OGA

UnknownOrganization2003-present (alleged)

Type

Organization

Status

Unknown

Active Period

2003-present (alleged)

Parent Organization

Central Intelligence Agency (alleged)

Summary

The Office of Global Access is an alleged Central Intelligence Agency office that, according to David Grusch and others in the UAP disclosure community, was established in 2003 and given a mandate to facilitate U.S. access to non-human intelligence craft and materials recovered abroad. Grusch has claimed that OGA operates as a coordination mechanism between the CIA and allied foreign intelligence services to ensure that crash retrieval events outside U.S. borders are brought to American custody. The office allegedly provides liaison and logistics capability to move recovered materials through existing intelligence channels while maintaining cover through legitimate intelligence operations.

Significance

OGA's significance lies in extending the alleged crash retrieval program beyond U.S. territory. If Grusch's account is accurate, OGA represents the CIA's institutional mechanism for international UAP material recovery - addressing the logical question of how the U.S. could maintain a retrieval program for events that occur globally. The 2003 establishment date, if accurate, would coincide with the post-9/11 CIA reorganization that created significant new authorities for overseas operations. OGA has not been acknowledged by the CIA, and the claim rests almost entirely on Grusch's testimony and the accounts of his named sources.

Limitations & Caveats

  • !OGA's existence in the UAP context rests entirely on David Grusch's testimony and the accounts he attributes to sources he has not publicly named.
  • !The CIA has not acknowledged an 'Office of Global Access' with a UAP mandate, and standard FOIA approaches to such a highly classified alleged program yield no results.
  • !Grusch has stated he received this information in classified briefings; the chain of custody for this claim cannot be publicly verified.
  • !The term 'OGA' (Other Government Agency) is also used generically in U.S. intelligence community parlance as a euphemism for the CIA in unclassified contexts, creating potential ambiguity in sourcing.