STATE-OF-THE-ART IN UFO DISCLOSURE WORLDWIDE Vicente-Juan Ballester Olmos The relationship between society and government as far as the UFO phenomenon is concerned is a very complex issue in many of the most advanced countries. Defense, intelligence agencies, police forces and the governments themselves have tackled the UFO question and the cumulative UFO archives in a variety of manners, procedures and policies, non-uniform and changing over the decades. Through the attached template, the present paper introduces a concise chronological picture of the history of release of UFO archives at a worldwide level. In the current context, by UFO disclosure I mean the revelation, declassification or release of official UFO reports from g overnmental files to the news media, researchers, and UFO organizations or directly placed into the public domain. This relates to both classified and non-classified records, military and non- military reports; in sum, officially-originated files pertaining to UFO sightings. Every summary of reality distorts it in some way. In this case, the tabulation of the varied and sometimes quite complicated administrative processes involved a certain distortion by necessity. In my view, the advantage of producing this compilation outweighs the necessary abridgement of data. I have attempted to consolidate all significant or major releases over time, in some instances selecting from a variety of actions over a span of 60 years, for the purpose of achieving a year-to -date status rev iew of the national formulae followed to comply with the citizens aspiration to have access to governmental records related to UFO information. The intricacies of internal bureaucracies, the way UFO reports have been handled by authorities, the various a ir forces relationships with the press or with ufologists, national legislation and, above all, a general ignorance about whether or not UFOs represent a threat to homeland security, have marked the different historical behaviors we observe herein. It seems evident that in most countries the release of UFO documents is linked to lobbying by the media or UFO organizations. In other cases, it simply runs parallel to the routine declassification of government archives. The United States of America has th e most convoluted panorama by far, mainly because of the multiplicity of agencies implied, the immense volume of material generated and the large number of both characters and events involved. In the international scene, the USA took the lead in the handling of UFO reports and, somehow, most countries mirrored their own management of the UFO question according to US standards, for better or for worse. Massive amounts of documentation have been declassified and released by both the USAF and other agencies. However, there is evidence of present withholding of supplementary information by some intelligence agencies, like the CIA or the NSA, in addition to the United States Air Force and NORAD. Whether documents were destroyed, lost, or simply refused for release, we do not know. Many UFO researchers in the States suspect untruthful behavior. Agencies contend that disclosure (i.e., revealing intelligence sources and methods) would endanger US intelligence capabilities, as it would jeopardize listening posts abroad, eavesdropping systems, electronic techniques, etc. Regarding NORAD, its reticence to make public its files would avoid uncovering the sheer amount of uncorrelated targets in the system. In any event, as far as documents on actual UFO occurrences, it i s difficult for me to think of case information more sensational than what already exists, either declassified or in the ufologists own files. Whether the effect of the forthcoming law on administrative transparency by US President Barack Obama has any impact on these pending-to -declassify records is yet to be seen, the prospect is more than sceptical. As this paper shows, a remarkable amount of UFO-related information from official sources has been disclosed in many countries to date. But in spite of the large wealth of UFO documentation available worldwide, there are release processes still unfinished, and others not yet started. The following is certain: t o hide information would simply feed rumors about conspiracies and evil practices, it is a continuing source of criticism, it overshadows the image of any government, and it is unfair to its taxpayers. All this can be avoided through a crystal-clear disclosure process. The timing of public UFO disclosures is not random. There is an escalation marked, first, by the closure of the USAF Project Blue Book in January 1970, the declassification of its files later this year and their final transfer to the US National Archives in 1976, followed by a similar move in Canada in 1980. Meanwhile, New Zealand started placing UFO files at the National Archives. UFO researchers succeeded in having several European governments release or declassify their UFO records (Sweden 1983, Spain 1992). In other countries, the application of current legislation on public archives produced the availability of UFO files (UK 1987). These examples encouraged UFO organizations and researchers to achieve the opening of UFO files (Portugal 1990, Italy 1996, Brazil 1999) and the international precedents produced copycat effects and influenced other countries (Switzerland 1994, Philippines 2000, Australia 2003, France 2007, Ireland 2007, Denmark 2009) as far as en-masse disclosure is concerned. In addition to the lights and shadows of the declassification in the United States, Europe and Australasia stand out by the completeness and professionalism in the public disclosure processes. On the contrary, Central and South American countries have failed to advance a full-size, systematic development. In some instances, the initial release of UFO documents to journalists created a great deal of friction with the official sources because of serious mismanagement of the information. It delayed by a number of years the possibility of a full public declassification process (e.g., in Spain and Italy). Considering the many precedents to date, this compilers recommendation is that active local UFO students formally contact their air force or defense staffs to provide the following arguments: (1) UFO phenomena represent no threat to national security; therefore it is not a military concern (2) UFO investigation must be left exclusively to science, by methodology, approach and instrumentation (3) To withhold information is hardly compatible with a democratic policy (4) Many countries in the world, both large and small, have already made public their UFO records There are specialists in Europe who have instigated and monitored national release or declassification processes, whose know-how and advice on best practices can prove useful to governments willing to proceed in this direction. There are several targets to accomplish with the publication of this paper. Firstly, I would like to provide a compilation of historical data that illuminates a generally obscure subject. Then, I hope it will generate feedback to expand this table and improve its accuracy. Also, government officials may be inspired to commence similar release processes in their countries. Overall, given the geographical extent and temporal amplitude of the UFO disclosure operations under various political scenarios, it demonstrates that there is a case to support it as a legitimate matter for academic research where historians, sociologists, defense or intelligence analysts, students of government administration or bureaucracy, information science specialists like librarians, archivists and documentalists, and other experts can develop Ph.D. dissertations and publish papers in professional journals. It will improve the current knowledge and will attract scholars to this field with new visions, interpretations and insights. Though unprecedented in its global scope, this study cannot claim to be exhaustive; in fact, it is only an approximation in the case of some nations. The US picture has been particularly difficult to define because of conflicting information from multiple sources. As a best possible summing-up of a fragmentary history pertaining to the subject matter, in doing this research I have found out that the true story of the interaction between DoDs & the intelligence community and UFO reporting (data acquisition and analysis) is yet to be written. A supplementary comment is in order. While there is a common trend in most advanced countries for Departments of Defense to discontinue UFO projects and fu lly releasing their documents to the public, in Latin A merica, a number of countries like Argentina or Chile seem to wish to re-invent the wheel by starting new UFO commissions to investigate the UFO phenomena. Other countries from South America, like Brazil, for example, act much more intelligently and resource-oriented: UFO reports are just collected, registered and then submitted to the National Archives. Acknowledgments In its preparation phase, the attached template has received invaluable cooperation from the members of EuroUFO, the largest network of European UFO researchers. In particular from Jean-Franois Baure, Bjrn Borg, Ole- Jonny Brnne, Piotr Cielebias, Dr. Dave Clarke, Dr. Joaquim Fernandes, Patrick Ferryn, Mikhail Gershtein, Patrick Gross, Pierre Lagrange, Anders Liljegren, Ulrich Magin, Bruno Mancusi, Claude Maug, Joe McGonagle, Matas Morey, Marco Orlandi, Theo Paijmans, Jean-Pierre Pharabod, Jenny Randles, Edoardo Russo, Clas Svahn, Dr. Jacques Vallee and Frits Westra. Also, I appreciate the assistance provided by other UFO colleagues as well as national archives civil servants or military personnel: Alejandro Agostinelli, Colonel Eduardo Aguirre, Jan Aldrich, K. Amamiya, Edison Boaventura, William Chalker, Dr. Anthony Choy, Jorge Guillermo Dewey, Fernando Fernandes, Diane Frola, Peter A. Gersten, Ademar J. Gevaerd, Marcos Gonzlez, Barry J. Greenwood, Richard Heiden, Milton Hourcade, Heriberto Janosch, Stphane Jaumotte, Don Ledger, Kentaro Mori, Jonathan Newport, Mario Rangel, Francis Ridge, Jaime Rodrguez, Chris Rutkowski, Brad Sparks and Illobrand Von Contact the autor Vicente-Juan Ballester Olmos Apartado de correos 12140 46080 Valencia
[email protected] W OR LD W ID E U FO D IS CLOS U R E TEM P LATE ( 2 U p d a te ) COU N TR Y YEAR OF D ES CR IP TION OF AR CH IVES R ELEAS ED United States of America - Some UFO reports below Top Secret level made available to S. Project Saucer (Sign) report released to media January 7, 1948 Captain T. Mantell UFO sighting and aircraft crash report released Project Grudge final report open to newsmen at the Pentagon 41 UFO reports cleared and other ATIC documents released to D. USAF released annual UFO report summaries Scattered UFO reports released to D. Keyhoe, NICAP and media Project Blue Book Special Report #14 released to L. Davidson USAF allowed access to all case summaries and many complete Blue Book files to J. Vallee Project Blue Book Status Reports #1-12 released to NICAP USAF allowed access to 1947 Blue Book files to T. Bloecher 1947, Roswell 1947, Roswell USAF allowed partial access to Blue Book files to J. McDonald USAF released 39 microfilm rolls to H. Strentz for Ph.D. dissertation, with reports, clippings and correspondence Full Blue Book archives declassified and available at Maxwell AFB (AF Historical Research Agency) Full Blue Book redacted files (~125,000 pages) and added AFOSI files (~5,000 pages) available at the National Archives and branch offices around the US: ~15,000 cases microfilm only, paper copies AFOIN (Air Force Intelligence) Special Study Group files released under FOIA request by R. Todd: 50 pages Air Intelligence Report 102-122-79 final report on Childs-Whitted case of July 26, 1948 released, ~100 pages Air Intelligence Service Squadron investigative files added to National Archives, ~350 reports, ~3,500 pages USAF report published GAO report published Air Force Scientific Advisory Board documents released under FOIA request by W. LaParl: ~13 pages 1947, Roswell USAF second report published Air Force UFO files found at Maxwell AFB and released Air Force Public Relations UFO files found at Maxwell AFB and released, ~200 pages Microfilm copy of Blue Book unredacted files found at National Archives and released Projects Sign and Grudge investigative files released by Wright-Patterson AFB under FOIA request by R. Todd and W. LaParl, ~1,100 pages Briefing to Air Force Scientific Advisor H.P. Robertson documents released under FOIA request by W. Jones, ~20 pages 13,000+ pages of UFO documents pending to declassify from AAF, USAF, ADC, Far East AF, SAC, GOC, AISS and others (conservative estimate by J. Aldrich) NORAD withholds ~50,000 unidentified track reports (B. Sparks Personal files of military (e.g., E. Ruppelt, C. LeMay, H.H. Arnold, H. Vandenberg, D. Fournet, J. Chamberlin, B. Baruch) and scientists (e.g., D. Menzel, E.U. Condon, R. Craig, J. McDonald, W. Fenn) contain official UFO documents not yet available United States of America late 1990s CIA released 100+ pages of UFO policy and analysis memos to B. Sparks through Mandatory Declassification Review DIA released the Tehran jet case of September 18, 1976 under FOIA request by Ch. Huffer FBI released ~2,000 pages under FOIA request by B. Maccabee CIA released ~900 pages under FOIA lawsuit by P. Gersten (GSW) US Coast Guard UFO reports released under FOIA request to B. Greenwood, 110 pages Army Intelligence UFO files released under FOIA request by P. Gersten, ~1,000 pages NSA released 204 pages of heavily redacted UFO documents under FOIA lawsuit by F. Olsen CIA released ~300 pages of UFO docs (mostly foreign reports) CIA released ~1,500 further pages of UFO documents [In 2008, CIA reported having released 2,779 pages in total] Non-Blue Book official UFO records released (including Air Force) amount to ~8,000 pages, according to B. Greenwood Army Intelligence and Security Command UFO files released under FOIA request by R. Todd and W. LaParl, ~900 pages since ~2000 since ~2004 since ~2004 since ~2004 1946 to date CIA placed ~300 UFO docs online (B. Sparks catalog), 991 pages https://www.cia.gov/ (search for unidentified flying objects) Department of State UFO & Moondust documents in microfilm available, with new documents added as received FBI placed all FOIA UFO documents online NSA placed hundreds of UFO documents online DIA placed 292 pages of FOIA UFO documents online http://www.dia.mil/public-affairs/foia/reading-room/ ( Under Other Available Records") NSA sets up a UFO document index http://www.nsa.gov/public_info/declass/ufo/index.shtml FBI releases 1,618 pages of UFO documents online http://vault.fbi.gov/UFO FBI releases 355 pages of UFO-related, animal mutilation and extra-sensory perceptions documents online http://vault.fbi.gov/unexplained-phenomenon ~3,200 pages of UFO documents pending to declassify from US Navy, NASA, AEC and US Army (J. Aldrich estimate) ~15,000 pages of CIA/OSI UFO reports were withheld by 1979 (CIA to B. Sparks and B. Maccabee) 1947 to date 1955 to date A large unquantifiable number of UFO documents still pending to declassify from NARA NSA withholds ~100 UFO documents (J. Aldrich estimate) Military Air Transport Service (previously ATC) probably keeps ~1,000 pages of UFO documents awaiting discovery/release Brazilian Air Force (FAB) released 4 UFO reports to media Government and Navy disclosed January 16, 1958 Trindade Island photographic case FAB report of March 18, 1967 Canoas case released to media Official SIOANI works in close liaison with civilian ufologists SIOANI bulletins #1-2 leaked to A. Gevaerd: 58 reports Some FABs Operation Prato documents and UFO photographs leaked to UFO groups: ~200 pages FABs Operation Prato documents and a few dozen photographs leaked to A. Gevaerd: ~300 pages FAB report of radar echoes detected from April 28 to May 16, 1982 from Anpolis AFB leaked to A. Gevaerd FAB report of early 1955 Lorena case leaked to E. Boaventura COMDABRA released reports and showed films of FABs Operation Prato to UFO groups: ~100 pages 66% of SIOANI archives leaked to E. Boaventura: 1,300 pages (in July 2000 he submitted them to the National Archives) 9 FAB UFO files released to National Archives at the instigation of A.J. Gevaerd: 383 pages,