CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516064 CLASSIFIED
CIA-Air Force UFO Report Declassification Coordination (1966)
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516064 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1966-08-18
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington, D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
N/A - Administrative record
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 represents an internal CIA memorandum dated August 1966 that records coordination efforts between the Central Intelligence Agency and the United States Air Force regarding the declassification of a CIA UFO report. Mrs. Sara Hunt from the Air Force Office of Information contacted CIA personnel multiple times between August 16-18, 1966, seeking information about a declassification response and requesting the return of a CIA report that had been forwarded to the Air Force for declassification review.
The document reveals that the CIA had sanitized certain content before releasing the report, specifically removing references to 'CIA' itself and the names of CIA employees. The memo notes that 'some additional sanitizing probably was done in the processing of the reply,' suggesting a careful internal review process. The Air Force's persistent follow-up calls indicate bureaucratic coordination on sensitive UFO-related intelligence materials during the mid-1960s, a period when Project Blue Book was still actively investigating UFO reports.
This administrative record provides insight into the inter-agency process for handling UFO documentation during the Cold War era. The fact that CIA reports on UFOs required declassification review and sanitization before release to even other military branches suggests the sensitivity with which such materials were treated. The document was distributed to multiple offices within CIA's Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI), indicating internal coordination across the Division of Scientific and Defense divisions.
02 Timeline of Events
1966-07-10
Initial Reference Communication
Original communication referenced (Ch/DGD memo dated 10 July 1966) that initiated the declassification process
1966-07-11
Follow-up Memo for Record
Second reference document (Memo for Record dated 11 July 1966) documenting the ongoing declassification request
1966-08-16 (First Call)
Air Force Inquires About Response
Mrs. Hunt from Air Force Office of Information calls CIA to confirm if declassification response had been sent; requests contact information for responsible office
1966-08-16 (Second Call)
Air Force Requests Details on Deletions
Mrs. Hunt calls again seeking information about extent of redactions; CIA confirms removal of CIA references and employee names, plus additional sanitization
1966-08-18
Air Force Confirms Receipt and Requests Return
Mrs. Hunt calls to confirm Air Force received the sanitized response and requests return of their copy of the original CIA report
1966-08-23
Internal CIA Distribution
Memo for Record distributed to multiple CIA/OSI offices documenting the complete coordination process
03 Key Witnesses
Mrs. Sara Hunt
Air Force Office of Information liaison
high
Official representative from the U.S. Air Force Office of Information responsible for coordinating declassification requests with CIA regarding UFO reports in 1966
"She requested the phone number of the office responsible for issuing the reply"
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516064
CIA FOIA 2 pages 396.8 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This memorandum is significant not for describing a specific UFO incident, but for documenting the institutional handling of UFO information within the U.S. intelligence community. The date of August 1966 places this squarely within the Project Blue Book era (1952-1969) and shortly before the Condon Committee would begin its influential study in 1966-1968. The careful sanitization process—removing CIA attribution and employee names—suggests operational security concerns that went beyond simple privacy protection.
The multiple offices receiving distribution (AC/D/DOD/OSI, DSD/OSI, EO/OSI) indicate this was considered important enough for coordination across CIA's scientific intelligence apparatus. The fact that the Air Force Office of Information was actively pursuing this material suggests they may have been preparing public-facing documentation or responses to FOIA-type requests even before the formal Freedom of Information Act was signed into law on July 4, 1966. The timing is notable—this August 1966 memo follows just weeks after FOIA's enactment, potentially representing early implementation of new disclosure procedures.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Evidence of Classified UFO Intelligence Program
The careful coordination and sanitization process suggests the CIA was maintaining substantial classified intelligence on UFO phenomena that was sensitive enough to require removal of CIA attribution before sharing with military partners. The timing—just after FOIA's passage—and the multiple office coordination indicate this was part of a larger classified program. The underlying report's contents remain unknown, potentially containing significant intelligence assessments of UFO activity.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Administrative Artifact of Minimal Substance
This memo likely pertains to a mundane intelligence report that happened to mention UFO-related matters peripherally, perhaps Soviet or Chinese aerospace developments that were misidentified as UFOs. The sanitization was standard practice for any intelligence product, and the Air Force interest may have been driven by public relations needs during the Blue Book era rather than the substantive content of the report. The document reveals bureaucratic process, not evidence of extraordinary phenomena.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document does not describe a UFO sighting but rather reveals the bureaucratic mechanics of how UFO intelligence was managed between agencies during the 1960s. Its significance lies in what it implies: the CIA maintained classified reports on UFO phenomena that required careful sanitization before sharing even with military partners. The redaction of CIA attribution and personnel names suggests concern about revealing the extent of CIA interest in UFO matters. This is a valuable piece of administrative history showing that UFO-related intelligence was taken seriously enough to warrant formal inter-agency coordination procedures and careful classification review. The underlying CIA report referenced in this memo remains of interest—what did it contain that required such careful handling?
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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