Pentagon: Gen. Garland denies NORAD UFO detections
On July 7, 1966, Brig. Gen. William C. Garland, deputy chief of USAF Public Information, denied in a Project Blue Book briefing that NORAD radars detected spaceships or extraterrestrial vehicles.
Background
Event Details
On July 7, 1966, during a briefing related to Project Blue Book, Brig. Gen. William C. Garland, serving as deputy chief of USAF Public Information at the Pentagon, publicly rejected claims that NORAD radar systems had detected any spaceships, interplanetary intruders, or vehicles from outer space.
Key Witness and Role
William C. Garland, a high-ranking Air Force officer with extensive experience including command roles and a master's in international affairs, was positioned to address public concerns on UFO matters. His denial came amid ongoing investigations by the Air Force's Foreign Technology Division, which had reviewed thousands of sightings without finding threats.
Context and Evidence
This statement occurred within Project Blue Book operations (1952-1970), the USAF's official UFO study program categorizing reports as identified, insufficient data, or unidentified. No radar evidence supported extraterrestrial claims, aligning with Blue Book's conclusions of no national security threats or advanced tech beyond known science.
Significance
The denial reflects official USAF efforts to counter public speculation during a peak UFO sighting period in 1966, reinforcing skepticism toward extraterrestrial hypotheses despite persistent reports.
Connections
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