The truth is out: X-Files go public

British UFO 'sightings' investigated by a secret branch of the MoD are soon to 
be revealed and officials are braced for a torrent of inquiries 

Mark Townsend, defence correspondent
Sunday January 6, 2008
The Observer 


Without warning, the orange UFO swooped toward them. The crew of the RAF Vulcan 
bomber banked hard and radioed they were being chased across the Atlantic by a 
large mysterious object. The incident was classified as a UFO sighting and the 
details were immediately locked away.
Now, 30 years later, the extraordinary encounter is among thousands of 
previously secret cases contained in the government's 'X-Files' that officials 
are to release in their entirety.

The cases, many from a little-known defence intelligence branch tasked with 
investigating UFO claims, will be published by the Ministry of Defence to 
counter what officials say is 'the maze of rumour and frequently ill-informed 
speculation' surrounding Whitehall and its alleged involvement with Unidentifed 
Flying Objects.
The public opening of the MoD archive will expose the once highly classified 
work of the intelligence branch DI55, whose mission was to investigate UFO 
reports and whose existence was denied by the government until recently. 
Reports into about 7,000 UFO sightings investigated by defence officials - 
every single claim lodged over the past 30 years - are included in the files, 
whose staged release will begin in spring.

The decision to release Whitehall's full back-catalogue of UFO investigations 
was taken last month after the Directorate of Air Space Policy, the government 
agency responsible for filtering sensitive reports, gave its permission to 
publish the biggest single release of documents in MoD history. Now the 
government fears a repeat of the unprecedented demand and the website crash 
experienced by the French national space agency in March when it released its 
own UFO files. Government IT experts are believed to have drawn up contingency 
plans to avoid a repeat scenario when Britain's dossiers are finally made 
public.

Among the first tranche of UK cases will be the official government files into 
the famous Rendlesham incident, dubbed 'Britain's Roswell' after the US 
incident when a flying saucer is said to have crash-landed in the New Mexico 
desert 60 years ago. On a foggy night in 1980 several witnesses reported a UFO 
apparently landing in Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk. Statements claimed the craft 
was covered in markings similar to Egyptian hieroglyphics and aliens emerged 
from it. Although a man later confessed to having staged the incident as a 
hoax, the files will clear up continuing speculation as to whether radiation 
was detected at the site after the event.

Another case reported to the intelligence branch DI55 - Britain's version of 
the 'Men In Black' - chronicles a series of reports sent to RAF Scampton, 
Lincolnshire, by the crew of a Vulcan bomber on exercise over the Bay of Biscay 
early on 26 May 1977. According to documents seen by The Observer, five 
crewmen, including the captain, co-pilot and navigators, watched 'an object' 
approach their aircraft at 43,000ft above the Atlantic. The mysterious craft 
then appeared to turn and follow their precise course from a distance of four 
miles.

Initially, the crew said the object resembled landing lights 'with a long 
pencil beam of light ahead' but as it turned towards them the lights suddenly 
went out leaving a diffuse orange glow with a bright fluorescent green spot in 
its bottom right-hand corner. Then, according to signals sent back to Scampton, 
the crew noted a mystery object 'leaving from the middle of the glow on a 
westerly track... climbing at very high speed at an angle of 45 degrees'.

The Vulcan's navigator recorded interference on his radar screen from the 
direction of the UFO which continued for 45 minutes as the plane headed back to 
Britain. On return to the UK, the camera film from the aircraft's radar was 
examined by RAF intelligence. They found a 'strong response' from the direction 
of the sighting. The UFO was captured as 'an elongated shadow' of a 
'large-sized' object travelling at a similar height to the Vulcan. An 
intelligence report sent to the MoD the same day says the crew 'were unable to 
offer a logical explanation for the sighting'.

Although hailed as the complete disclosure of the UK's UFO files, questions are 
likely to remain over whether all available information will be made public. 
Despite the Vulcan sighting being investigated by DI55, no details remain in 
the file indicating what they found or what became of the radar film.

The disclosures are more likely, claim some experts, to lend credence to the 
theory that such UFO incidents were, rather than alien visitations, military 
activities such as missile launches, testing of prototype aircraft and other 
activities during the Cold War.

David Clarke, a lecturer in journalism at Sheffield Hallam University and 
author of Flying Saucerers: A Social History of UFOlogy, said: 'Something was 
definitely going on, but really these files show that the government did not 
know either. This release will be a source of disappointment or vindication for 
some, and embarrassment for others.

'Conspiracy theorists who believe that the various governments of the world are 
hiding secrets about the "reality" of aliens will see this as another whitewash 
effort by the MoD and will probably continue their self-sustaining "campaign 
for the truth", when the truth will in fact now be "out there".'

UFO researcher Joe McGonagle said: 'There will always be a hard core who 
believe these files were prepared for release and that there is a secret 
department within the military who has a separate stash of files that have not 
been disclosed.'

UFOs remain one of the most popular subjects for Freedom of Information 
requests and the release is certain to generate a massive response from the 
public when the files are placed in the National Archives. Clarke, who has 
lodged hundreds of FoI requests, recently discovered that the government was 
considering destroying the 24 files created by DI55 because they were 
contaminated by asbestos. Not only were the UFO records polluted, but a total 
of 63,000 files estimated at between six to 12 million pages - most of them 
classified as secret - were facing the same fate. Having admitted the existence 
of the problem to Clarke, the MoD opted to instigate a £3m project digitally to 
scan the files before they were destroyed. Scanning of the 24 contaminated UFO 
files owned by DI55 was completed last year, although it is understood that 
names of officials in the reports will be removed.

Although the government remains reticent to discuss its intelligence work on 
UFOs, it is known that DI55 has been hot on the trail of flying saucers since 
the Sixties. Experts admit that they work closely with the security services 
MI5, MI6 and GCHQ to collect and assess evidence of potential threats to 
Britain.

The decision by the UK to open its files could lead to the US government 
following suit. A group of former pilots and government officials recently 
urged the Pentagon to reopen investigations into claims of UFO sightings.

UFO claims

1980 Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk. US servicemen claim to have seen an alien 
craft and its landing site.

1984 Minsk, USSR. Aeroflot pilots say they are pursued by a glowing shape.

1989 Bonnybridge, Scotland. Fire crew report objects rushing towards them 
before veering away at the last moment.

1990 Brussels, Belgium. Two F-16 fighter pilots recount being engaged in 
75-minute mid-air chase with a UFO.



www.guardian.co.uk




Special report
The military

Focus
The British army
The Royal Air Force
The Royal Navy

Useful links
British army
Royal Navy
RAF
Ministry of Defence
Nato
United Nations



mediacare
http://www.mediacare.biz


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke