http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,543150,00.html



US base's report of UFO crash 'had MoD in a panic'

Richard Norton-Taylor
Tuesday August 28, 2001
The Guardian

A report by the deputy commander of a US nuclear base in East Anglia of an
unidentified flying object provoked panic in the Ministry of Defence,
newly-released documents have revealed.

In what was claimed to be Britain's first UFO landing, Lieutenant Colonel
Charles Halt, commander of the US Bentwaters base near Woodbridge in Suffolk,
reported that two of his security patrolmen had seen "unusual lights" early
in the morning of December 27, 1980.

Thinking that an aircraft had crashed, they reported seeing "a strange
glowing object in the Rendlesham forest". The object was described as being
"metallic in appearance and triangular in shape".

It had a "pulsing red light on top and bank of blue lights underneath".

Animals on a nearby farm were said to have gone into a " frenzy". The
following day three depressions were found as well as traces of radiation,
Col Halt reported.

His report was released under the US freedom of information act two years
later. What has not been disclosed until now is the MoD's response to it.

British papers on the incident have been discovered by David Clarke, a
researcher at Sheffield University who is writing a book on UFOs.

The Halt report was sent to the MoD with a covering letter by Squadron Leader
Donald Moreland, an RAF liaison officer, who referred to "some mysterious
sightings".

The ministry's scientists said they could offer "no explanation for the
phenomena", or the radiation. Radar tapes from the night in question were
impounded from nearby RAF bases to see if there was any evidence that British
airspace had been invaded.

The papers make clear the MoD was concerned more about protecting the base
from unwelcome publicity than about the alleged UFO sightings.

The ministry was worried about rumours being spread suggesting that the
"alien landing" was a clever cover story for an accident involving nuclear
weapons, the crash of a prototype Stealth aircraft, or even the secret
recovery of part of a Soviet satellite.

It was also worried that anti-nuclear campaigners would be alerted to the
presence of nuclear bombs at Bentwaters.

Yet it had something else to hide. Five documents are being withheld on the
grounds that they contain confidential briefings to ministers, relate to
national security, or affect Britain's relations with the US.

Dr Clarke, of Sheffeld University's centre for English cultural tradition,
and whose book is due to be published by Piatkus next year, has asked the MoD
to release them.

He said: "Here we had USAF servicemen at a highly sensitive Nato base chasing
UFOs around a forest in the middle of the night."

He added: "The files raise questions about how easily our defences could be
fooled."


Reply via email to