CIA acknowedges Area 51, mum on UFOs

File - A car moves along the Extraterrestrial Highway near Rachel, Nevada. The CIA is acknowledging the existence of Area 51 in newly declassified documents. (AP Laura Rauch, File)

File - A car moves along the Extraterrestrial Highway near Rachel, Nevada. The CIA is acknowledging the existence of Area 51 in newly declassified documents. (AP Laura Rauch, File)

Published Aug 16, 2013

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Las Vegas - The CIA is acknowledging in the clearest terms yet the existence of Area 51, the top-secret Cold War test site that has been the subject of elaborate conspiracy theories about aliens and flying saucers for decades.

The recently declassified documents have set Area 51 buffs abuzz, though there's no mention of UFO crashes, black-eyed extraterrestrials or staged moon landings.

The CIA history released Thursday not only refers to Area 51 by name and describes some of the activities that took place there, but places the Air Force base on a map, along the dry Groom Lake bed.

It also describes some cool planes, though none of them are saucer-shaped.

George Washington University's National Security Archive used a public records request to obtain a CIA history of one of Area 51's most secret Cold War projects, the high-flying U-2 spy plane program.

National Security Archive senior fellow Jeffrey Richelson first reviewed the history in 2002, but all mentions of Area 51 had been redacted. So he requested the history again in 2005, hoping for more information, and sure enough, he received a version a few weeks ago with the mentions of Area 51 restored.

It's not the first time the government has acknowledged the super-secretive, 8,000-square-mile (12,875-kilometer) installation. Former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush acknowledged the “location near Groom Lake” in insisting on continued secrecy, and other government references date to the 1960s.

But those who are convinced “the truth is out there” are taking the document as a sign of loosening secrecy about the government's activities in the Nevada desert.

Barbara Mervine, who describes herself as part of the “UFO community,” said the declassification of the documents is “quite important.”

The site is known as Area 51 among UFO aficionados because that was the base's designation on old Nevada test site maps.

Beginning with the U-2 in the 1950s, the base has been the testing ground for a host of top-secret aircraft, including the SR-71 Blackbird, F-117A stealth fighter and B-2 stealth bomber. Some believe the base is also a storage site for alien vehicles and extraterrestrial corpses.

Even for those who do not believe, the mystery surrounding the site, situated about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northwest of Las Vegas, across miles of empty desert speckled with Joshua trees and sagebrush, has been a boon.

One Nevada bicycle event company produces an “X Rides” event that incorporates mountain and road biking near a certain heavily guarded patch of Nevada desert. Las Vegas' minor league baseball team is called “the 51s.”

Small-town restaurants along State Route 375, officially designated the Extraterrestrial Highway, sell souvenir T-shirts to tourists making their way to the boundary of Area 51, which consists of a no-trespassing sign, a surveillance camera and an armed guard on a hill.

Sapa-AP

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