CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516049 CLASSIFIED

CIA Public Affairs Coordination on UFO Inquiries

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516049 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
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 reveals internal coordination procedures for handling public UFO inquiries during the early Cold War period. The document demonstrates institutional concern about maintaining consistent public messaging regarding UFO phenomena, particularly in the wake of increased public interest following the dissemination of portions of the 'Flying Saucer Report' dated January 1953. The memo establishes a clear chain of responsibility, directing all UFO-related public inquiries to Major Lawrence J. Tacker at SAFIS (Secretary of the Air Force, Office of Information Services) at the Pentagon, who held public relations responsibility for the Air Force on UFO matters. When problems or questions arose requiring coordination, the protocol called for referral to J.M. Gilson of AFCIN (Air Force Chief of Intelligence), also at the Pentagon. The document reflects the bureaucratic complexity of UFO information management across military and intelligence agencies. The memo writer expresses concern about keeping UFO public relations matters 'completely separate' from what are described as 'Mr. Fine's new films and publications,' suggesting parallel classified programs or information streams that required compartmentalization. This administrative record provides insight into how the U.S. government managed the intersection of public curiosity, military intelligence, and information control during the height of UFO reporting in the 1950s-60s. While the document itself does not describe a specific sighting incident, it represents important evidence of institutional UFO interest at the intelligence level. The reference to a 'Flying Saucer Report' from January 1953 likely refers to materials related to the Robertson Panel, a CIA-convened scientific panel that met in January 1953 to assess UFO reports. The memo's emphasis on centralized public affairs management suggests concern about maintaining narrative control over a topic generating significant public attention.
02 Timeline of Events
January 1953
Flying Saucer Report Released
A portion of the 'Flying Saucer Report' dated January 1953 is disseminated, likely referring to materials from the Robertson Panel convened by the CIA to assess UFO reports.
Post-January 1953
Increased Public Inquiries
CIA becomes 'flooded by inquiries concerning UFOs' as a result of public awareness of the Flying Saucer Report, prompting need for coordinated response protocol.
1953 (estimated)
Coordination Protocol Established
CIA establishes formal referral procedure directing all UFO public inquiries to Major Lawrence J. Tacker at SAFIS, Pentagon, with J.M. Gilson at AFCIN as secondary coordination point.
1953-1960s
Compartmentalization Maintained
Document author emphasizes keeping UFO public relations completely separate from classified programs (referenced as 'Mr. Fine's new films and publications'), suggesting parallel classified UFO-related work.
Declassified (date unknown)
Document Released via FOIA
CIA declassifies this administrative memo through Freedom of Information Act request, revealing internal coordination procedures decades after creation.
03 Key Witnesses
Major Lawrence J. Tacker
USAF Public Affairs Officer, SAFIS Pentagon
high
Official Air Force spokesperson for UFO matters in the 1950s-60s, later author of 'Flying Saucers and the U.S. Air Force' (1960) presenting the official skeptical position on UFO phenomena.
J.M. Gilson
Air Force Chief of Intelligence (AFCIN) Representative
high
Intelligence community liaison for coordinating UFO inquiry responses when matters required technical or intelligence community input.
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516049
CIA FOIA 2 pages 402.2 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant for what it reveals about governmental UFO information management rather than any specific incident. The partially redacted nature of the text, combined with references to coordinating responses and separating public inquiries from other classified work, suggests a multi-tiered approach to UFO information handling. The mention of Major Tacker is particularly notable—he later became known as a prominent Air Force spokesperson on Project Blue Book matters and authored 'Flying Saucers and the U.S. Air Force' in 1960, which presented the official skeptical position. The January 1953 'Flying Saucer Report' referenced almost certainly relates to the Robertson Panel (also known as the Scientific Advisory Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects), convened by the CIA from January 14-18, 1953. This panel recommended that UFO reports be 'debunked' to reduce public interest, which they viewed as a potential vulnerability during the Cold War. The timing of this memo, appearing to follow public dissemination of portions of that report, suggests the document dates to 1953 or shortly thereafter. The concern about separating public UFO inquiries from 'Mr. Fine's' work hints at compartmentalized programs, though without additional context, the nature of Fine's activities remains unclear. The document's classification and subsequent declassification through FOIA demonstrates that even routine administrative UFO coordination was deemed sensitive enough to warrant restricted access for decades.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Two-Track UFO Information System
The explicit separation between public relations responses and 'Mr. Fine's' classified work suggests the government maintained parallel UFO programs: one for public consumption and dismissal, another for serious intelligence analysis. The classification of even this administrative memo indicates the sensitivity of revealing governmental UFO interest.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Public Perception Control Following Robertson Panel
This document implements the Robertson Panel's recommendation to reduce public interest in UFOs through coordinated debunking. The centralization of responses through Major Tacker, who later became a prominent UFO skeptic, suggests an organized effort to shape public perception rather than genuine scientific investigation.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document represents authentic evidence of coordinated inter-agency UFO information management at the CIA and Air Force level during the 1950s. While it does not describe UFO encounters directly, it confirms institutional interest sufficient to warrant formal protocols, centralized public affairs management, and classified handling. The document's significance lies in demonstrating that UFO matters were treated seriously enough at the intelligence level to require standardized response procedures and information compartmentalization. The separation between public relations responses and other classified UFO-related work suggests a two-track system: one for managing public perception and another for actual intelligence analysis. This case file merits medium priority as an administrative artifact that illuminates the bureaucratic infrastructure surrounding UFO investigations during a critical period of Cold War history.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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