ID | 146172 |
Title Proper | Grounded before takeoff |
Other Title Information | the 1966 decision to cancel the A-12 OXCART |
Language | ENG |
Author | Swanson, Eric P |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Most people have never heard of the Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA) A-12 OXCART aircraft, and many would have difficulty differentiating it from an Air Force SR-71 Blackbird. Though similar, the A-12 was by many accounts more capable than its famous cousin. Yet, in December 1966, the A-12 was cancelled, not the SR-71. With that cancellation, the United States essentially lost its ability to conduct covert, non-military aerial reconnaissance.1 The main reason scholars and the public know so little about the A-12 is that many details of the program remained classified until 2007, and some documents until as recently as August 2013. Newly-declassified documents on the A-12, SR-71, and the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) help fill a significant gap in the literature on the cause of the A-12's cancellation. But the question remains: Why did President Lyndon B. Johnson cancel the A-12 program in December 1966? |
`In' analytical Note | International Journal of Intelligence and Counter Intelligence Vol. 29, No.1; Spring 2016: p.75-97 |
Journal Source | International Journal of Intelligence and Counter Intelligence Vol: 29 No 1 |
Key Words | Surveillance ; Grounded Before Takeoff ; 1966 Decision ; A-12 OXCART ; New Dimensions |