CORROBORATED
CF-CIA-C05515875 CORROBORATED
Lt. Colonel Tacker's Flying Saucer Book Correspondence
CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515875 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1961-01-10
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington, D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
N/A - Administrative correspondence
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 is a brief thank-you letter dated January 10, 1961, addressed to Lt. Colonel Lawrence J. Tacker of the United States Air Force Office of Information in Washington, D.C. The sender thanks Colonel Tacker for providing a manuscript copy of his forthcoming book on 'flying saucers.' The correspondent expresses agreement with the book's approach and hopes it will help clear up confusion about UFOs.
The letter writer states they read the book the previous night and found it 'extremely interesting and well presented.' However, they note pessimistically that there appears to be a 'lunatic fringe' that will never be convinced of Air Force objectivity and forthrightness on the subject. The tone suggests this is correspondence between officials or individuals with access to military information during the early 1960s UFO investigation era.
This document provides historical context for official Air Force public relations efforts regarding UFOs. Lt. Colonel Lawrence J. Tacker was the Chief of the Air Force Public Information Division and authored 'Flying Saucers and the U.S. Air Force' (1960), which defended Project Blue Book's conclusions. This correspondence reflects the Air Force's strategy to manage public perception of UFO phenomena during the height of Cold War tensions.
02 Timeline of Events
1960
Tacker's Book Published
Lt. Colonel Lawrence J. Tacker publishes 'Flying Saucers and the U.S. Air Force,' defending Project Blue Book's skeptical conclusions
January 9, 1961, evening
Manuscript Review
Correspondent reads the manuscript copy of Tacker's book, finding it 'extremely interesting and well presented'
January 10, 1961
Thank You Letter Sent
Formal correspondence sent to Lt. Colonel Tacker thanking him for the manuscript and expressing hope the book will clear up UFO confusion
Post-1961
Document Declassified
Letter declassified through CIA FOIA process and made available through The Black Vault research efforts
03 Key Witnesses
Lt. Colonel Lawrence J. Tacker
Chief of Air Force Public Information Division, USAF Office of Information
high
Air Force officer responsible for public information and author of 'Flying Saucers and the U.S. Air Force' (1960), a book defending Project Blue Book conclusions and attempting to debunk UFO phenomena
Anonymous Correspondent
Unknown official or cleared individual with access to pre-publication military materials
unknown
Identity redacted or unclear from document. Had access to manuscript of Tacker's book before publication and corresponded with Air Force Office of Information
"I certainly agree with the plea & hope that publication of this book will do much to clear up the confusion about UFO's... Unfortunately, there seems to be a fair size 'lunatic fringe' that can never be really convinced of Air Force objectiveness and forthrightness on this subject."
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515875
CIA FOIA 2 pages 392.5 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The historical significance of this document lies in its connection to official Air Force UFO communication strategy rather than any specific sighting. Lt. Colonel Lawrence J. Tacker was a key figure in Air Force public information during the Project Blue Book era, and his book was part of the military's effort to debunk UFO claims and reassure the public. The reference to a 'lunatic fringe' reveals institutional frustration with persistent UFO believers despite official explanations.
The document's classification status (declassified through CIA FOIA) and preservation in intelligence archives suggests it was part of inter-agency coordination on UFO messaging. The sender's identity is redacted or unclear from the available text, but their access to pre-publication materials and formal tone indicates an official capacity. This represents the administrative and public relations aspect of UFO investigations rather than field reports or sighting data. The document has minimal evidentiary value for actual UFO phenomena but provides valuable insight into how Cold War-era military and intelligence agencies managed the UFO narrative.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Inter-Agency UFO Information Management
The preservation of this seemingly routine thank-you letter in CIA files suggests possible inter-agency coordination on UFO information management. Some researchers interpret the network of correspondence between military, intelligence, and civilian officials as evidence of a broader information control effort beyond simple public relations.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Recognition of Persistent Belief Despite Evidence
The correspondent's reference to a 'lunatic fringe' that will never be convinced reveals official acknowledgment that no amount of debunking would satisfy hardcore UFO believers. This suggests the Air Force recognized the limitations of their public relations efforts and the enduring nature of UFO belief systems regardless of official explanations.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This is an administrative document with no direct connection to UFO sightings or investigations. It represents historical correspondence related to Air Force public relations efforts during the Project Blue Book era. The document's value lies entirely in understanding the institutional approach to UFO discourse in the early 1960s. Lt. Colonel Tacker's book was part of the Air Force's debunking campaign, making this correspondence a minor artifact of that effort. Classification: administrative record with historical interest only.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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