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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
Page 111
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investigation oA REO yed For Re lease.20 Q140 410 2 : GlArR DP&A RO Q560R0001000100 140-7 phase’’
in 1951 when the situation was reviewed partly due to public
protests.
y UFO PROJECT CHIEFS
After reorganization of the UFO project during 1951, it be-
came an organization in its ownright, at ATIC, Wright-Patterson
AFB, Ohio.
Summer 1951: Lt. Jerry Cummings
Sept. 1951-Sept. 1953: Capt. Edward J, Ruppelt
(Ruppelt’s assistants at various times during this period
were Lt. Bob Olsson, Lt. Henry Metscher, Lt. Andy Flues, and
Lt. Kerry Rothstien. From May to July 1953, Lt. Olsson was
acting chief while Ruppelt was away on temporary duty. The
position devolved on A/1C Max Futch briefly in July 1953,
when Lt. Olsson was discharged).
1954-1956 (approx): Capt. Charles A. Hardin
1957-1959 (approx.): Capt. George Gregory
1959-early 1964: Lt. Col. Robert Friend
Early 1964 to date: Capt. Hector Quintanilla
PENTAGON UFO SPOKESMEN
April 1952-March 1953: Al Chop
1953-1957: Various officers including Capt. Robert White
(cirea 1955), Maj. Robert F. Spence (circa 1957).
1958-March 1961: Lt. Col. Lawrence J, Tacker
April 1961-January 1962: Maj. William T. Coleman
Feb. 1962-Summer 1963: Maj. Carl R. Hart
,Smmer 1963 to date: Maj. Maston M. Jacks
September 15, 1951: Lt. Jerry Cummings, and a Lt. Col. from
ATIC, were called to Washington to brief a General (and a dis-
gruntled group of industrialists and scientists) about the conduct
of the investigation. Received orders to set up anew project.
(ppg. 128-130)
September 1951: Capt. Edward J, Ruppelt became chief of
the newly revitalized project.
October 27, 1951: New project officially established. (p. 154).
March 1952: Project Grudge had become a full-fledged organ-
ization, the ‘‘Aerial Phenomena Group.’’ Soonthereafter, the code
name was changed to ‘‘Blue Book.’”’ (p. 176)
April 1952: Al Chop appointed public information officer for
UFOs.
Air Force Letter 200-5 gave Project Blue Book authority to
cut red tape, contact any Air Force unit in the U.S. without going
through channels; provided for wire transmission of reports to
ATIC, followed with details via Air Mail.
Life article ‘‘Have We Visitors From Space?’’, inspired by
several top officers in the Pentagon. (ppg. 177-178)
May 8, 1952: Capt. Ruppeltand a Lt. Col. from ATIC briefed
Air Force Secretary Thomas K. Finletter for one hour. (p. 185)
Mid-June 1952: Capt. Ruppelt briefedGeneral Samford, Director
of Intelligence, others; given directive to take further steps to
obtain positive identification of UFOs. (ppg. 196-199)
Mid-July 1952; Every Air Force installation in U.S. swamped
with UFO reports. (p. 205)
August 1952: Study of UFO maneuvers initiated, to determine
whether objects displayed intelligent control. (ppg. 250-251)
November 1952: Panel of four scientists convened at ATIC to
make preliminary review of accumulated reports. Recommended
convening panel of top scientists. (p. 264)
January 12, 1953: The Air Force (reportedly with the assistance
of the Central Intelligence Agency) convened a panel of top
scientists to weigh the accumulated evidence. The panel was to
decide whether the evidence indicated UFOs were interplanetary,
whether it was all explainable, or whether the project should con-
tinue and seek better data. (p. 275). A study of UFO maneuvers
concluding the objects were interplanetary was presented to the
panel by Maj. Dewey Fournet. (p. 285)
January 17, 1953: The conclusions of the scientific panel were
not made public at the time. Since then, two conflicting versions
have been released:
Conclusions Reported by Ruppelt, 1956
The panel recommended that the UFO project be expanded, the
investigative force quadrupled in size and staffed by trained
scientists; that tracking instruments be established all over the
of the investigation. The scientists believed this program would
“‘dispel any of the mystery’’ created by military security pro-
cedures, and also keep the investigation on a scientific basis.
The recommendations were not adopted. (ppg. 293-298)
Summary Released by Air Force, 1958
The panel concluded that UFOs constituted no ‘‘direct physical
threat to national security,’’ there was no evidence of ‘‘foreign
artifacts capable of hostile acts,’’ and no ‘‘need for the revision
of current scientific concepts.’’ The panel recommended ‘‘im-
mediate steps to strip the Unidentified Flying Objects of the special
status they have been given and the aura of mystery they have
unfortunately acquired.’’? The panel suggested ‘‘an integrated
program designed to reassure the public of the total lack of
evidence of inimical forces behind the phenomena.’’
Phase Three
The 1958 summary issued by the Air Force Office of Public In-
formation--five years after the fact--first released the names of
the scientists on the panel: H. P. Robertson, Luis W. Alvarez,
Lloyd V. Berkner, S, A. Goudsmit, and Thornton Page.
Exactly what transpired at the conclusion of this meeting is not
clear, though it is strongly suggested that the whole story has not
been told. If the decision of the panel had been clearly negative,
as the 1958 summary implies, there would have been no reason to
be so secretive about it. On the contrary, there would have been
every reason to make an immediate public announcement.
What is known about the affair is the public manifestation of the
UFO project following the meeting. After a period of apparent
serious interest in gathering better data (which supports Ruppelt's
version of the panel conclusions), the Air Force began debunki
UFOs. Since then the Air Force does not admit *o having the
slightest shred of evidence that anything at all out of the ordinary
is taking place. Concurrently, a noticeable public relations pol-
icy has been adhered to by the Air Force through the Public In-
Sormation Office: A policy of public reassurance. Members of
Congress or citizens who request current information on the sub-
ject are told repeatedly that UFOs do not present any danger, or
threat to the national security. ,
About the same time as the panel meeting, or shortly there-
after, the Air Force (reportedly through its own RAND Corpora-
tion) had an independent study conducted. This resulted in the
Project Blue Book "Special Report No. 14."" What relationship this
had to the scientific panel meeting is not known. However, the
introduction to the Blue Book report states (p. vii): "The special
study which resulted in this report started in 1953. . .the infor-
mation cut-off date was established as of the end of 1952."
August 26, 1953: AF Regulation 200-2 issued by Secretary of
Air Force; procedures for reporting UFOs, restrictions on
public discussion.
December 1, 1953: The Air Force announced in Washington
it had set up cameras around the country equipped with diffraction
gratings to analyze the nature of light from UFOs.
January 6, 1954: Reporters seeking information on UFOs
were banned from Wright-Patterson AFB. [Cleveland Press]
February 23, 1954: Scripps-Howard papers said the Air
Force had worked out a plan with commercial airline companies
to report sightings quickly.
May 15, 1954: General Nathan F. Twining, Air Force Chief of
Staff, stated the best brains in the country were working on the
UFO problem; Air Force could not explain 10 per cent of the
sightings. [Quoted by United Press; Amarillo, Texas].
May 5, 1955: Project Blue Book ‘‘Special Report No. 14”
declassified.
October 25, 1955: Summary of Blue Book report released to
press; linked with statement that Air Force would soon have its
own saucer-shaped aircraft, the AVRO disc. (The AVRO disc
project subsequently was scrapped without producing a flying
model). Reported no evidence that UFOs ‘‘constituted a threat to
the security of the United States. . .’’
1956-1957: UFOs all but faded out of the news. Queries to the
Air Force were answered by a ‘‘fact sheet’’ referring back to the
1955 report. A 1957 ‘‘fact sheet’’ stated the unexplained cases
had been reduced ‘‘from approximately 10% in 1954 to 3%, as of
now.’’
November 1957: When the ‘‘flap’’ of UFO reports began about
November 1 [See Section XII; November 1957 Chronology], ‘‘fact
sheets’’ were issued on the letterhead of the Department of De-
fense, Office of Public Affairs. These emphasizedthe percentages
of explained cases, and again the lack of evidence of ‘‘a threat
to the security of the country.’’
1958-1959: ‘‘Fact sheets’’ were issued approximately semi-
annually reiterating the above position.
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