Few imaginary people that the CIA had its "men in black" really, responsible for assessing whether certain reports pointed to the sighting of a real UFO, but it is so, and precisely during the first years of this organization, among its Its main functions were to protect the United States from any external threat, and you will agree that there is nothing more external than a real UFO.
The CIA system in the 50s to identify a UFO real
Shortly after the end of World War II, different units of the US government received so many complaints of sightings of extraterrestrial objects that they decided to take the matter seriously, creating an investigation committee in the United States Air Force United and a small department in the newly created Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
Today the role played by the military institution is known more than between 1952 and 1969 adelan The Blue Book Project , which recorded more than 12,000 reports, and in which at least 700 could correspond to the sighting of a real UFO.
The CIA, for its part, paid attention to this phenomenon that other observers ruled out and attributed to a kind of collective hysteria, in the first place, because the sightings could correspond to flights of Russian spy planes on North American territory, or with other kinds of activities of human origin that could constitute a threat to national security.Its participation with the Air Force led her to create a list of 10 steps around how proceed before a sighting report of a real UFO or not.The steps were as follows:
1.Create a group to determine if it is of a real UFO.This step was completed with the creation of the Blue Book Project .
2.Define the direction of the investigation: if it was a threat or not; if it was a technologically advanced object and tell how the encounter had occurred.
3.Consult experts.To determine if it was a real UFO, the CIA contacted physicists, engineers, biologists, astrophysicists and meteorologists, among other professionals.
4.Organization and classification.The CIA and the Air Force jointly developed a series of questionnaires that included data such as date, time, location of the sighting, position in the sky, object form, etc., in order to determine whether it was the encounter with a real UFO or not.
5.Determine if they were “false positives.” The questionnaire helped determine whether it was of a phenomenon of nature, the passage of an aircraft, an aerostatic balloon or there was another kind of logical and natural explanation, instead of being a real UFO.
6.Determine if they were missions secret.During the three decades after the Second War several companies develop sophisticated aircraft were for the government of the United States and not all of their agencies were informed, much less their citizens, so it was not unusual for any test flight to be confused with the passage of a real UFO.
7.Examination of the evidence presented by the witnesses of the close encounter: photographs, drawings, videos, recordings.
8.Carry out experiments to reproduce the sighting, and thus discard the “False positives.”
9.Collection of evidence and evidence at the meeting site.The general order was to deliver any material that was found to the Air Force, to be analyzed in its laboratory.
10.Training of agents to rule out sighting cases that were false positive and to clarify doubts among witnesses without generating suspicion.
Aunq That the CIA stopped paying attention to the sightings already in the early 50s, for not considering them a threat to security, the Air Force continued to investigate until the late 60s, and proof that people are not convinced that all encounters were wrong observations is that interest in UFOs is still alive in the world, even if an encounter with a real UFO is still unconfirmed.
We recommend that you read our article on the most consulted FBI document .
Images: (c) Can Stock Photo/ruskpp, Mike Holmes, BinoCanada, Stanislav Trifonov
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