The Woolsey Briefing: Greer Briefs CIA Director at His Home (1993)
In December 1993, Steven Greer was invited to the home of CIA Director R. James Woolsey for a private dinner and briefing. Woolsey's wife Suzanne attended. Greer presented his evidence on UAP programs, recovered craft, the contractors involved, and the illegal classification structure hiding it all. By Greer's account, Woolsey was genuinely stunned — he had not been read into these programs despite being the Director of Central Intelligence. This is consistent with the pattern documented throughout the hub: the programs operate above presidential and CIA director authority, compartmentalized within defense contractors under special access programs that even the DIA Director (Admiral Wilson) was denied access to. THE DENIAL AND THE CONFIRMATION: Years later, when the briefing became public, Woolsey attempted to downplay the meeting. However, Woolsey's wife Suzanne confirmed the dinner occurred exactly as Greer described. Multiple other attendees corroborated. The denial-then-confirmation pattern itself is significant — it mirrors how the entire UAP topic works: officials who privately acknowledge the reality publicly deny or minimize it. THE SIGNIFICANCE: Greer briefing the CIA Director is not a fringe claim — it happened, and multiple witnesses confirm it. The question is what it means. If the Director of Central Intelligence genuinely didn't know about UAP programs, then those programs operate completely outside the intelligence community's chain of command. This is the same conclusion the Wilson-Davis memo reaches from a different angle: the DIA Director was also denied access. Two of America's top intelligence officials — one CIA, one DIA — both locked out. Greer's briefing of Woolsey also established his credibility with the intelligence community: if you can get a dinner at the CIA Director's home, your network is real. This briefing preceded and enabled everything that followed — the 2001 NPC event, the Wilson briefing with Edgar Mitchell, and the 35-year disclosure project.