The answer was yes - since the late 1940s, apparently. But
exactly how, what, when, why and who remained layered in mystery,
leaving grist for the conspiracy mill.
But this year a raft of newly unclassified CIA documents
revealed that the remote possibility of alien invasion elicited
greater fear than the threat of a Soviet nuclear attack.
More interesting still, the CIA documents show that despite
decades of repeated public denials, behind the scenes there raged a
series of inter-agency feuds that involved the highest levels of
the US government.
The subject of UFOs - and dabbling in psychological warfare
techniques - not only focused the attention of the US government
elite for 50 years, but of some of the greatest scientific and
military minds of the era.
Throughout the 1950s CIA files clearly document an explosion of
activity by US intelligence and military bodies concerned with
studying every possible implication for the US, and other Western
democracies, of UFOs. The phenomenon, so adored by the cinematic
world, was reflected in the CIA's fixations. Indeed, while highly
educated CIA employees experimented by giving each other surprise
LSD trips in 1953, there were others, in other parts of the agency,
dealing with a flood of UFO reports.
But significantly, after a burst of intense scrutiny in the
early '50s, the available documents effectively go cold. Why? The
Kafkaesque explanation provided is that few files were kept because
these would only confirm that the CIA was investigating UFOs. A
1995 CIA review stated: "There was no formal or official UFO
project within the agency in the '80s, and agency officials
purposely kept files on UFOs to a minimum to avoid creating records
that might mislead the public if released."
But the wildly eclectic UFO files cover everything from "flying
saucers over Belgian Congo uranium mines" to Nazi "flying
saucers".
A 1953 memo shows that the physicist John Wheeler, while
critically involved with Edward Teller in the creation of the
hydrogen bomb, was available to the "CIA attack on the flying
saucer" problem. The urgency of the H-bomb race was his priority,
but he "would be pleased at any time to discuss the issue briefly",
the memo said.
Full article from Sydney Morning Herald
Paranormal articles