CIA acknowledges secret ‘Area 51’

The CIA has officially acknowledged the secret US test site known as Area 51, in a newly unclassified internal history of the U-2 spy plane programme.

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The document obtained by a US university describes the 1955 acquisition of the Nevada site for testing of the secret spy plane.

It also explains the site’s lingering association with UFOs and aliens.

The remote patch of desert surrounding Groom Lake was chosen because it was adjacent to a nuclear testing facility.

“The U-2 was absolutely top secret,” Chris Pocock, a British defence journalist and author of histories of the programme, told the BBC.

“They had to hide everything about it.”

The U-2 plane, developed to spy on the Soviet Union during the Cold War, is still flown by the US Air Force.

Reports of UFOs

The document, a secret 1992 internal CIA history of the U-2 programme, was originally declassified in 1998 with heavy redactions.

Many of the blacked-out details were revealed this month after a public records request by the National Security Archive at the George Washington University in Washington DC.

‘Inclination towards secrecy’

The original request for the redacted portions of the history was made in 2005. It was released to the National Security Archive several weeks ago.

Jeff Richelson, a senior fellow at the National Security Archive, said the long period of secrecy was notable because of the extent people across the world were already aware of Area 51’s existence.

Mr Richelson speculates the CIA must have recently made a conscious, deliberate decision to reveal Area 51’s existence and origins.

“There is a general inclination towards secrecy,” he said, and the many US agencies and non-US governments involved in the U-2 programme would have had a say in the declassification process.

“As far as I can tell, this is the first time something must have gone to a high-enough level to discuss” whether or not to formally acknowledge Area 51’s existence, he said.