The
truth is out there... and it's a bit of a letdown
By
Sarah Freeman
The
Ministry of Defence is about to open its UFO foles, but the contents threaten
to reveal more about Cold War blunders than extraterrestrials.
The
truth often has a habit of disappointing.
When
the Ministry of Defence announced it was going to parcel up all the reports it
had ever made on UFOs and send them to the National Archive it created a wave
of excited chatter in chat rooms and web blogs devoted to all things paranormal.
Interest
was understandable the MoD has had an office dedicated to UFO sightings
since 1950 and while it's more likely to have been a dingy broom cupboard, with
no natural sunlight, and few home comforts than any kind of Men in Black headquarters,
details of its activities have always appeared shrouded in secrecy.
According
to the conspiracy theorists its staff have been too busy covering up alien landings
to hold press conferences and publish books, their filing cabinets overflowing
with documents containing precise co-ordinates of extra-terrestrial visits to
planet Earth. However, those who've had an early glimpse of what's on offer insist
that those wanting photographic evidence of little green men will remain disappointed.
One
of those responsible for the MoD decision to go public is David Clarke, a man
who has spent the last few years using the Freedom of Information Act to bombard
the Government with requests to release details of various incidents up and down
the country.
As
pastimes go, it's hardly conventional. While some would described him as an obsessive
and others as just another player in the great cover-up machine, the Sheffield
Hallam University lecturer insists he's neither.
"Whenever
anyone asks me whether I believe in UFOs I quietly groan," he says. "I
am interested in unidentified flying objects, but it's something which comes with
a whole lot of other connotations.
"Originally
the term was coined by the Americans in an effort to get away from flying saucers,
but it doesn't seem to have worked. For me these sightings are a part of social
history and I've always been intrigued by how they were viewed by intelligence
sources."
David
has been nothing if not committed and one can only imagine the MoD switchboard
staff must let out a small sigh whenever they hear his voice on the other end
of the phone. His mission began in 1999 when he applied for the release of files
relating to a UFO sighting in Rendlesham, Suffolk an incident dubbed Britain's
answer to Roswell but in 2005 a new piece of legislation came into force
which was manna from heaven.
The
Freedom of Information Act compelled public bodies to release information on request
within a one-month time limit and with the law behind him David's assault on the
MoD and in particular intelligence branch DI55 intensified.
"In
the end, I think they decided it was costing them a lot of time and money to reply
to every individual request, so they would be better off handing over everything
they had to a national archive," he says. "Over the past 30 years there
have been 7,000 sightings and because there is so much paperwork the release is
going to be staggered over a number of years."
David
is now trying to secure a grant which would pay for an in-depth audit of the papers,
which he says will tell us as much about military intelligence, or the lack of
it, during the Cold War than they do about alien life-form.
"Clearly
the MoD never believed we were visited by little green men," says David.
"However, DI55 was supposed to investigate UFO sightings in case it was evidence
a foreign government was developing missiles and satellites or testing prototype
aircraft.
"It's
work was shrouded in secrecy, because they new if it came out they were spending
public money tracing UFOs it would be taken out of context, but it was, or at
least should have been, considered vital intelligence work. What's interesting
is just how scant most of the reports are."
The
opening of the Government's X-Files is bound to renew interest in cases such as
the Rendlesham Forest incident in 1980 when several witnesses reported an apparent
UFO landing outside the perimeter fence of a military base in Suffolk. One of
the witnesses, Colonel Charles Hunt, sent a detailed report to Whitehall, but
the files show he was never interviewed and the subsequent investigation was fatally
flawed due to a confusion over dates.
"Bearing
in mind this was a military base, you might have thought the MoD would have taken
more interest in the witness statements of respected officers," says David.
"In reality they did nothing and when Col Hart's report landed on their desk
some three weeks later it still failed to kick them into life. "They concluded
that there was nothing especially noteworthy about what happened at Rendlesham.
However, it turned out Col Hart had included the wrong dates for the sighting
and because the MoD failed to cross reference the report with police logs unsurprisingly
the investigation came to nothing.
"It's
easy to forget, but in the 1980s we were in the height of the Cold War, night
and day there were protesters outside Greenham Common, but when it came to sightings
of what could have been Russian satellites or aircraft there was no sense of urgency.
"In
truth, 90 per cent of sightings can be easily explained whether it be a 9.45pm
flight into Manchester or even an unusual cloud formation which is picked up on
radar, but it's that five per cent which no one can explain which is interesting."
While
most of the papers won't set the paranormal world on fire, their release almost
didn't happen when some 63,000 files running to 12 million pages, apparently contaminated
by asbestos, were earmaked for destruction. However, when news of their intentions
became known the MoD, confounding accusations of a cover-up, spent £3m making
digital copies of the files.
"While
we managed to save these papers a lot has already been lost or destroyed,"
says David. "Pretty much everything before 1950 has gone and it wasn't until
1967 that they stopped routinely destroying things at five-yearly intervals. It
is a victory for freedom of information, but there are always going to be some
who will consider it a whitewash.The truth is that these papers show they were
incompetent at keeping proper files and tracking information on UFOs, so if we
had ever been visited by aliens I'm sure we would have heard by now."
THE
SIGHTINGS
1977
Broad
Haven, Wales
There were several reported UFO sightings in the area during the
1970s, but the most widely publicised was the strange visitation to a field near
to Broad Haven Primary School in February 1977. Fourteen primary children witnessed
a silvery yellow cigar shaped UFO and some said they had seen a figure in a silver
suit. Following this report there were adult witnesses to a dome shaped UFO in
the same area.
1989
Bonnybridge,
Scotland
A
fire crew were attending a blaze when they saw what appeared to be a red object
hovering in the distance. A second object then appeared above a loch about 20ft
from the witnesses, followed by a third which passed overhead. After a further
spate of sightings the area was dubbed the UFO Capital of Scotland.
1987
Ilkley
Moor
A
former police officer was walking over moorland when he claimed he saw a small
green creature about 4ft tall with overlong arms running towards a hollow in the
hillside. He shouted at the creature, which waved its arms at him, and he managed
to snap a picture. The resulting photograph, which experts later said had not
been tampered with, did show a strange figure, but sadly he was never seen again.