British military authorities give up hunt for UFOs
A
flying object is seen on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, in this
1981 photograph. The “truth” may still be “out there”, as fans of The
X-Files will argue, but the British military authorities are no longer
looking for it. Photograph: Reuters
The last of the British government’s UFO files have been released.
The “truth” may still be “out there”, as fans of The X-Files will argue, but the British military authorities are no longer looking for it
The
national archives in Kew yesterday published the final 25 files of the
Ministry of Defence’s UFO desk, which closed in November 2009 after 60
years in operation.
In a final rush of interest in UFOs, spurred
on by news that the unit was to close, over 600 alleged sightings were
reported in its final year, treble the number of the year before.
However, even that surge was behind the flood of reports that emerged after Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind became a Hollywood sensation in 1978. The decision to close was made after defence secretary Bob Ainsworth
was told that in 50 years “no UFO sighting reported has ever revealed
anything to suggest an extra-terrestrial presence or military threat to
the UK”.
The British began to take an interest in the subject after an American pilot, Kenneth Arnold,
reported in 1947 that he had spotted nine objects flying at great
speeds “like a saucer skipping on water”. Thus, the phrase “flying
saucers” was born.
Piffle
Three years later, the British established the “Flying Saucer Working Party”, though it declared a year later that all UK sightings were piffle – explained by meteorology or astronomy, or because the witness was delusional.
Piffle
Three years later, the British established the “Flying Saucer Working Party”, though it declared a year later that all UK sightings were piffle – explained by meteorology or astronomy, or because the witness was delusional.
However, spurred on by a succession of films, such as Flying Disc Man from Mars, The Flying Saucer and The Day the Earth Stood Still, the public continued to record sightings.
In 1951, even Winston Churchill
became involved, writing to one of his ministers: “What does all this
stuff about flying saucers amount to? What can it mean? What is the
truth? Let me have a report at your convenience.”
The
number of alleged sightings, including one of an alien craft hovering
opposite the Houses of Parliament increased with the arrival of summer,
taking place while people were “outside walking dogs, smoking
cigarettes, at family barbecues – and even while relaxing in hot tubs”.
To
mark the publication of the final documents held by the archives, an
iPhone/iPad app, UFO Files UK, is being released today. It lets the
public search through 25 years of paperwork and 5,000 sightings,
“analysed, categorised and mapped”.
The app’s
designers noticed interesting patterns: the best place and time to see a
UFO is in Glasgow between 10pm and 11pm (shortly before closing time);
sightings drop dramatically between 1pm and 2pm; in London, Bromley is a
hotspot, while Wembley has never had a sighting.
If some of the witness reports can be put down to
enthusiastic social drinking at a summer barbecue, there is no doubt
that some display distress over what those concerned believed they saw.
In
one from Bolton in Lancashire in March 2009, a family, who had been in
their sitting room at 1.30am, reported seeing “what at first appeared to
be a large airliner in flames crashing to the ground”.
‘Terrified’
“My parents were terrified. Just as we were expecting the object to crash into the ground it stopped and hovered over Bromley Cross. The object then appeared to come towards us, stop suddenly and at high speech shoot off in a southeasterly direction towards Bury,” said the witness.
‘Terrified’
“My parents were terrified. Just as we were expecting the object to crash into the ground it stopped and hovered over Bromley Cross. The object then appeared to come towards us, stop suddenly and at high speech shoot off in a southeasterly direction towards Bury,” said the witness.
In 2007, a man in Glamorgan in Wales
reported that a UFO, which had been moving quite slowly across the sky
in formation with others, turned and abducted his “dog, car and tent
when he and some friends were out camping”.
While some correspondents were
attention-seekers, others were desperate to ensure their names were
never published for fear of ridicule, but “still wanted to do our duty”.
In
one report from south Yorkshire in 2007, a couple, who said “we really
do value our privacy”, reported “a very bright, luminous piercing light
in the sky”, “shooting sprays of light out from it”. However, the
husband failed to get a photograph of “the greenish orange colour with a
number of small lights on its outer rim” as his dog set off the
security lights.
In Bingley in west Yorkshire, in
2008, a man claimed to have seen 30 UFOs flying in formation, while
another report that year from Leeds spoke of “a jumbo jet sized object,
that was flat and round with a blue rippled underside”.
Mark Hennessy
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