-Caveat Lector-

ISSUE 1544 Tuesday 17 August 1999

X-Files version of history is backed by CIA report
By Michael Smith

THE CIA has released a secret history of its investigations into UFO
sightings, revealing that there was more truth in the popular television
series The X-Files than is often believed.

The highly critical report describes often bitter debates between real-life
X-Files investigators who believed that "the truth is out there" and their
sceptical bosses. It records tales of bumbling undercover agents whose
activities fuelled a widespread belief that the government was covering up
what the agency described as "extra-terrestrial visitations by intelligent
beings".

The problem was eventually passed to the agency's physics and electronics
division where in true X-Files style just one analyst investigated UFO
phenomena. But the Fifties equivalent of Fox Mulder was constantly
undermined by his boss, described by the CIA history as "a non-believer in
UFOs", who tried but failed to declare the project "inactive".

While the CIA investigations eventually concluded that all the sightings
could be explained, the report concludes that "misguided" attempts to keep
them secret led to widespread belief of a government cover-up.

The report, written by Gerald K Haines, the official CIA historian, was
commissioned by the then CIA director James Woolsey in 1993 in the wake of
renewed claims of a CIA-led cover-up. It calls for the first time on
documents that the agency hid from UFO enthusiasts who obtained thousands
of more mundane files under the Freedom of Information Act. The report,
completed in 1997, has been released at the request of the British academic
journal Intelligence and National Security and is published in its summer
issue this month.

US intelligence began investigating UFO sightings in 1947 when a pilot
claimed to have seen nine discs travelling at more than 1,000 mph in
Washington state. The claim was backed up by additional sightings including
reports from military and civilian pilots and air traffic controllers.

The first investigation, Operation Saucer, was carried out by US air
intelligence which initially feared that the objects might be Soviet
bombers. But some officers became convinced that UFOs existed and in a
top-secret report concluded many of the sightings were "interplanetary".
Air force chiefs had the report rewritten to conclude that "although visits
from outer space are deemed possible, they are believed to be very
unlikely".

The CIA initially dismissed the investigations as "midsummer madness". But
an agency committee decided they could be used by Moscow either to create
mass hysteria or to overload the air warning system, making it unable to
distinguish between UFOs and Soviet bombers.

In 1955, claims by two elderly sisters to have had contact with UFOs
attracted widespread publicity. A CIA agent describing himself as an air
force officer spoke to them and reported that he appeared to have stumbled
upon a scene from Arsenic and Old Lace. Analysis of a "code" which the
women believed aliens were using to make contact with them while they
listened to their favourite radio programme was morse code from a US radio
station.

But when UFO enthusiasts heard of the "air force" officer's visit they
became immediately suspicious that he was a member of the CIA trying to
cover up the affair. One enthusiast pursued the CIA conspiracy theory and
was visited by another CIA officer, who claimed to be in the air force and
even wore an air force uniform. The ruse failed, making the conspiracy
theorists even more suspicious.

The refusal to release 57 documents on the investigation in the Seventies,
to protect sources, also fuelled the cover-up theory, Haines concluded.


28 January 1999: [Connected] What the little green men say about scientists
8 July 1998: Scientists deride UFOs report
30 June 1998: Scientists call for inquiry on UFOs
24 November 1997: Clinton looked for evidence of UFOs

  © Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 1999. Terms & Conditions of
reading. Commercial information.

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