Declassified UFO / UAP Document

Defense Intelligence Agency FOIA Response and Intelligence Reports

📅 11 July 1990; 28 March 1990; 28 August 1988 📍 Amman, Jordan; Chongqing, Sichuan Province, China; Technical College, USSR 🏛 Defense Intelligence Agency 📄 Correspondence and Intelligence Reports

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AI-Generated Summary

TL;DR

This document contains a DIA FOIA response and several intelligence reports from the 1990s regarding UFO sightings in Jordan, China, and the USSR, as well as Russian aviation developments. It highlights the agency's process for handling FOIA requests and the nature of intelligence reporting on UAP-related topics.

This document is a compilation of materials released by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) in response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request submitted by John Greenewald, Jr. on 8 February 1997. The package includes a formal response letter dated 17 March 1997, which outlines the agency's search results and fee assessment, followed by several declassified intelligence reports. The intelligence reports cover a variety of topics, primarily focusing on Russian military aviation, radar intelligence, and reports of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) or Unidentified Lights. Specific reports detail sightings in Jordan in July 1990, where civilians reported lights in the western suburbs of Amman. Another report from 1990 describes a UFO sighting north of Chongqing, China, involving a 20-meter long object with orange and pale green lights. A 1988 report from the USSR describes a strange light observed from a technical college window. The document also contains excerpts from the Russian magazine 'Vestnik Vozdushnogo Flota' (Air Fleet Herald), which discusses Russian stealth technology, flight accidents, and the influence of 'energetic envelopes' or UFOs on aviation safety. The DIA notes that some portions of the documents were withheld pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552 (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(6) for national security and privacy reasons.

Besides possible natural causes, the author even mentions the influences of unidentified flying objects.

Official Assessment

The documents include reports on UFO sightings in Jordan, China, and the USSR, alongside analysis of Russian aviation and radar intelligence.

Key Persons