Project Sign
Project Sign was the United States Air Force's inaugural systematic investigation into unidentified flying objects (UFOs), formally established on January 23, 1948, under the Air Technical Intelligence Center (ATIC) at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base to evaluate sightings amid Cold War concerns over potential Soviet secret weapons or extra-planetary phenomena posing national security risks.[1] The project systematically collected and analyzed reports of anomalous aerial phenomena, reviewing 243 UFO sightings alongside intelligence on foreign weaponry capabilities, with initial assessments open to extraordinary explanations including possible extraterrestrial origins.[1] An internal analysis titled the "Estimate of the Situation," prepared in July 1948, reportedly concluded that interplanetary sources could explain certain unexplained cases, but this document was rejected by Air Force Chief of Staff General Hoyt Vandenberg due to lack of supporting proof and subsequently ordered destroyed.[1] By February 1949, Project Sign transitioned into Project Grudge, reflecting a personnel shift and a more skeptical orientation toward debunking claims, as the final report attributed most sightings to misidentifications, psychological factors, or hoaxes, while acknowledging no definitive evidence of advanced aircraft but recommending ongoing intelligence monitoring without ruling out unconventional origins entirely.[1] This evolution highlighted internal tensions between empirical openness and institutional pressure for prosaic resolutions, setting the stage for subsequent UFO inquiries like Project Blue Book.[2]