CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516063 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH
CIA UFO Report Declassification Request - Air Force Press Inquiry
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516063 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1966-08-10
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 CIA internal memorandum dated August 10, 1966, documents a phone inquiry from Miss Sara Hunt of the Air Force Office of Information regarding the status of CIA's response to a declassification request for UFO reports. The memo references an earlier correspondence from July 20, 1966, indicating an ongoing inter-agency process to declassify UFO-related intelligence materials. Miss Hunt's inquiry was prompted by journalist John Lear's recent article on UFOs published in Saturday Review magazine, with the Air Force expressing intent to share the newly declassified version with Lear as soon as it became available.
The document reveals the careful coordination between CIA and Air Force public affairs offices during the mid-1960s regarding UFO information disclosure. Walter Mackey instructed the respondent to inform Miss Hunt that declassified reports were 'being reviewed and would be forwarded soon,' though the memo notes her 'admirable restraint' when pressing for more specific details. The memorandum was distributed to ACMB/DSD/OSI and DSD/OSI divisions, indicating involvement of CIA's Directorate of Science and Intelligence's Office of Scientific Intelligence.
This administrative record provides insight into the bureaucratic handling of UFO information during a period of heightened public interest. The reference to John Lear—a prominent aviation journalist and son of Learjet founder Bill Lear—suggests this declassification effort was connected to mainstream media coverage of UFO phenomena. The careful language and inter-agency coordination evident in the memo reflects the sensitive nature of UFO-related information management during the Cold War era.
02 Timeline of Events
1966-07-20
Initial Declassification Request
Chief of DSD/OSI receives memorandum regarding Air Force request for declassification of CIA UFO reports
1966-08-XX
John Lear Article Published
Aviation journalist John Lear publishes article on UFOs in Saturday Review magazine, prompting Air Force interest in sharing declassified CIA materials
1966-08-10 AM
Air Force Follow-Up Inquiry
Miss Sara Hunt phones CIA to determine status of declassification request response, three weeks after initial memo
1966-08-10 PM
CIA Response and Memo Documentation
Following Walter Mackey's instructions, CIA officer informs Miss Hunt that declassified reports are 'being reviewed and would be forwarded soon.' Internal memo documents the exchange and Miss Hunt's request to share materials with John Lear
1966-08-10
Memo Distribution
Internal memorandum distributed to ACMB/DSD/OSI and DSD/OSI for awareness and action
03 Key Witnesses
Miss Sara Hunt
Air Force Office of Information representative
high
Official Air Force public affairs officer responsible for coordinating UFO information requests with CIA in 1966
"She pressed gently for a more specific response, which was not forthcoming."
John Lear
Aviation journalist, Saturday Review contributor
high
Prominent aviation journalist and son of Learjet founder Bill Lear. Published UFO article in Saturday Review shortly before this memo was written
Walter Mackey
CIA official, DSD/OSI
high
CIA officer who provided instructions on how to respond to Air Force inquiries regarding UFO report declassification
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516063
CIA FOIA 2 pages 390.3 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant not for describing a specific UFO sighting, but for revealing the internal CIA processes surrounding UFO information declassification and public disclosure in 1966. The timing is notable—this falls within the period of the University of Colorado UFO Project (Condon Committee, 1966-1968) and follows the 1966 wave of high-profile sightings including the March 1966 Michigan swamp gas incidents that sparked Congressional interest. The involvement of journalist John Lear adds credibility to the public pressure being applied for information release. Lear was a respected aviation journalist whose Saturday Review article would have reached educated, mainstream audiences, not just UFO enthusiasts.
The memo's careful bureaucratic language ('admirable restraint,' 'not forthcoming') suggests tension between public affairs transparency and intelligence compartmentalization. The distribution to DSD/OSI (Directorate of Science and Intelligence, Office of Scientific Intelligence) indicates this was handled at a relatively senior level within CIA's scientific analysis branch. The fact that Miss Hunt specifically mentioned wanting to show the declassified version to John Lear suggests the Air Force was engaged in a calculated public relations effort, possibly attempting to shape the narrative around UFO phenomena through controlled disclosure to credible journalists. The document's classification status and the vague promise of 'soon' delivery of materials hints at the complexity of clearing intelligence-gathered UFO reports for public release.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Evidence of Substantive Classified UFO Program
The memo confirms that CIA maintained classified UFO reports requiring formal declassification review at the OSI (Office of Scientific Intelligence) level, suggesting more substantive investigation than publicly acknowledged. The careful handling, three-week delay, and senior-level involvement indicate these reports contained sensitive information beyond simple sighting reports. The government's eagerness to control the narrative through selective journalist briefings suggests concern about what full disclosure might reveal.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Routine Bureaucratic Process
This memo simply documents standard inter-agency coordination for FOIA-type requests during a period when UFO reports were common and required declassification review before release. The 'classified' reports likely contained mundane sighting reports that were technically classified only because they were collected through intelligence channels, not because they contained extraordinary evidence. The delay reflects normal bureaucratic processing time.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document represents a piece of the larger historical puzzle regarding government UFO information management rather than evidence of any specific aerial phenomenon. Its significance lies in demonstrating that by 1966, CIA possessed classified UFO reports requiring formal declassification review, and that inter-agency coordination was necessary when responding to press and public inquiries. The involvement of mainstream journalist John Lear and the Air Force's eagerness to share declassified materials with him suggests an official effort to manage public discourse on UFOs through strategic information release. The memo provides no evidence regarding the nature or credibility of actual UFO sightings, but does confirm that such reports existed within classified CIA files and were subject to deliberate disclosure policies. This is a historically important administrative record that validates long-standing claims that intelligence agencies maintained classified UFO files during the 1960s, lending credibility to FOIA researchers' efforts to uncover such materials.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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