UFO Files and Their Flights of Fancy
By Nick Pope
And still they come. The Ministry of Defence has just
released the latest batch of their UFO files, as part of an ongoing three-year
collaboration between the MoD and the National Archives. There are 18 files and
while that may not sound particularly impressive, this release – the sixth –
runs to over 5000 pages of documentation. The material comprises sighting
reports, letters from the public and papers discussing how to handle the issue
when it was raised in Parliament - as it occasionally was.
There’s an extraordinary claim about Winston Churchill, made by a scientist who
wrote to the MoD claiming that his grandfather had been one of Churchill’s
bodyguards. It’s alleged that Churchill met General Eisenhower to discuss an
incident in the Second World War when an RAF aircraft returning from a bombing
raid encountered a UFO capable of extraordinary speeds and manoeuvres. It was
claimed that they agreed to keep this from the public, to prevent mass panic and
to avoid the possibility that people’s belief in God and the church would be
shattered. MoD officials investigating the claim found no documents to support
these allegations, though they admitted that prior to 1967, most UFO files had
been destroyed after five years.
Some documents relate to the Joint Intelligence Committee – more recently in the
news due to their role in producing the so-called 'dodgy dossier’, which took us
to war with Iraq. In 1957 the JIC discussed the UFO mystery at a meeting and
concluded that four cases where UFOs had been tracked on radar remained
unexplained. The report was delivered to the JIC by the Air Ministry's Head of
Air Intelligence. This sort of high-level interest always gets conspiracy
theorists excited, particularly where the word "intelligence" appears anywhere
near the phrase "UFO".
Indeed, allegations of cover-ups and conspiracies feature prominently in these
files. There are accusations from the public that DA-Notices were being used to
prevent the media running UFO stories. There is correspondence about cases where
it’s alleged that UFOs crashed (one in Wales, another in the Peak District) and
that the wreckage was spirited away by sinister government agents. There is
speculation about secret prototype aircraft and even documents about UFO
researchers being arrested after trying to break into RAF Rudloe Manor in
Wiltshire, where they believed UFO secrets were kept.
The MoD's UFO files occasionally contain documents relating to other mysteries
such as ghosts or crop circles. Some newly-released documents tell the bizarre
story of how, in 1990, a man presented himself at RAF Stanmore and said he'd had
a dream about an attack at a military base in London. He felt it was a psychic
warning. A few weeks later there was a terrorist bomb attack on the base at
Stanmore. The RAF Police launched an investigation.
My favourite case is that of the man who placed a bet at 100-1 that proof of
alien visitation would be confirmed by the end of the 20th century. He then
wrote to the MoD asking for evidence that would support his claim. MoD gave the
standard response, explaining that while the Department remained open-minded
about the possibilities, they had no such evidence. The man lost his bet.
This article was first published in The Guardian on 5th August 2010