CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516001 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH
CIA OSI Division UFO Responsibility Transfer Memo (1958)
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516001 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1958-02-19
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
CIA Headquarters, 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 February 19, 1958, documents the internal reassignment of UFO investigation responsibilities within the Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI). The memo explicitly references CIA's assumption of responsibility for 'Non-Conventional Types of Air Vehicles' and establishes procedures for handling incoming UFO reports. The document references Special Report #14, 'Analysis of Reports of Unidentified Aerial Objects (Project Blue Book)' by ATIC dated May 5, 1955, indicating CIA coordination with Air Force intelligence on UFO matters.
The memo establishes a four-tiered filtering system for UFO reports: reports potentially relevant to foreign weapons systems research would be maintained in files; those concerning fundamental science developments would be forwarded to the Fundamental Sciences Area; reports with no intelligence value would be destroyed. The document also mandates maintaining chronological files of all OSI correspondence related to the U.S. UFO program and preserving finished intelligence reports on UFOs.
Significantly, the memo states that existing 'raw intelligence' and 'obsolete finished reports' on UFOs currently filed in Electronic Division should be destroyed. This directive suggests a systematic culling of UFO documentation within the CIA, though the memo justifies this by claiming experience shows such reports 'cannot be analyzed in a manner useful to OSI in carrying out its mission.' The document provides rare insight into CIA's internal UFO program management during the Cold War era.
02 Timeline of Events
1955-05-05
Project Blue Book Special Report #14 Published
ATIC (Air Technical Intelligence Center) publishes 'Analysis of Reports of Unidentified Aerial Objects (Project Blue Book)', which is referenced in this CIA memo as source material
1958-01-09
OSI Assumes UFO Responsibility
CIA memo AD/SI 1-881 establishes OSI responsibility for 'Non-Conventional Types of Air Vehicles', referenced in this February memo
1958-02-19
Procedural Framework Established
This memo establishes detailed procedures for handling UFO reports within OSI, creating a four-tier filtering system based on intelligence value
1958-02-19
File Destruction Ordered
Memo recommends destruction of existing raw intelligence and obsolete finished reports on UFOs currently filed in Electronic Division
1958-02-19
Archive Protocol Implemented
Direction given to maintain chronological files of all OSI correspondence and finished intelligence reports on UFOs in ASD (Applied Sciences Division)
03 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516001
CIA FOIA 3 pages 431.1 KB EXTRACTED
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant for several reasons. First, it confirms CIA involvement in UFO investigations beyond previously acknowledged activities, with OSI taking formal responsibility for 'Non-Conventional Types of Air Vehicles' - a euphemism for UFOs. The reference to coordination with ATIC's Project Blue Book indicates intelligence community overlap despite public claims of Air Force exclusivity in UFO investigation. Second, the filtering criteria reveal CIA's intelligence priorities: foreign weapons systems and fundamental science developments, suggesting genuine concern about potential foreign technology rather than dismissing all reports as misidentifications. Third, the directive to destroy existing files is troubling from a historical perspective, though the memo claims these reports lack analytical value. The preservation of 'finished intelligence reports' while destroying 'raw intelligence' suggests only evaluated conclusions were retained, potentially losing valuable primary source data. The document's formal tone and specific procedural directives indicate this was a established program requiring administrative reorganization, not a casual or dismissive effort.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Evidence Suppression Program
The directive to destroy existing raw intelligence files while maintaining only filtered, finished reports could represent systematic suppression of UFO evidence. The timing (1958) coincides with increased public interest in UFOs and follows major sighting waves. By destroying primary source material and implementing a filtering system that discards reports not fitting narrow intelligence criteria, the CIA may have been eliminating evidence of genuinely anomalous phenomena that didn't fit the 'foreign weapons' narrative. The fact that Project Blue Book continued publicly while CIA conducted parallel classified analysis suggests a two-tier system.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Administrative Housekeeping
This memo may represent bureaucratic reorganization rather than evidence of significant UFO concern. The directive to destroy accumulated reports that 'cannot be analyzed in a manner useful to OSI' suggests most reports were low-quality, lacking actionable intelligence. The transfer of responsibility between divisions and establishment of filtering procedures could indicate the agency was streamlining an unwanted administrative burden inherited from earlier Cold War paranoia, rather than managing an active investigation of genuine unknowns.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case represents documented evidence of CIA's institutional involvement in UFO investigation during the 1950s, contradicting later public statements minimizing agency interest. The memo's significance lies not in documenting specific sightings, but in revealing the intelligence community's structured approach to the phenomenon. The directive to maintain files on reports potentially related to foreign weapons systems suggests genuine national security concern rather than mere public relations management. However, the simultaneous order to destroy accumulated raw reports raises questions about what information may have been lost. The document is authentic and provides critical insight into Cold War-era UFO program administration, though it offers no conclusions about the nature of the phenomena being investigated. This is a high-priority historical document that confirms long-suspected CIA involvement in UFO matters beyond what was publicly acknowledged during this period.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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