The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has quietly moved to discontinue its long-running World Factbook, ending a staple reference tool that has served both intelligence professionals and the general public for decades.
According to the Daily Caller, the agency announced Wednesday that the World Factbook, which first appeared online in 1997, has served the Intelligence Community and the general public as a longstanding, one-stop basic reference about countries and communities around the globe. The CIAs notice offered no concrete explanation for why the publication is being terminated, an omission likely to raise questions among researchers, journalists and citizens who relied on the resource as a neutral, taxpayer-funded compendium of global data.
When contacted for clarification, a CIA spokesperson directed the Daily Caller News Foundation back to the posted announcement and declined to elaborate further. The lack of additional comment underscores a broader pattern in which major shifts in federal information policy occur with minimal transparency, despite their impact on public access to basic facts about foreign nations.
The World Factbook traces its roots to a classified volume, The National Basic Intelligence Factbook, first issued in 1962, according to the agencys own account. An unclassified companion followed in 1971 and was rebranded as The World Factbook roughly a decade later, gradually becoming one of the most recognizable public-facing products of the U.S. intelligence community.
Once the Factbook migrated to CIA.gov in 1997, it began drawing millions of visits each year, reflecting its broad appeal beyond government circles. Though the World Factbook is gone, in the spirit of its global reach and legacy, we hope you will stay curious about the world and find ways to explore it in person or virtually, the CIA wrote, offering a sentimental farewell in place of a substantive justification.
The Factbooks entries spanned history, government, economics, communications, the environment and other global issues, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. The Associated Press reported that it became a go-to reference for journalists, trivia buffs and college students, a role that will now likely be filled by less accountable private platforms or ideologically driven sources.
The decision comes against the backdrop of long-running concerns about politicization and bloat within the intelligence bureaucracy. In April 2025, CIA Director John Ratcliffe pledged to eliminate the well-documented politicization that has taken place in the intelligence community, and the agency is reportedly preparing to cut more than 1,000 positions in line with President Donald Trumps broader effort to streamline federal agencies and curb the growth of the administrative state.
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