CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516041 CLASSIFIED

Air Force UFO Information Protocol: Internal Coordination Memo

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516041 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1958-04-01
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
N/A - Administrative document
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
unknown
Source Origin database or archive this case was sourced from
cia_foia
Country Country where the incident took place
US
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
85%
This declassified CIA memorandum dated April 1, 1958, reveals internal coordination procedures between the CIA and U.S. Air Force regarding UFO information requests. The document discusses communications with Major Lawrence Tacker of the Office of the Secretary of Air Force Information Services regarding the release of UFO-related information to inquirers. The memo indicates that Major Tacker (likely affiliated with Project Blue Book operations) had no objection to the CIA forwarding letters of inquiry along with copies of an unclassified panel report, but insisted that such inquiries be directed to the Air Force as the proper agency for UFO information. The document reveals institutional protocols for handling public UFO inquiries during the late 1950s, a period when both agencies were actively managing information related to aerial phenomena. The memo writer notes agreement with Major Tacker's position that the Air Force office is 'the proper place to go for such information' and proposes this as standard procedure for future UFO-related inquiries. References to Mr. Davidson and Major Byrnes suggest multiple levels of coordination on these matters. This administrative record provides insight into the bureaucratic framework surrounding UFO investigations during the Cold War era, demonstrating active interagency coordination and information control protocols. The mention of an 'unclassified panel report' likely refers to the 1953 Robertson Panel findings, which remained a key document in official UFO policy throughout the 1950s.
02 Timeline of Events
1958-04-01
Internal CIA Memorandum Drafted
CIA officer drafts memo to Assistant Director/SI regarding coordination with Air Force on UFO inquiry procedures, referencing earlier correspondence dated April 1, 1958
1958-04-01
Contact with Major Tacker Established
CIA contacts Major Lawrence Tacker regarding release of monthly reports to Mr. Davidson and Major Byrnes; referred to Office of Secretary of Air Force Information Services
1958-04-01
Protocol Agreement Reached
Major Tacker agrees to CIA forwarding inquiry letters with unclassified panel report copies, but insists Air Force must be positioned as primary source for UFO information
1958-04-01
Standard Procedure Established
Memo writer proposes established protocol as precedent for all future inquiries regarding UFO matters, formalizing interagency coordination
03 Key Witnesses
Major Lawrence Tacker
Office of the Secretary of Air Force Information Services
high
Air Force spokesperson and information officer during Project Blue Book era, responsible for managing public inquiries regarding UFO phenomena
"Air Force has no objection to forwarding letters with copies of unclassified panel report, but insisted that the Air Force office is the proper place to go for such information"
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516041
CIA FOIA 2 pages 441.7 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The significance of this document lies not in describing a specific UFO sighting, but in revealing the administrative machinery and information control protocols surrounding UFO phenomena during a critical period of U.S. government investigation. The 1958 date places this squarely within Project Blue Book's active investigation period (1952-1969), with Major Lawrence Tacker being a known Air Force spokesperson on UFO matters during this era. The document's existence in CIA files, despite Air Force primacy on UFO matters, indicates CIA maintained ongoing interest and coordination role in UFO information management. The insistence that the Air Force be allowed to answer inquiries directly, rather than CIA, suggests carefully maintained boundaries between agencies regarding public-facing UFO information. This coordination protocol implies both agencies sought to present a unified front while maintaining institutional separation. The reference to an 'unclassified panel report' being distributed to inquirers almost certainly refers to sanitized versions of the Robertson Panel conclusions, which recommended debunking and reduced public interest in UFOs. The document's declassification through FOIA demonstrates these administrative protocols were themselves considered sensitive enough to warrant classification.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Evidence of Hidden CIA UFO Role
The document's existence in CIA files, despite Air Force public primacy, suggests CIA maintained deeper involvement in UFO matters than officially acknowledged. The careful coordination and the classification of even administrative protocols hint at more significant CIA interest in the phenomenon than admitted. The reference to 'monthly reports' implies ongoing intelligence gathering beyond public Project Blue Book activities.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Routine Administrative Coordination
The document may simply reflect routine bureaucratic coordination between agencies handling public inquiries on a topic of public interest. The careful protocol establishment could indicate nothing more than normal government practice of directing inquiries to appropriate departments. The classification of this mundane administrative memo may reflect general Cold War era over-classification practices rather than any particular sensitivity about UFO content.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document represents credible evidence of formal interagency protocols for managing UFO information during the Cold War. While not describing an actual sighting or incident, it provides authenticated documentation of how two major intelligence and defense agencies coordinated their public stance on UFO phenomena. The document confirms that UFO inquiries were significant enough in 1958 to warrant established procedural coordination at the major/director level between CIA and Air Force. The careful delineation of responsibilities and the emphasis on directing inquiries to Air Force channels suggests a coordinated information management strategy. This administrative record is significant for UFO research as it demonstrates institutional acknowledgment and active management of the UFO topic at high levels, contradicting later claims of minimal official interest in the phenomenon.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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