Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency / Department of State / CIA / FBI1945–1970Declassified: multiple FOIA releases
DECLASSIFIED

Operation Paperclip

Operation PaperclipJIOANazi scientistsCold WarFBICIAState DepartmentFOIA

The documents on this page are the actual government records behind Operation Paperclip. They include the presidential authorization signed by Harry S. Truman, the FBI's internal summary of its involvement with the program, JIOA operational records, and CIA files. All existed as scanned PDFs or buried government archives until now. Every word has been transcribed into searchable text for the first time.

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Operation Paperclip was a postwar U.S. government program that recruited German and Austrian scientists, engineers, and technicians and brought them to the United States for exploitation in military and civilian research. The program operated from 1945 through the early 1970s. At least 1,600 scientists and their dependents were brought to the United States under Paperclip and its successor programs.

The program was run by the Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency, a special intelligence office reporting to the Director of Intelligence in the War Department. The JIOA coordinated between the Army, Navy, Air Force, State Department, Department of Justice, FBI, and CIA. It compiled dossiers on scientists, managed their entry into the United States, and served as the liaison to British intelligence officers running a parallel program.

The program's original code name was Operation Overcast. It was renamed Operation Paperclip in November 1945, after Ordnance Corps officers began attaching paperclips to the folders of rocket experts they wished to employ in the United States.

The presidential authorization document, signed by Harry S. Truman on September 3, 1946, contains the screening standard that governed which scientists could enter the United States. That standard excluded anyone who was more than a nominal Nazi Party participant. It explicitly stated that position or honors awarded under the Nazi regime solely because of scientific ability would not disqualify a specialist. This standard is in the document Truman approved. It is not an allegation.

The FBI's internal summary, written January 7, 1983 and classified SECRET, confirms that in February 1947 the FBI reported to the Department of Justice that 16 of 124 scientists checked had Nazi Party membership in their files. The FBI stated at the time that it considered any person with Nazi Party connections a definite security threat. The program continued. The scientists received visas.

The FBI conducted 525 investigations of German scientists and specialists brought into the United States under the Paperclip program. It repeatedly refused to assume ongoing security responsibility for the scientists, stating this was outside its jurisdiction.

The documents do not establish that every Paperclip scientist was a war criminal. They establish that the U.S. government wrote a standard that allowed scientists with Nazi records to enter, was informed that some had those records, and continued the program.

Operation Paperclip does not stand alone in the declassified record. The scientists recruited under Paperclip went to work at institutions and programs that appear elsewhere in the government's own documents.

Several Paperclip scientists worked at Edgewood Arsenal, which later appears in the MKOFTEN and MKSEARCH records transcribed on this site. The institutional overlap between Paperclip, the postwar chemical and biological weapons programs, and the CIA behavioral research programs is documented, not speculative. The documents are the evidence.

The following documents have been transcribed in full as searchable HTML for the first time.

Federal Bureau of Investigation  •  1945–1966  •  FOIA Release 1459792-000
FBI internal summary of Operation Paperclip

The FBI's own account of its involvement with Paperclip from 1945 to 1966. Classified SECRET at time of writing. Confirms 525 FBI investigations, Nazi Party membership findings reported to DOJ, and the FBI's repeated refusal to assume security responsibility for the scientists.

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Department of State / White House  •  August 30, 1946  •  FRUS 1946, Volume V
Acheson memorandum to President Truman: presidential authorization

Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson's memorandum to President Truman requesting approval to expand Paperclip to 1,000 scientists. Includes the full policy enclosure with the screening standard. Bears Truman's handwritten notation: "Approved 9/3/46 Harry S Truman."

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Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency  •  December 4, 1947  •  National Archives RG 330
JIOA memorandum on Project Paperclip, December 4, 1947

The JIOA operational memorandum establishing the program's administrative procedures, dossier requirements, and interagency coordination protocols. From the Interagency Working Group final report to Congress.

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Central Intelligence Agency  •  1945–1955  •  CIA FOIA Reading Room
CIA Operation Paperclip files: full FOIA release

267 pages of CIA records on Operation Paperclip. Documents CIA coordination with JIOA, scientist dossiers, and the agency's role in the program. Published in multiple parts.

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Harry S. Truman Library  •  1945–1949  •  Truman Library FOIA
Truman Library Operation Paperclip records

16 pages of presidential-level records on Operation Paperclip from the Truman Library. White House correspondence and executive branch coordination on the program during the Truman administration.

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FBI FOIA release: FOIPA Request No. 1459792-000. Released February 21, 2020.

Presidential authorization: Foreign Relations of the United States, 1946, Volume V, Document 448. Office of the Historian, U.S. Department of State.

JIOA records: National Archives Record Group 330, Records of the Secretary of Defense.

CIA FOIA release: CIA FOIA Reading Room. 267 pages.

Truman Library: Harry S. Truman Library and Museum, Independence, Missouri.

National Archives: JIOA records, RG 330 →

The Black Vault: Operation Paperclip FOIA archive →

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The Interference begins with a patent. US3951134, filed in 1974, describes a device for remotely monitoring and altering human brain waves without physical contact. The patent is real. The USPTO granted it.

What precedes that patent is a documented institutional record. In 1960, the CIA funded MKUltra Subproject 119 at Texas Christian University. The stated objective included techniques of activation of the human organism by remote electronic means. The contractor was unwitting. The budget was $6,370. Sidney Gottlieb signed off. In 1952, an ARTICHOKE field team produced total amnesia in two overseas subjects held in a guarded safehouse with eyes taped shut in transit. Their dispositions after the operation were outside the team's responsibility. In 1963, the CIA Inspector General recommended termination of unwitting testing on American citizens. The program ran for another decade. In 1983, a U.S. Army Intelligence report filed in the CIA's STARGATE collection treated the brain as an electromagnetic organ that could be entrained to external frequencies. Not as theory. As established fact.

The Colonial Authority in The Interference is what that timeline produces if you follow it forward rather than stop at the declassified record. The mesh program James Harlan carries inside his skull is built on the physics in these documents. The fiction begins exactly where the public record stops answering questions.

The Interference series begins here: williamraybrown.com →