MoD UFO Project Axed
By Nick Pope
The Guardian commissioned Nick Pope to write this article in response to the termination of the MoD's UFO project. It was published on 5th December 2009.
On 1st December 2009 the Ministry of Defence terminated its
UFO project. After over 50 years of investigating the phenomenon, the plug was
pulled in a most unceremonious way.
The news was slipped out in a way designed not to attract attention, by making
an amendment to an existing document in the Freedom of Information section of
the MoD website, entitled "How to report a UFO sighting". The announcement
states that "in over fifty years, no UFO report has revealed any evidence of a
potential threat to the United Kingdom" and goes on to say that "MOD will no
longer respond to reported UFO sightings or investigate them". When rumbled, the
MoD press office tried to spin the story by implying that the money saved
(around £50K a year) would be spent on body armour in Afghanistan. It won’t be.
As someone whose 21 year MoD career included a posting in a financial policy
division, I know that’s not how it works. Indeed, finance has played a part in
this, I am sure. The defence budget is under huge pressure and the UFO project
was doubtless an easy target for the Treasury and MoD financiers.
From the Fifties to the present day, the MoD received around 12,000 UFO reports.
While most were misidentifications of ordinary objects and phenomena, around 5%
remained unexplained. These included instances where UFOs were seen by police
officers and pilots, or tracked on radar.
Having worked on the UFO project from 1991 to 1994, I am very sorry to see MoD
disengage in this way. I believe that where evidence suggests that UK airspace
has been penetrated by an unidentified object, this must automatically be of
defence interest and should be investigated properly. Not because I believe
Britain is vulnerable to an alien attack, but because “if it doesn’t behave like
a conventional aircraft, we’re not interested” is a very dangerous mindset.
Britain remains vulnerable to espionage and terrorist attack. What if the “UFO”
turns out to be a prototype spyplane or drone? What if it’s a hijacked aircraft
with its transponder turned off? This is not the time to take our eye off the
ball but yet this is precisely what has happened. Because of the baggage that
the term “UFO” has, the baby has been thrown out with the bathwater.
My only hope is that – away from the public gaze - sightings from pilots and
uncorrelated targets tracked on radar will continue to be looked at, albeit
outside of a formally constituted UFO project. But by cutting out the public,
MoD will only add fuel to the fire among conspiracy theorists.
UFO sightings are at record levels and public interest is at an all-time high.
Whatever one’s views about UFOs, this is a sad day for science. One of the
greatest mysteries of the modern era is now much less likely to be resolved.