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THE Ministry of Defence ordered an investigation of thousands of UFO
sightings in the 1990s to examine whether alien spaceship technology
could be exploited to build advanced engines for the RAF, according to
a new official history.
The book, based on the ministry’s “X-files” of thousands of
sightings, shows that an unnamed wing commander initiated the project
in 1993 because he believed it was wrong to assume extra-terrestrial
craft did not exist.
Nick Pope, who has written on UFOs and was a colleague of the
officer at the MoD, confirmed the book’s account: “I remember him
saying he believed there was evidence of an exotic propulsion system
and the bottom line was that if they had it, we sure as hell wanted
it.” Pope would not disclose the man’s name.
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Official documents from the wing commander are quoted in the book,
written by David Clarke, senior journalism lecturer at Sheffield Hallam
University.
The officer wrote that while most of the phenomena would have
rational explanations, “if the sightings are of devices not of this
earth then their purpose needs to be established as a matter of
priority”.
He added: “There has been no apparently hostile intent and other
possibilities are 1) military reconnaissance; 2) scientific; and 3)
tourism.”
Alien engines, if they existed, were apparently “stealthy” and “do
not use conventional reaction propulsion systems”. The wing commander
wanted to explore possibilities for “technology transfer”.
The new book, The UFO Files: The Inside Story of Real-Life
Sightings, is published by the National Archives in Kew, west London,
and is based largely on MoD files released there. It traces the story
of UFO sightings in Britain from the first decade of the 20th century.
Through much of the past 100 years, thousands of sightings by people
ranging from RAF pilots to police officers and children have been
collated by the MoD who believed they could yield evidence of advanced
foreign aircraft of which Britain had no knowledge.
Some remain hard to explain, such as foo fighters, the name given to
balls of fire that seemed to pursue RAF bombers in the second world war.
It was only in the 1990s, partly at the wing commander’s prompting,
that the MoD finally did a systematic analysis of UFO sightings, called
Project Condign.
Most were explained by everyday objects, such as airships, clouds or
even chinese lanterns, being mistakenly identified as alien craft, or
by unusual atmospheric phenomena. No evidence of aliens was found.
A retired senior official at the defence intelligence staff, where
the wing commander was employed, said: “Some people had bees under
their bonnet ... whenever UFOs were raised at the weekly directorate
meetings it was in a fairly light-hearted and dismissive way.”
Clarke’s book shows sightings are still frequent. In 2007 the MoD
opened a file on an incident over the sea near Guernsey in which pilots
of two planes saw a “sparkling yellow object shaped like a long, thin
cigar”.
Last year the MoD’s directorate of air staff logged 285 UFO
sightings. The ministry runs a UFO hotline at RAF High Wycombe in
Buckinghamshire which the public can telephone with details of
sightings. The number is 01494 496 254.
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Jack Grimston
- http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/article6841250.ece
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