CIA declassifies a trove of two million documents about UFOs dating back to the 1970s that reveal a mysterious object was analyzed by the agency’s chief scientist
- A dossier with more than 730 files about Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) was published on The Black Vault website on Thursday
- Black Vault founder John Greenewald Jr spent two decades suing the CIA to release the records and then scanning the pages one by one
- A DailyMail.com review of about three dozen of the more than 700 files in the Black Vault database revealed a few perplexing examples of UAP sightings
- One of the reports describes how seemingly urgent UFO information was hand-delivered to the CIA’s deputy director for science and technology in 1976
- In another report, CIA officials discuss the possibility that UFOs were behind a ‘mysterious blast’ in the small Russian town of Sasovo in 1991
The CIA has declassified a trove of more than two million documents about UFO sightings and research dating back to the 1970s.
The remarkable dossier filled with what the CIA claims is every single one of its files on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) – the government’s official term for what are commonly called UFOs – was published on The Black Vault website on Thursday.
Black Vault’s founder John Greenewald Jr has spent the past two decades suing the CIA to release the records and then scanning the pages one by one.
Asked about which documents had piqued his interest, Greenewald highlighted a report about seemingly urgent UFO information being hand-delivered to an Assistant Deputy Director for Science & Technology at the CIA in April 1976.
Most details about the information were redacted in the document, but Greenewald said he is determine to uncover more through further FOIA requests.
The name of the deputy director was also redacted but records indicate that Carl Duckett served in that position at the time.
The document states: ‘We contacted A/DDS&T (Dr [redacted]) to see if he knew of any UFO program and also to answer the questions posed by [redacted].
‘Dr [redacted] exhibited interest in [redacted] which was handcarried to his office. After a short examination of its contents Dr [redacted] advised us that he would personally look into the matter and get back to us.’
More than two million pages of declassified CIA reports about UFOs dating back to the 1970s were published on The Black Vault website on Thursday (file photo)
The heavily redacted report above describes seemingly urgent UFO information being hand-delivered to an Assistant Deputy Director for Science & Technology in April 1976
Among the more than 700 files in the Black Vault database is this report, where CIA officials discuss the possibility that UFOs were behind a ‘mysterious blast’ in a small Russian town
The dossier was released ahead of a June deadline for US intelligence agencies to reveal everything they know about UFOs to Congress under a clause slipped into the $2.3trillion coronavirus relief bill signed into law by President Donald Trump in December.
A DailyMail.com review of about three dozen of the more than 700 files in the Black Vault database – which could take weeks to comb through in its entirety – revealed a few perplexing examples of UAP sightings.
In one case, CIA officials discuss the possibility that UFOs were behind a ‘mysterious blast’ in the small Russian town of Sasovo in 1991.
Residents reported seeing a ‘fiery sphere’ descend from the sky before a shockwave tore through the town, leveling an entire block.
Black Vault’s founder John Greenewald Jr (pictured) has spent the past two decades suing the CIA to release the records and then scanning the pages one by one
The report said investigators had failed to come to a conclusion about the cause of the explosion, leaving open the possibility of UFOs.
Other documents were redacted so heavily that they merely pointed to a UFO sighting without describing any details about it.
Many of the files in the mix merely mention the keywords ‘UFO’, ‘UAP’ or ‘extraterrestrial’ in the context of unrelated topics, offering little to no insight about the CIA’s overall knowledge about those keywords.
For example, one document entitled ‘Hypervelocity Test Techniques Discussed’ describes a French study of a force which could be used to deflect UFOs – defined in the document as ‘undesired flying objects’ – not unidentified ones.
Another document joined the pile because it features a newspaper column about a Bosnian fugitive, in which the author mocks the Pentagon’s failure to find the man despite ‘communicating regularly with extraterrestrial beings’.
Greenewald began investigating the US government’s research on UFOs when he was just 15 years old in 1996.
He described his painstaking efforts to Motherboard on Monday, saying he filed nearly 10,000 different Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to unseal the records.
‘Around 20 years ago, I had fought for years to get additional UFO records released from the CIA,’ Greenewald said.
‘It was like pulling teeth. I went around and around with them to try and do so, finally achieving it.
‘I received a large box, of a couple thousand pages, and I had to scan them in one page at a time.’
The dossier contains both the records that Greenewald requested and others that the CIA had already released publicly and compiled into a CD, which Black Vault purchased last year.
In a blog post Greenewald noted that while the CIA claims it has released all of its UAP documents, there is no way to verify whether some documents may have been withheld.
In a Twitter thread on Tuesday he explained how the records available on the CIA’s website are incomplete, despite the agency ‘giving the illusion’ that everything is there.
He posted screengrabs of a CIA site search which produced 415 results for UFO-related FOIA requests – compared to the 713 files on the Black Vault.
In a Twitter thread on Tuesday Greenewald explained how the records available on the CIA’s website are incomplete, despite the agency ‘giving the illusion’ that everything is there
Greenewald also emphasized how the CIA releases its records in a format that is far from user-friendly.
‘The CIA has made it incredibly difficult to use their records in a reasonable manner,’ Greenewald told Motherboard.
‘They offer a format that is very outdated (multi page .tif) and offer text file outputs, largely unusable, that I think they intend to have people use as a “search” tool.
‘In my opinion, this outdated format makes it very difficult for people to see the documents, and use them, for any research purpose.
‘Researchers and curious minds alike prefer simplicity and accessibility when they look at data dumps such as these.’
Despite the inconvenience, Greenewald said thousands of people had already downloaded the archive on the first day it was posted on the Black Vault.
He’s offering the archive for free but set up a Patreon account for anyone who wants to donate money to support his past and future efforts to uncover CIA records.
‘Plain and simple, the public has a right to know,’ Greenewald said.
‘When I began researching nearly 25 years ago at the age of 15, I knew there was something to this topic. Not because of viral internet hoaxes. Not because of back door meetings wherein I can’t tell you who, but I promise it was mind-blowing information. No, none of that.
‘It was simply because of the evidence that I got straight from the CIA. And the NSA. And the Air Force. And the DIA. I feel I am achieving what I set out to do. Easy access, to important material, for people to make up their own minds on what is going on.’
Greenewald did not immediately return DailyMail.com’s requests for comment.
Greenewald (pictured) began investigating the US government’s research on UFOs when he was just 15 years old in 1996. His Black Vault database is the result of nearly 10,000 different Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests
UFO detectives like Greenewald may soon have even more intel to sift through, with the upcoming deadline for US intelligence agencies to submit an unclassified report about ‘unidentified aerial phenomena to congressional intelligence and armed services committees.
The director of National Intelligence and the secretary of defense have just under six months to do so, after a stipulation in the ‘committee comment’ section of the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 was included in the huge bill, according to CNN.
The Senate intelligence committee’s directive said that the report should be unclassified, but it can contain a classified annex. Therefore, it is unlikely to reveal the discovery of extra-terrestrial life reaching earth.
It does, however, state that the report must contain detailed analysis of UFO data and intelligence collected by the Office of Naval Intelligence, the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force and the FBI.
Detail of ‘an interagency process for ensuring timely data collection and centralized analysis of all unidentified aerial phenomena reporting for the Federal Government’ must be included, and it should designate an official responsible for that process.
A spokesperson for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence confirmed the requirement for the report to the fact-checking website Snopes.
Navy pilots believe they spotted a UFO just off the coast in Jacksonville in 2015 (pictured)
In April last year, the Pentagon released three short videos – one from 2004 and two from 2015 – that showed ‘unidentified aerial phenomena’, which had earlier been confirmed to be real by the US Navy.
The videos, recorded by infrared cameras, showed what appeared to be unidentified flying objects quickly moving across the sky.
In the background of two of the videos, service members can be heard reacting as they watch the objects, with one speculating it could be a drone.
In August, the Pentagon announced that it was setting up a task force to investigate the objects, but it is still unclear what the objects are or where they came from.
Both Pentagon officials and members of Congress have been concerned about the appearance of unidentified objects flying over US military bases, with some suggesting the objects in the video could be drones collecting intelligence.
In June last year, the Senate Intelligence Committee voted to have the Pentagon and intelligence community provide public analysis of such encounters.
This is not the first time the Pentagon has investigated aerial encounters with UFOs, having previously studied recordings of such incidents as part of a classified program launched by former Senator Harry Reid, that has since been shut down.
That program was launched in 2007 and closed in 2012, the Pentagon says, after it decided there were higher priority areas that required funding.
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