• main
  • reviews
  • articles
  • authors
  • books
  • about
    • high contrast
    • default

BOOK REVIEWS / EDITORIALS

FEATURING...

ARTICLE ARCHIVES

Latest Articles

Obama ban: What not to wear where?
24 July 08

Chipping’ of Humans No Longer the Stuff of Novels; Use of RFIDs Becoming Commonplace in America
24 July 08

One Million Terrorists?---'Watch' List Hasn't Nabbed A Single Terrorist
24 July 08

Kurds ask for US bases to be built near Iran border
24 July 08

Christian policeman 'victimised' over opposition to gay pride event
24 July 08

McDonald’s Franchisee to Pay $1 Million for Hiring illegals
24 July 08

Hillary Donors Not Backing Obama
24 July 08

Wachovia Loses $8.9B, Exits Wholesale Mortgage
24 July 08

Jury Duty Scam DO NOT DELETE WITHOUT READING !
23 July 08

AL BIELEK: Smearing a good man
23 July 08

BARAK OBAMA & THE UN's DRIVE FOR GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
23 July 08

FEMA seeks immunity from suits over trailer fumes
23 July 08

Top Rocket Scientist: No Evidence CO2 Causes Global Warming
23 July 08

Have Our Leaders Lost Their Minds?
23 July 08

Obama Bans Signs From Rally To Be Watched By Millions
23 July 08

War: Who Decides?
23 July 08

BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP
23 July 08

ILLEGAL RX? BARACK OBJECTS & DICK ANSWERS
22 July 08

Citizen get Felony charge for what Illegals do DAILY !
22 July 08

Ebola-like virus returns to Europe after 40 years
22 July 08

« older article         newer article »

Air controllers reported UFO: British papers

http://www.suntimes.com/news/world/946860,ufo051308.article

 May 13, 2008

FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON —

The men were air traffic controllers. Experienced, calm professionals. Nobody was drinking. But they were so worried about losing their jobs that they demanded their names be kept off the official report.

No one, they knew, would believe their claim an unidentified flying object landed at the airport they were overseeing in the east of England, touched down briefly, then took off again at tremendous speed. Yet that’s what they reported happened at 4 p.m. on April 19, 1984.

The incident is one of hundreds of reported sightings contained in more than 1,000 pages of formerly secret UFO documents being released Wednesday by Britain’s National Archives. It is one of the few that was never explained.

The air traffic controllers’ ‘‘Report of Unusual Aerial Phenomenon’’ was filed from an unspecified small airport near the eastern coast of England.

The men, each with more than eight years on the job, described how they were helping guide a small plane to a landing on runway 22 when they were distracted by a brightly lit object approaching a different runway without clearance.

‘‘Everyone became aware that the object was unidentified,’’ their report said. ‘‘SATCO (code name for a controller with 14 years experience) reports that the object came in ’at speed,’ made a touch and go on runway 27, then departed at ’terrific speed’ in a ’near vertical’ climb.’’

The incident is one of the more credible in the newly public files because it was reported by air traffic controllers, said David Clarke, a UFO expert who worked with the National Archives on the document release.

‘‘They were absolutely astonished,’’ he said. ‘‘It was a bright, circular object, flashing different colors, and after it touched down it disappeared at fantastic speed. The report comes from very qualified people, and it’s one of the few that remained unexplained.’’

But while there are some unexplained cases in the papers, there is no reported instance in which the Ministry of Defense found any evidence of alien activity or alien spacecraft, said Clarke, who nonetheless expects conspiracy theories about a UFO cover-up by the British defense establishment to persist.

‘‘The Ministry of Defense doesn’t have any evidence that our defenses were breached by alien craft,’’ Clarke said. ‘‘They never found one, no bits of one. That’s all we can say.’’

Clarke said the released documents, dealing with the late 1970s and early 1980s, are the first batch in a series that will be made public in the next few years.

The National Archives is releasing the files because of numerous freedom of information requests seeking information about the government’s UFO reports. Officials said that names of many individuals had been blacked out to protect their privacy and that the entire files had been reviewed to make sure their release did not compromise national security.

Ministry of Defense officials indicate in the files that UFO reports were only investigated to make sure no enemy aircraft had illegally entered British airspace. This was crucial during the Cold War when Russian planes posed a threat.

Officials said they did not try to solve UFO riddles once an enemy attack had been ruled out.

The vast majority of UFO reports come from members of the public who see strange things in the sky and jump to the conclusion that a UFO is involved even though there are logical explanations for what they observe, experts said.

‘‘The most common things are aircraft lights, bright stars and planets, satellites, meteors, airships and things like that,’’ said Nick Pope, another UFO expert who helped the Ministry of Defense investigate the phenomenon.v That was the case when a number of people leaving a Tunbridge Wells pub one night reported seeing a strange craft ‘‘with red and green’’ lights, according to the released documents.

Asked by police where the object seemed to be traveling, the pub crawlers said it appeared to be heading for London’s Gatwick Airport. It didn’t take a scientist to figure out it was a commercial plane making a routine approach.

permanent link

Copyright (C) 2001-2008: The Rose Garden - The Universal Seduction series and material listed on our authors' page - All Rights Reserved. The Rose Garden and The Universal Seduction, Piercing the Veils of Deception is a registered trademark. The collective authorship takes no responsibility for articles authored by others. They are posted for your reading edification and we are neither advocating nor disavowing the information found therein. * Republication and re-dissemination of articles with an asterisk is expressly prohibited without prior written consent.