Widely considered the UN's most effective chief, Hammarskjold died as he was attempting to broker a ceasefire in the newly independent Congo. The crash of his DC-6 aircraft near Ndola Airport in modern-day Zambia has bred a rash of conspiracy theories, many centering on some startling inconsistencies.
For example: Why did it take 15 hours to find the wreckage, just a few miles from the airport? Why did Hammarskjold's bodyguard, who survived the crash for a few days, say that the plane "blew up"? Why did witnesses report seeing sparks, flashes, or even another plane?
The four-member commission established to weigh those questions was only meant to recommend whether those questions merited further investigation, not answer them.
In his introduction to its report, commission chairman Stephen Sedley said key evidence may lie with America's electronic eavesdropping agency, the NSA. Sedley said it was a "near certainty" that the NSA was recording radio transmissions from the African airfield near where Hammarskjold's plane crashed, meaning that American intelligence could help determine whether the UN chief died as a result of an accident or of a conspiracy.
Sedley said that the commission had already sought the help of George Washington University's National Security Archive, a non-governmental research centre, in identifying whether the NSA had any relevant information.
"Of three documents or records which appear to respond to our request, two are classified top secret on national security grounds," Sedley said.