CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05515823 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

The Keyhoe-CIA Correspondence: Official Response to UFO Inquiry

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05515823 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1958-10-22
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington, D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
Ongoing investigation
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 represents a significant piece of Cold War-era UFO investigation bureaucracy. On October 22, 1958, Major Donald E. Keyhoe—Director of the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) and one of the most prominent UFO researchers of his era—sent a letter to the CIA seeking information about unidentified flying objects. The CIA's response, preserved in this heavily degraded document, redirects Keyhoe's inquiry to the Office of Information Services at the United States Air Force, specifically noting that 'the Air Force is the security agency' responsible for such matters and 'is qualified to speak on the subject of unidentified flying objects.' The document itself is brief and bureaucratic, but its significance lies in what it reveals about the interagency handling of UFO reports during the 1950s. By 1958, Project Blue Book was the Air Force's official investigation program, and this memo demonstrates the CIA's consistent public position of deferring UFO matters to military authorities. The correspondence was distributed to multiple offices including the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Research and Development Office file) and Front Office, indicating administrative tracking of UFO-related inquiries at the highest levels. The document's classification status appears to have been minimal or nonexistent at creation, yet it remained in CIA files and was only released decades later through FOIA requests. The preservation and eventual declassification of routine correspondence with civilian UFO investigators suggests either comprehensive record-keeping protocols or continued interest in monitoring civilian UFO research organizations during this period.
02 Timeline of Events
1958-10-22
Keyhoe Submits Inquiry to CIA
Major Donald E. Keyhoe, Director of NICAP, sends a formal letter to the CIA requesting information about unidentified flying objects and government investigation efforts.
1958-10-22 (received)
CIA Receives and Processes Request
The CIA acknowledges receipt of Keyhoe's letter dated October 22, 1958, and begins processing the inquiry through administrative channels.
1958 (shortly after receipt)
CIA Redirects to Air Force
CIA responds by directing Keyhoe to the Office of Information Services, United States Air Force, stating that 'the Air Force is the security agency' qualified to speak on UFO matters.
1958 (post-response)
Internal Distribution
The correspondence is distributed internally to multiple offices including ASD (Research and Development Office file), Front Office, and OSI/ASD, indicating tracking at senior administrative levels.
Decades later
FOIA Declassification
The document is declassified and released through Freedom of Information Act requests, made available via The Black Vault archive of CIA UFO documents.
03 Key Witnesses
Major Donald E. Keyhoe
Director, National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP); Former Marine Corps pilot and aviation writer
high
Major Donald Keyhoe was one of the most influential UFO researchers of the 1950s-60s. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and Marine Corps aviator, he became a respected aviation writer before turning his attention to UFO phenomena. As director of NICAP, he advocated for Congressional hearings and scientific investigation of UFOs, maintaining that the government was withholding evidence of extraterrestrial visitation.
"Letter content not preserved in available document scan"
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05515823
CIA FOIA 2 pages 384.9 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
The credibility of this document is high—it's an authentic CIA administrative record that reveals the bureaucratic handling of UFO inquiries during a critical period. Major Donald Keyhoe was not a fringe figure; he was a Marine Corps aviator, respected aviation writer, and head of NICAP, which counted several high-ranking military officers and scientists among its members. The CIA's deflection to the Air Force is consistent with the public narrative maintained throughout the 1950s-60s, but researchers have noted that CIA interest in UFOs extended well beyond what such correspondence suggests. What makes this document analytically interesting is its context within the broader timeline of government UFO investigation. By 1958, the CIA had already conducted the Robertson Panel (1953), which recommended debunking UFO reports and monitoring civilian UFO groups. This memo appears to follow that recommendation perfectly—politely redirecting inquiries while maintaining distance from the subject. The distribution list indicates the correspondence was tracked at senior levels despite its seemingly routine nature. The document's poor physical condition (heavily degraded, difficult to read) may indicate age, storage conditions, or potentially redaction techniques, though no obvious redaction markers are visible in the available scan.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Monitoring and Compartmentalization Strategy
The document may represent part of a broader CIA strategy to monitor civilian UFO researchers while maintaining plausible deniability about agency involvement. The fact that routine correspondence with Keyhoe was preserved, distributed to senior offices, and retained for decades suggests ongoing intelligence interest in NICAP's activities. The Robertson Panel had explicitly recommended monitoring civilian UFO groups, and Keyhoe—as one of the most prominent researchers—would have been a logical subject of such attention.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Legitimate Division of Responsibility
The CIA's response may simply reflect reality: the Air Force genuinely was the primary investigative body for UFO reports through Project Blue Book, which collected and analyzed thousands of sighting reports. The CIA, focused on foreign intelligence, had no operational mandate for domestic UFO investigation. The document represents honest bureaucratic channeling rather than concealment, with the Air Force being the appropriate agency to handle such public inquiries.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This document represents a genuine piece of UFO investigation history but is ultimately an administrative deflection rather than substantive disclosure. The CIA's response to Keyhoe is consistent with established protocols of the era: maintain that UFOs are an Air Force matter while internally monitoring civilian research efforts. The significance lies not in what the document reveals about specific UFO incidents, but what it demonstrates about governmental compartmentalization and the management of public inquiries during the height of Cold War UFO interest. For researchers, this serves as evidence that prominent civilian investigators like Keyhoe were making formal approaches to intelligence agencies and receiving bureaucratic responses that neither confirmed nor denied agency interest—a pattern that would continue for decades. The document's preservation and eventual declassification suggests it was deemed historically significant enough to retain but contained nothing operationally sensitive.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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