CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05515870 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

The Dulles UFO Book Correspondence - 1959

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515870 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1959-06-02
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 document from June 2, 1959, reveals correspondence regarding a book titled 'They Knew Too Much About Flying Saucers' being returned to George Patrick Wyllie at his Cleveland, Ohio address. The memo indicates that CIA Director Allen W. Dulles personally read this book and instructed staff to return it after he finished reviewing it. The document represents a rare glimpse into official CIA interest in UFO literature at the highest levels during the early Cold War period. The book in question, authored by Gray Barker and published in 1956, was one of the first popular works to detail the 'Men in Black' phenomenon and alleged government suppression of UFO information. That the Director of Central Intelligence would personally review such material suggests either institutional curiosity about public UFO narratives or concern about information control during a sensitive period of national security anxiety. The brevity and administrative nature of this memo raises significant questions about the broader context of CIA interest in UFO phenomena. Was this routine monitoring of popular culture, counterintelligence assessment, or genuine investigation? The document's classification and subsequent FOIA release decades later indicates the agency considered even acknowledgment of interest in UFO materials to be sensitive information.
02 Timeline of Events
1956
Gray Barker Publishes 'They Knew Too Much About Flying Saucers'
The book in question is published, detailing alleged Men in Black encounters and government suppression of UFO information. It becomes influential in UFO conspiracy circles.
1959 (prior to June 2)
Book Provided to CIA Director Dulles
George Patrick Wyllie's copy of the book somehow comes into possession of CIA Director Allen Dulles, either through loan, confiscation, or intelligence collection.
1959-06-02
Dulles Completes Review and Orders Return
CIA Director Allen Dulles finishes reading 'They Knew Too Much About Flying Saucers' and instructs staff to return the book to Wyllie in Cleveland. Administrative memo documents this transaction.
Post-1959
Document Classified and Filed
This routine administrative correspondence is classified, indicating CIA sensitivity about public knowledge of their interest in UFO literature.
Declassified via FOIA
Document Released to Public
Decades later, document C05515870 is declassified through Freedom of Information Act requests and made available in the CIA Reading Room, revealing historical CIA engagement with UFO materials.
03 Key Witnesses
Allen W. Dulles
Director of Central Intelligence (1953-1961)
high
Served as CIA Director during critical Cold War period. Oversaw numerous covert operations and intelligence assessments. His personal review of UFO literature suggests institutional interest at the highest levels.
"Not applicable - administrative memo only"
George Patrick Wyllie
Unknown - Cleveland resident, possible UFO researcher
unknown
Cleveland, Ohio resident who possessed or loaned the book 'They Knew Too Much About Flying Saucers' to CIA officials. His relationship to the agency and reason for the book exchange remain unclear.
"Not applicable - recipient of returned book"
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515870
CIA FOIA 2 pages 388.9 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant not for describing a UFO sighting, but for documenting high-level CIA engagement with UFO literature during the 1950s height of flying saucer mania. Several factors elevate its importance: (1) Direct involvement of Allen Dulles, one of the most powerful intelligence figures in American history, (2) The specific book chosen - Gray Barker's work was conspiratorial in nature and alleged government cover-ups, (3) The fact this mundane administrative note was classified suggests sensitivity around CIA UFO interest. The timing is relevant: 1959 was post-Project Blue Book establishment, during peak Cold War tensions when unusual aerial phenomena had both potential prosaic explanations (Soviet technology) and psychological warfare implications. The CIA's Robertson Panel (1953) had already recommended monitoring UFO groups and publications for security concerns. This document likely represents execution of that surveillance mandate. The recipient, George Patrick Wyllie, remains unidentified but his Cleveland address and possession of this book suggests he may have been a researcher, contactee, or person of interest to the agency.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Genuine Investigation of Claims
The Director's personal attention suggests the CIA took seriously either the UFO phenomenon itself or specific claims in Barker's book about Men in Black and government agents silencing witnesses. This could indicate the agency was investigating whether foreign intelligence services were impersonating US officials or whether actual suppression activities were occurring without authorization.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Assessing Conspiracy Theory Threats
The CIA was concerned about Gray Barker's allegations of government cover-ups and wanted to assess whether the book contained leaked classified information or could inspire problematic conspiracy movements. Dulles personally reviewed it to determine if countermeasures were needed to manage public perception or if sources had been compromised.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This case represents documented evidence of CIA Director-level awareness and engagement with UFO literature in 1959, specifically material alleging government knowledge and suppression. While not a field investigation or sighting report, it confirms institutional interest in monitoring public UFO discourse. The classification of this routine correspondence suggests the agency was sensitive about public knowledge of their UFO-related activities. Most likely explanation: this was part of a broader counterintelligence or public affairs monitoring program to track conspiracy narratives that could undermine government credibility or reveal actual classified programs. The case is significant as historical evidence of the intelligence-UFO connection, though it provides no information about actual UFO phenomena. Confidence level: High that this represents surveillance activity; medium regarding the specific motivations behind Dulles' personal review.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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