Department of Flying Saucers
Hello? UFO Desk? I'm calling to report a ...
- By Craig Mellow
- Air & Space magazine, September 2010
Lenticular clouds tend to remain stationary; their longevity and their saucer-like appearance sometimes lead to misidentification as otherworldly spacecraft. NOAA
January 2009. Police in the western French province of Brittany are puzzled by a wave of reports that strange, undulating lights have been drifting across the night sky. They call for a national operative who works out of a small, unmarked office in the southern city of Toulouse. He arrives on the scene swiftly and begins making subtle inquiries, wary as always of spreading panic among the public.
The investigator in this real-life Gallic version of “The X-Files” is Yvan Blanc, a diminutive, balding, 57-year-old engineer who bears a striking resemblance to former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Until last year, Blanc was a project manager helping launch the European Space Agency’s Herschel Observatory, a job he thought might cap a three-decade career at the French national space agency CNES. Then he got an unexpected offer: to head up the Group for the Study and Information on Unidentified Aerospace Phenomena, or GEIPAN—the French government’s UFO office.
The first flying saucer sighting is generally credited to a hobbyist pilot in Washington state, who reported seeing a fleet of nine in 1947, and ever since, the vanguard of the cosmic imagination has been occupied by the United States. But the U.S. government closed the book, literally, on official UFO studies in 1969, when outside researchers reviewed 22 years of sightings in the Air Force’s Project Blue Book and found none that could be traced to either the Communist Bloc or extraterrestrials. Not so other countries. Well beyond the 1970s, governments from Uruguay to the U.S.S.R. kept some sort of tabs on unexplained airborne apparitions. The most systematic and long-lasting programs were sponsored by Britain and France.
Beginning in 1959, the U.K. Air Ministry and later Ministry of Defence (MoD) logged more than 11,000 UFO reports—until the MoD finally shuttered its monitoring program in 2009. France started later, establishing GEIPAN’s predecessor in 1977, but still carries on, though the agency’s staff has shrunk from a dozen to just Blanc and a secretary. Both countries published their UFO records recently after decades of secrecy, drawing enormous public interest. GEIPAN posted files online in 2007, and the first day they were up, the Web site crashed. The United Kingdom emptied MoD’s filing cabinets into the National Archives, and over two years or so, the digitized bits have been downloaded two million times. That swamps the archives’ former greatest hit, the Domesday Book, which catalogued taxable property transactions in England after the Norman Conquest.
The new wealth of official information has lent substance to the longstanding debates over how to identify the unidentifiable. The newly declassified document piles have forced the hardest-headed researchers to admit that, strictly speaking, unidentified aerial phenomena do exist. Pilots and other legitimate witnesses have sworn to, and radar at times has confirmed, heavenly anomalies that cannot be readily explained. But the French and British files also confirm that if alien civilizations have probed our planet, they have been pretty darned subtle about it.
One UFO obsessive who resists belief in ETs is David Clarke, a journalism professor at Sheffield Hallam University in the English Midlands whose relentless freedom-of-information requests helped unseal the MoD’s vaults. He now acts as the National Archives’ official expert on the vexing phenomenon. “I’ve been involved in the investigation of UFO reports, firstly as an enthusiast and later during my career as a journalist. I defy anyone to do this for over 20 years and emerge anything other than skeptical,” he exclaims during an interview at a distinctly down-to-Earth pub across the street from the university’s campus.
What the government’s papers prove, Clarke explains, is that garden-variety UFO sightings are heavily driven by banal suggestion. They peaked when Close Encounters of the Third Kind hit British screens in 1978, and again in 1997 with the release of Independence Day. Clarke thinks better-documented visions likely stem from rare weather manifestations such as ball lightning—spheres that can shoot through the sky for minutes at a time—and red sprites, which appear above thunderclouds when lightning flashes beneath.
But not everyone who worked behind the UFO curtain entirely agrees. Nick Pope was a career MoD bureaucrat who from 1991 to 1994 fielded celestial weirdness reports in the Secretariat (Air Staff) office overlooking 10 Downing Street; he passed the juicier ones on to a military intelligence subdivision known as DI55. Some of the reports, he says, forced him to keep an open mind to the possibility of visitors from other worlds, most notably a night in March 1993 when more than 30 separate observers reported an object akin to “two Concordes flying side by side and joined together” flying at a leisurely pace across England for six hours.
Related topics: Interstellar Spacecraft
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Comments (5)
Overall this is a pretty good article.However, the claim that official investigations of UFO sightings ended with the closure of Project Blue Book at the end of 1969 is false. The October 20, 1969, memo that resulted in the closure was written by USAF General Carroll Bolender. He stated "Moreover,reports of UFOs which could affect national security are made in accordance with JANAP 146 or Air Force Manual 55-11 and are not part of the Blue Book system" . He also stated "Termination of Project Blue Book would leave no official federal office to receive reports of UFOs. However, as already stated, reports of UFOs which could affect national security would continue to be handled through the standard Air Force Procedures designed for this purpose" .
I located General Bolender about 10 years later. He meant exactly what he wrote.For example saucers near a SAC base where nuclear weapons were stored would be a national security matter and would be tracked, but not by Blue Book.
In addition the National Security Agency finally released 160 documents about UFOs. They had been TOP SECRET UMBRA. All but one sentence per page were whited out. The CIA has released a number of almost completely blacked out UFO documents. Stanton T. Friedman www.stantonfriedman.com
Posted by Stanton Friedman on August 19,2010 | 02:00 PM
Not so much a comment but a desire to know a little more about this fungi: "A weird backyard crop circle was traced to a rare microscopic mushroom". Is there a citation about this?
Posted by Donald Recklies on August 23,2010 | 07:37 AM
From Purdue University: "These descriptions are typical of fairy rings caused by a diverse family of fungi called basidiomycetes. Fairy rings might be six inches to two feet wide and can be anywhere from two feet to hundreds of feet in diameter and expanding yearly." EDITORS' REPLY: Thank you, Dr. Trenner.
Posted by Pat Trenner on August 26,2010 | 03:07 PM
wow. that is CRAZY!! that looks half real and half faux.
Posted by Miles on August 31,2010 | 08:13 PM
The June 24, 1947 sighting of 9 unknown aerial objects was NOT by a "hobbyist pilot." Sighter Kenneth Arnold was a business pilot with ~4000 hours fying time in the mountain regions of the Pacific Northwest. His first thoughts on the identity of the objects were that they were experimental craft out of the nearby Boeing field.
Secondly,the conclusions of the Condon Report, that there was nothing in UFO reports that were worthwhile for science, ignored the fact that of the cases listed in the report, approximately one third were unsolved. It seems to me an unknown rate that high should possibly have some value to science.
George W.Earley, Mount Hood, OR
Posted by George W. Earley on September 12,2010 | 12:18 AM