• CIA Releases it's Secret UFO Files to public

CIA Releases it's Secret UFO Files to public (Photo : The Cosmos News/Youtube)

The United States Central Intelligence Agency has exposed documents of historical value to be accessed by the public. This archive of nearly 13 million pages from 930,000 formerly declassified records is available online.

Most of the revelations details that can be found are details about the handling of UFO Sightings and the possible weaponization of psychic powers.

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The CIA documents that Uri Geller was subjected to a series of peculiar secret experiments that aspired to weaponize psychic abilities such as his clairvoyant and telepathic abilities. Geller ability to been spoons with his mind was taken to Stanford Research Institute in the 1970s to have his abilities investigated.

The US CIA wrapped up in the records that Geller was a 'convincing paranormal' after secret experiments in 1973 which involved him successfully reproducing the random drawings of a representative in a separate room which made Geller passed a psychic test.

"I did many things for the CIA. They wanted me to stand outside the Russian embassy in Mexico, and erase floppy discs being flown out by Russian agents," Geller said.

Among the more unusual records include the CIA's secret search for alien life. In the CIA reports made to the public, UFO is defined as "any object which, by performance, aerodynamic characteristics, or unusual features, does not conform to known aircraft or missiles."

The CIA studied snaps of alleged sightings of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOS). The CIA was keen to highlight the importance of rapid but systematic reporting of any such sightings as a matter of National Security.


In the declassified documents, the listing of the four phases of air defense as detection, identification, interception and destruction. The Unidentified Flying Object Program requires that all US Air Force (USAF) commanders hold on severely to these guidelines.

 "Declassifying all the documents in the world doesn't accomplish anything if people can't get access to them," director Steve Aftergood of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists said, as published Buzz Feed.

The CIA Director for Information Management Joseph Lambert revealed that the recent release of declassified documents online is an excellent access to the historically significant collection and Americans are no longer limited by geography which these documents can be accessed from the comfort of their homes.