After the war ended, he became "Chief Engineer" of the Photogrammetry Division of the Naval Photographic Interpretation Center (the original NPIC, which subsequently became known as the Naval Reconnaissance Technical Support Center - NRTSC). In 1953, he moved to the
CIA, to lead the "Photographic Interpretation Division (PID), manage both general photointerpretation and then the products, in the late fifties, of the
U-2 program. In 1954 he served as President of the
American Society of Photogrammetry (ASP).
NPIC and the U-2 In that effort, he combined
photo interpretation, automatic data processing, photogrammetry, graphic arts, communications, collateral research, and technical analysis into the NPIC. According to his associate,
Dino Brugioni, on July 4, 1956, using the U-2 aircraft, and within two months, the NPIC could put to rest the political accusation of a "bomber gap". Next, the U-2 was used tactically to keep US policymakers informed on the Suez Crisis of 1956. Other U-2 missions analyzed by NPIC included flyovers of Tibet, the offshore islands of the PRC, and Lebanon. Overflights of the USSR continued until a U-2 was shot down in May 1960.
Unidentified Flying Objects CIA documents indicate that the agency monitored the UFO situation starting in 1952. Lundahl's first meeting with a study group was in 1967.
Lundahl meets with Air Force contract team In 1967, the Air Force issued a contract, to the University of Colorado, for the study of unidentified flying objects. BG
Edward B. Giller, USAF, was the contract monitor, Dr. Thomas Rachford was the senior Air Force Scientist on the project, and the principal investigator from the University was Dr. E.U. Condon. "On 20 February 1967 at 0915
Dr. Condon and four members of his investigative team visited NPIC. With Dr. Condon were Dr. Richard Love, University of Colorado, Dr. David Saunders, University of Colorado, Dr. William Price, Executive Director of APRST, and Dr. Rachford, USAF. The purpose of this visit was to familiarize Dr. Condon and members of his team with selected photogrammetric and photographic analysis capabilities of NPIC. Lundahl met with investigators of
UFO reports ." The meeting was allowed to discuss classified material through the SECRET level. NPIC established ground rules: In summary, Condon and the same group met again in May 1967 at NPIC to hear an analysis of UFO photographs taken at
Zanesville, Ohio. The analysis debunked that sighting. The committee was again impressed with the technical work performed, and Condon remarked that for the first time a scientific analysis of a UFO would stand up to investigation.
Discussion of UFO's with Jacque Vallée On an episode of
The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, computer scientist
Jacque Vallée recounted a conversation he had with Lundahl about a piece of strange metal which had been shot off a UFO during a 1952 sighting over Washington, D.C. ==Beginnings of space-based photoreconnaissance==