of MJ-12 Hoax," Skeptical Inquirer, 
				vol. 14 (Winter 1990); and Moore and Jaime H. Shandera, The 
				MJ-12 Documents: An Analytical Report (Burbank, California: 
				Fair-Witness Project, 1990), Publication Number 1500. Walter 
				Bedell Smith supposedly replaced Forrestal on 1 August 1950 
				following Forrestal's death. All members listed were deceased 
				when the MJ-12 "documents" surfaced in 1984. See Peebles, Watch 
				the Skies, pp. 258-268.
 
 Dr. Larry Bland, editor of The George C. Marshall Papers, 
				discovered that one of the so-called Majestic-12 documents was a 
				complete fraud. It contained the exact same language as a letter 
				from Marshall to Presidential candidate Thomas Dewey regarding 
				the "Magic" intercepts in 1944. The dates and names had been 
				altered and "Magic" changed to "Majic." Moreover, it was a 
				photocopy, not an original. No original MJ-12 documents have 
				ever surfaced. Telephone conversation between the author and 
				Bland, 29 August 1994.
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