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This article from The Register follows recent sightings of 'building size' orb-like objects around the UK. The Uk broadsheet The Daily Telepgraph reported lights in Cambridgeshire and near Liverpool and Southport. An image caught by a local resident can be seen below in this article. Although as we reported back in our popular 2008 article many of the so called orbs may well be party lanterns - it seems as if this current batch are indeed something different.
From article: A Royal Navy warship may have come within seconds of opening fire on
Unidentified Flying Objects above Merseyside, possibly narrowly
avoiding the precipitation of an interstellar war and the extirpation
of humanity by testy aliens.
Reports have it that the UFOs - speculated to have been visiting
spacecraft from beyond the solar system - were tracked on naval weapons
radars.
The revelation comes from the Telegraph, reporting on last
week's sightings of "orange, ball-shaped" UFOs cruising above scouse
beauty-spots between South Liverpool and Southport.
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The orange,
blob-like flying balls - said by some witnesses to have "dropped fire"
at times - were assessed by some to be floating Chinese lanterns, but
this theory was widely disparaged among headline-writers in favour of
the more crowd-pleasing interstellar visitors hypothesis.
"Building size" Orange Orb Formations - Caught by Cambs Resident
So far, so what. But then the Telegraph entered the debate with stunning revelations from "an ex-military source" regarding the presence of HMS Daring, a Royal Navy Type 45 destroyer which was docked in Liverpool as the UFOs passed over.
"The guns on the ships are powered by radar," [?] said the source,
"but military radar and civilian radar work on different frequencies,
so that is probably why the airport said it had not picked anything up."
The Telegraph says that the UFOs were actually
"countermeasure flares used to test the radar systems of huge
anti-missile guns on the ship". The broadsheet carries on to say:
Countermeasure flares are designed to prevent radar-based missile systems locking on to aircraft by providing multiple targets.
The warship, which was docked at Liverpool's cruise liner terminal,
is fitted with radar-activated Phalanx guns, which are capable of
firing more than 3,000 rounds a minute.
"What happened was a plane flew over at high altitude following the
path of the river and dropped the counter measures, which the radar
tracked," said the paper's unnamed source.
"That's why people reported seeing them where they did, from Mossley Hill up to Southport."
Actually, while the Type 45 ships are designed to be fitted with Phalanx radar-controlled guns, they don't have them yet, owing to lack of money. The plan is apparently to cannibalise weapons from older ships as they retire. But Daring
does have her 4.5-inch main gun, and a pair of ordinary slower-firing
30mm cannon intended for use against pirate dhows and the like.
The 4.5" "Kryten"
gun turret (a type of weapon in use since before World war II) can be
fired under radar control. It would normally be seen as a poor choice
for anti-aircraft work these days, but beggars can't be choosers - the
ships' PAAMS missiles, their primary armament, aren't ready yet either.
The "Radar countermeasure flares" notion is plainly poppycock,
however. Countermeasure flares are for confusing infrared systems, not
radar - though ordinary illumination flares are used
occasionally as aiming targets for lighter manually-aimed guns. But you
certainly aren't going to start letting off flares over a
densely-populated urban area in the UK, so we're staying with the much
more credible alien-visitors idea.
So what we've got here is HMS Daring tracking
extraterrestrial spacecraft, and possibly almost certainly coming
within inches of triggering an interstellar invasion by an ill-timed
freak accidental firing mishap. That is, in the unlikely event that the
rather feeble weapons actually fitted to the navy's newest, billion-pound destroyer were actually able to do any harm. (
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