CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516044 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH
CIA-Air Force Meeting on Robertson Panel Report Declassification
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516044 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1953-01-17
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
Not applicable - administrative meeting
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 document reveals a classified interagency meeting held in 1953 between CIA and Air Force personnel to discuss the handling of the Robertson Panel Report on Unidentified Flying Objects. The meeting was convened specifically to address persistent requests from Mr. Leon Davidson, who had been demanding the full release of the report. The full report was classified as 'Secret,' though a declassified version had been prepared and provided to Davidson. The meeting included senior personnel from multiple military and intelligence branches, including Philip G. Strong from IAD/OSI CIA, Major Joseph E. Holland from Staff Air-3, Major James F. Byrne from AFCIN-4E4, Major Lawrence J. Tacker from SAFIS, A. Francis Arcier from ATIC, and George C. Carey, Associate Counsel for CIA, along with W.E. Lexow from OSI CIA.
The primary focus of the meeting was determining what information could be safely released and how to manage ongoing public inquiries about UFO investigations. Paragraph 3 of the original Robertson Panel report apparently contained examples of actions that could be taken by hostile entities with 'possibly dangerous consequences to national security,' which was cited as the principal reason the entire report could not be declassified. Additionally, several panel members had specifically requested that while they had no objection to their names being used in connection with the report, they did not want their names connected to the Central Intelligence Agency. The document notes that so far, all connections between panel members and CIA had been made by 'outside personnel.'
The meeting concluded with a strategic approach to handling future inquiries. Major Tacker agreed to respond to Davidson's letters on behalf of both the Air Force and CIA, maintaining the appearance that responses were coming from the Air Force alone. Philip Strong suggested that the best way to handle future inquiries would be to issue a press release covering the subject of unidentified flying objects, utilizing the panel report as much as possible. Major Holland agreed to this approach, indicating coordinated information management between the Air Force and CIA on the UFO topic.
02 Timeline of Events
1953-01-17
Robertson Panel Report Completed
The Scientific Advisory Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects completed their classified report, marked 'Secret.' The report apparently contained material in paragraph 3 describing actions that could be taken by hostile entities with dangerous consequences to national security.
1953 (before meeting)
Declassified Version Prepared
A declassified version of the Robertson Panel report was prepared and sent to Leon Davidson in response to his requests for information. The full classified version remained withheld.
1953 (before meeting)
Davidson's Persistent Inquiries
Leon Davidson repeatedly wrote letters demanding the full release of the Robertson Panel report. He sent copies to both Major Tacker at the Air Force and directly to the Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), escalating pressure on both agencies.
1953 (meeting date unclear)
Interagency Coordination Meeting Convened
CIA and Air Force personnel met to discuss how to handle ongoing inquiries about the Robertson Panel report, specifically addressing Leon Davidson's requests. Attendees included senior officers from CIA OSI, Air Force Intelligence (AFCIN), Air Force Staff, SAFIS, ATIC, and CIA legal counsel.
During meeting
National Security Concerns Discussed
Paragraph 3 of the report was identified as containing examples of hostile actions with 'possibly dangerous consequences to national security,' establishing this as the principal reason the entire report could not be declassified.
During meeting
Panel Members' CIA Association Concerns Revealed
It was revealed that several Robertson Panel members specifically requested their names not be connected to the Central Intelligence Agency, though they had no objection to being named in connection with the report itself. So far, all connections had been made by outside personnel.
Meeting conclusion
Response Strategy Agreed
Major Tacker agreed to respond to Davidson's letters 'for the record' as if responding solely for the Air Force, concealing CIA involvement. Philip Strong proposed issuing a press release on UFOs utilizing the panel report as much as possible, to which Major Holland agreed.
03 Key Witnesses
Philip G. Strong
CIA IAD/OSI Officer
high
CIA Intelligence officer from the Office of Scientific Intelligence, present at the interagency coordination meeting
"Perhaps the best way to handle any future inquiries along these lines was to put out a press release covering the subject of unidentified flying objects, utilizing the panel report as much as possible."
Major Lawrence J. Tacker
Air Force SAFIS Officer
high
Air Force officer who agreed to serve as the public liaison for responses to UFO inquiries on behalf of both Air Force and CIA
"Major Tacker would answer for the record the same as he was answering for the Air Force."
Leon Davidson
Civilian UFO researcher and chemical engineer
high
Persistent researcher who demanded full release of the Robertson Panel report, prompting this high-level interagency meeting. Sent copies of his letters to both Major Tacker and the DCI (Director of Central Intelligence).
"Mr. Davidson has been most insistent upon getting the entire report released."
Major Joseph E. Holland
Air Force Staff Air-3 Officer
high
Air Force staff officer who participated in the coordination meeting and agreed to the press release strategy
"Major Holland agreed [to the press release approach]."
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516044
CIA FOIA 3 pages 460.5 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is historically significant as it provides rare insight into the classified deliberations between CIA and Air Force regarding UFO information management in the early 1950s. The Robertson Panel, officially known as the Scientific Advisory Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects, was convened in January 1953 and is one of the most important early governmental studies of UFOs. This memorandum reveals the agencies' concern about specific security implications detailed in the classified report, suggesting genuine national security considerations beyond mere public relations management.
The document's credibility is extremely high—it's an authentic CIA internal memorandum from the FOIA Reading Room, bearing official markings and involving named senior military and intelligence officials. The meeting's convening specifically to address Leon Davidson's inquiries is particularly notable; Davidson was a real individual, a chemical engineer and UFO researcher who became famous for his persistent FOIA-like requests in the 1950s, well before FOIA existed. His tenacity apparently warranted high-level interagency coordination. The explicit concern about concealing CIA involvement while having the Air Force serve as the public face reveals deliberate compartmentalization of intelligence activities from public view. The mention that panel members didn't want their names associated with CIA suggests concern about professional reputation and the controversial nature of CIA involvement in UFO matters.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Evidence of Substantive UFO Concerns
UFO researchers interpret this document as evidence that the Robertson Panel discovered something significant enough to warrant ongoing high-level secrecy and interagency coordination. The 'dangerous consequences' mentioned in paragraph 3 might refer to actual technological capabilities observed in UFO encounters, reverse-engineering concerns, or acknowledgment of non-human intelligence that would cause societal disruption. The elaborate coordination to conceal CIA involvement suggests the agency had operational or intelligence interests in UFOs beyond mere scientific curiosity. Leon Davidson's persistent inquiries may have been getting too close to classified truths.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Bureaucratic Overclassification and Image Management
Skeptics might argue that the 'national security' justification was primarily bureaucratic overclassification and institutional image protection rather than genuine security concerns. The agencies may have been more concerned about public embarrassment, maintaining control of the UFO narrative, or concealing the extent of intelligence agency interest in UFOs. The concern about panel members not wanting CIA association suggests reputation management rather than security. The coordinated deception of making Air Force appear as the sole responder indicates information control operations.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case represents authenticated evidence of classified CIA-Air Force coordination on UFO information management and reveals institutional concerns about national security implications of UFO data. The document is significant not as evidence of any particular UFO sighting, but as proof of high-level governmental concern about UFO phenomena and deliberate policies to control information release to the public. The 'dangerous consequences to national security' mentioned in paragraph 3 of the classified Robertson Report remains intriguing—whether this referred to public panic, enemy exploitation of UFO reports for psychological warfare, or actual technological concerns cannot be determined from this document alone. The coordinated response strategy and deliberate concealment of CIA involvement demonstrates that UFO phenomena were taken seriously enough at the highest levels to warrant careful information operations. This document's authenticity is unquestionable, and it provides valuable historical context for understanding the government's posture on UFOs during the Cold War era. Confidence level: very high regarding document authenticity and institutional coordination; the actual content and conclusions of the classified Robertson Panel report would require additional documents for full assessment.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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