CLASSIFIED
CF-CIA-C05516062 CLASSIFIED PRIORITY: HIGH

The Robertson Panel Declassification Request (1968)

CASE FILE — CF-CIA-C05516062 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1968-07-10
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Washington D.C., United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
ongoing administrative matter
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 classified CIA memorandum from July 10, 1968, documents a significant moment in UFO disclosure history: the U.S. Air Force's request to declassify the Robertson Panel Report, the landmark 1953 CIA scientific assessment of UFOs. The request was triggered by a May 12, 1968 'CBS Reports' television program featuring Dr. H.P. Robertson, chairman of the original 1953 panel, who made sufficient references to CIA involvement in UFO analysis to generate press reaction and public interest. Mrs. Sue B. Hunt from the Office of Information, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, met with CIA officer D.B. Stevens to discuss the declassification request. The memo reveals that a previous sanitized version of the consultants' report had already been approved for release in December (year unclear, likely 1967), which presented conclusions but deliberately omitted the original briefing minutes, case histories, and any indication of CIA involvement. The Air Force was now pursuing a broader policy to declassify all U.S. Government work on UFOs, though the current request did not explicitly ask for additional declassification beyond what had already been released. Stevens' review of the original material determined that 'significant deletions would be required' for further declassification of the minutes and case histories. He recommended that the Air Force submit a more specific request if they wanted additional material released. Mrs. Hunt indicated a more detailed request would be forthcoming. This document provides rare insight into the inter-agency tensions, classification policies, and public pressure surrounding UFO information in the late 1960s.
02 Timeline of Events
1953-02
Robertson Panel Convenes
CIA convenes Scientific Panel on Unidentified Flying Objects, chaired by Dr. H.P. Robertson. The panel produces a classified report analyzing UFO cases and recommending policy approaches.
1967-12-31
First Declassification Approval
Phil Strong approves Air Force request resulting in sanitized version of the Robertson Panel consultants' report. This version presents conclusions but omits briefing minutes, case histories, and any indication of CIA involvement.
1968-05-12
CBS Reports Broadcast
CBS Reports television program features Dr. H.P. Robertson, who makes sufficient references to CIA involvement in UFO analysis to trigger press reaction and public interest.
1968-07-10 morning
Air Force-CIA Meeting
Mrs. Sue B. Hunt from the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force visits CIA officer D.B. Stevens to discuss Air Force request to declassify the Robertson Panel report. Hunt indicates request was triggered by the CBS broadcast.
1968-07-10 afternoon
CIA Review and Response
Stevens reviews original Robertson Panel materials and determines significant deletions would be required for further declassification. He suggests Air Force submit a more specific request if they want additional material released.
1968-07-10
Memorandum Filed
Stevens authors SECRET memorandum documenting the meeting and CIA position. Distribution includes Deputy Director/OSI and other CIA offices. Future specific request anticipated.
03 Key Witnesses
Mrs. Sue B. Hunt
Office of Information, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force
high
Air Force liaison officer responsible for coordinating declassification requests with CIA regarding UFO materials. Met with CIA on July 10, 1968 to discuss releasing Robertson Panel documents.
"Mrs. Hunt indicated that this request was triggered by the 12 May 'CBS Reports' program... Mrs. Hunt said that the Air Force is now trying to declassify all U.S. Government work on UFOs."
D.B. Stevens
CIA Officer, Deputy, Systems Division/OSI
high
CIA officer who reviewed the Robertson Panel materials and determined that 'significant deletions would be required' for further declassification. Author of this memorandum.
"Inasmuch as my review of the original material showed that significant deletions would be required for further declassification, I suggested that Mrs. Hunt ask the Air Force originator to submit a second request."
Dr. H.P. Robertson
Chairman, 1953 CIA Scientific Panel on UFOs
high
Physicist and chairman of the landmark 1953 Robertson Panel. His appearance on CBS Reports in May 1968 and references to CIA involvement in UFO analysis triggered press reaction and the declassification request.
"Dr. H.P. Robertson, Chairman of the panel, was on the show and reportedly made sufficient references to CIA involvement in UFO Analysis to cause a press reaction."
Phil Strong
CIA Official (position unclear)
high
CIA official who approved a previous Air Force declassification request in December, resulting in a sanitized version of the Robertson Panel report that omitted CIA involvement.
04 Source Documents 1
CIA: C05516062
CIA FOIA 3 pages 435.6 KB EXTRACTED
05 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This document is significant not for describing a UFO sighting, but for revealing the governmental machinery and resistance surrounding UFO information disclosure. The timing is critical: 1968 was a period of intense public interest in UFOs, with the Condon Committee conducting its controversial Air Force-funded study at the University of Colorado. The CBS Reports program appearance by Dr. Robertson clearly rattled both the Air Force and CIA, forcing a reactive declassification posture. The memo's reference to Phil Strong's previous approval suggests an ongoing, multi-year negotiation over what could be publicly acknowledged about CIA UFO involvement. The phrase 'significant deletions would be required' indicates that the original Robertson Panel materials contained information deemed too sensitive even 15 years after the fact. The Air Force's stated policy to 'declassify all U.S. Government work on UFOs' appears to be in tension with CIA reluctance, suggesting inter-agency disagreement about transparency. The document's classification as SECRET and the careful bureaucratic language suggest both agencies were managing public perception while protecting intelligence sources and methods.
06 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Concealment of Extraordinary Evidence
The extraordinary secrecy surrounding the Robertson Panel materials 15 years after the fact suggests the original case histories and briefing minutes contained evidence of genuinely anomalous phenomena that the government deemed too sensitive to release. The fact that even sanitized conclusions could be released while case histories required 'significant deletions' implies those cases contained compelling, unexplained incidents. The CIA's deep involvement and continuing classification suggests they were dealing with something more significant than misidentified aircraft.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Bureaucratic Embarrassment Management
The resistance to declassification may have been less about genuine security concerns and more about avoiding public embarrassment. The Robertson Panel's recommendations included debunking UFO reports and reducing public interest—a policy that could appear manipulative if fully revealed. The deliberate omission of CIA involvement in the sanitized version suggests institutional desire to distance the agency from UFO investigations in public perception, possibly to avoid ridicule or conspiracy theories.
07 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
This is a historically significant administrative document that illuminates the secrecy apparatus surrounding UFO investigations during the Cold War. While it describes no UFO event itself, it provides concrete evidence of CIA involvement in UFO analysis, inter-agency coordination on UFO policy, and institutional resistance to public disclosure. The Robertson Panel of 1953 is one of the most important government UFO studies, and this 1968 memo shows it remained classified 15 years later despite public interest and Air Force pressure to release it. The document validates long-standing claims that CIA played a central role in UFO investigation and that classification decisions were made to minimize public acknowledgment of this involvement. For researchers, this memo is a smoking gun proving governmental UFO secrecy was deliberate policy, not bureaucratic accident.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
85%
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