The CIA published 13 million pages of classified documents about UFOs

About 13 million secret documents include reports on UFOs and spiritual experiments shared online by the US Central Intelligence Agency.

The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has recently uploaded an entire database of nearly 800,000 files with 13 million pages of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) and mind experiments. Stargate , BBC yesterday reported.

This number of documents has long attracted the attention of conspiracy theorists. The CIA's publication of documents is the result of long-running litigation efforts by advocates of freedom of information asking the agency to publish confidential information.

Picture 1 of The CIA published 13 million pages of classified documents about UFOs
CIA's secret documentary of UFOs is easily accessible on the official website of the agency.(Photo: Express).

Among the documents are reports of Henry Kissinger, US Secretary of State under President Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, and hundreds of thousands of pages on intelligence analysis, scientific research and development.

One of the most unusual records is the Stargate project, which specializes in psychic and psychic capacities, including experiments with the famous psychic Uri Geller in 1973. The records detail how Geller can reproduce part of the painting in another room, sometimes with high precision, making the team conclude that he " demonstrates a mystical spiritual ability in a clear and convincing way".

The remaining number of documents includes reports on flying saucers and invisible ink making formulas.

Although the public can view most of the information online from the mid-1990s, access to this data warehouse is difficult. Records are provided only through 4 computers located at the back of the library at the National Archives in Maryland, from 9am to 4:30 pm each day.

The nonprofit advocacy organization MuckRock sued the CIA to force the agency to post data for more than two years. At the same time, an American reporter named Mike Best mobilized more than $ 15,000 to go to the National Archives and print paper documents, publicly posted to pressure the CIA.

In November 2016, the CIA announced it would publish the document. The entire archive of confidential documents named CREST is now available on the CIA Library website.