CORROBORATED
CF-CIA-C05516043 CORROBORATED

CIA-Air Force UFO Panel Report Coordination (1950)

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516043 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1950-04-04
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
N/A - Administrative matter
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 SECRET-classified CIA memorandum from April 1950 documents internal coordination between the CIA and U.S. Air Force regarding public inquiries about a UFO 'panel report.' The memo reveals that Major Byrne's office (AFOAI - Air Force Office of Air Intelligence) was contacted by the CIA's Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI) regarding the release of a panel report to Mr. Davidson and Major Keyhoe. Major Tacker from the Secretary of the Air Force Information Service (SAFIS) insisted that all UFO inquiries should be directed through his office rather than answered directly by the CIA. The document shows the Air Force actively managing the flow of UFO information to the public and establishing bureaucratic protocols for handling inquiries. Major Tacker specifically requested that the CIA forward letters requesting UFO information to him along with copies of unclassified reports, and that his office would answer the letters directly. Don Frank Chap in the Director's office was advised of the Air Force's preference and 'insistence' on handling these matters. The memo notably mentions Major Keyhoe, likely referring to retired Marine Corps aviator Donald Keyhoe, who became one of the most prominent UFO researchers and advocates of the era. The final paragraph establishes this as precedent for future procedures: 'I think we can use this procedure as a precedent henceforth in all inquiries regarding UFO's.' This document provides important insight into how the U.S. intelligence community and military coordinated their public messaging on UFOs during the early Cold War period, with the Air Force asserting control over information disclosure.
02 Timeline of Events
1950-04-04
Reference Memo on Panel Report
Initial memo from Chief, OSI/TID to Assistant Director regarding UFO panel report, prompting inquiry about release to Davidson and Major Keyhoe
1950-04-04 (later)
AFOAI Contacted by CIA
Major Byrne's office (Air Force Office of Air Intelligence) contacted regarding release of panel report. CIA referred to Major Tacker at SAFIS
1950-04-04 (later)
Air Force Asserts Control
Major Tacker indicates Air Force preference to answer letters directly rather than CIA doing so. States SAFIS is 'proper place' for such information requests
1950-04-04 (later)
Director's Office Notified
Don Frank Chap in Director's office advised that Air Force is 'most insistent' on handling the letters. Will forward letters to Major Tacker
1950-04-04 (end of day)
Precedent Established
Memo author proposes using this procedure as precedent for all future UFO inquiries, formalizing Air Force control over UFO information
03 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516043
CIA FOIA 2 pages 402.3 KB EXTRACTED
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant not for describing a UFO sighting, but for revealing the institutional machinery behind UFO information management in 1950. The classification level (SECRET) for what appears to be administrative correspondence suggests sensitivity around UFO disclosure procedures. The mention of Major Donald Keyhoe is particularly noteworthy - by 1950, he was already investigating UFOs and would soon publish 'The Flying Saucers Are Real,' becoming a major voice in ufology. The Air Force's insistence on centralizing all UFO inquiries through SAFIS indicates a deliberate public information strategy. The document references an unspecified 'panel report' that was apparently being requested by outside parties. This predates the famous 1953 Robertson Panel by three years, suggesting earlier internal UFO assessment efforts. The bureaucratic tension evident in the memo - with the Air Force 'most insistent' on controlling the narrative - reveals institutional anxiety about UFO information reaching the public through unofficial channels. The establishment of this as 'precedent henceforth' indicates this was part of a broader policy formalization. The memo's author clearly worked in CIA's Scientific Intelligence Division, showing OSI's active involvement in UFO matters during this early period.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Concealment of Extraordinary Information
The classified coordination over what appears to be simple administrative matters suggests the 'panel report' contained sensitive information requiring careful management. The involvement of both CIA's Office of Scientific Intelligence and multiple Air Force offices for what should be routine inquiries indicates the UFO subject was considered genuinely significant at the highest levels. The formalization of information control procedures in 1950 may represent an early phase of a longer-term policy to manage public knowledge of an extraordinary reality.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Information Control and Secrecy
The SECRET classification and the Air Force's insistence on controlling all UFO communications suggests an active effort to manage and potentially suppress UFO information. The establishment of bureaucratic gatekeepers and the forwarding of requests away from CIA to Air Force channels could indicate a strategy to filter, delay, or sanitize information before public release. The fact that correspondence with Major Keyhoe - already known as a UFO advocate - triggered this coordination suggests concern about information reaching serious researchers.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This is an authentic administrative document revealing the bureaucratic coordination between CIA and Air Force on UFO information management in 1950. While not describing any specific sighting, it provides valuable historical evidence of how U.S. intelligence agencies formalized protocols for controlling UFO-related information disclosure during the early years of the modern UFO era. The document's significance lies in demonstrating institutional concern about UFO inquiries and the establishment of centralized Air Force control over public communications on the subject. The involvement of figures like Major Keyhoe and the SECRET classification level suggest this was considered a sensitive matter requiring careful coordination at the intelligence agency level.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
07 Community Discussion
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