As the
British National Archives continues to release UFO-related documents, the
former Ministry of Defense (MoD) UFO Project chief is openly admitting to being
part of what he claims was a U.K. policy of ridiculing UFO reports and the
people who reported them.
The U.K.
made public 34 previously-classified files, totaling about 9,000 pages of
documents covering the years 1985 to 2007. For three of those years, 1991 to
1994, Nick Pope was in charge of the official MoD office.
"What's
abundantly clear from these files is that, while in public we were desperately
pushing the line that this was of no defense interest," Pope told The
Huffington Post. "We couldn't say 'There's something in our air space;
pilots see them; they're tracked on radar; sometimes we scramble jets to chase
these things, but we can't catch them.' This would be an admission that we'd
lost control of our own air space, and such a position would be
untenable."
WATCH:
"Every time we got a report from a pilot, we were checking the radar tapes. So it was an interesting sleight of hand. We were telling the public we're not interested, this is all nonsense, but in reality, we were desperately chasing our tails and following this up in great detail," he added.
One file
reveals how officials were afraid to be embarrassed if the public learned that
UFO research was hindered by a lack of funds and higher priorities.
Another case, from 2007, took place in the vicinity of the Channel Islands and involved
a small commercial aircraft.
"The
pilot and several of his passengers saw a UFO, which they said was essentially
a mile long," Pope recounted. "And several other pilots saw it, but
said, 'We're not going to report this.' And here's the great little
get-out-of-jail-free-card for the MoD: Just by a matter of maybe a few hundred
meters, it turned out that this was in French air space, so MoD was given this
little get out to say, 'Well, it happened in French air space, so it's not an
issue for us.' Clearly, that was an absolutely outrageous abrogation of
responsibility."
A file from 1993 (while Pope was chief of the UFO Project) describes how European Union
funds had been wasted on a report that included a theory that aliens had established
a base in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
It turns
out that Pope may have been directly involved with this case.
"I'm a
little bit apologetic about this because obviously, when I was in MoD, I had to
play this game myself. To really achieve our policy of downplaying the UFO
phenomenon, we would use a combination of 'spin and dirty tricks.'
"We
used terms like UFO buffs and UFO spotters -- terms that mean these people are
nut jobs. In other words, we were implying that this is just a very somewhat
quaint hobby that people have as opposed to a serious research interest."
But Pope
said the ridicule policy went much further than that.
"Another
trick would be deliberately using phrases like 'little green men.' We were
trying to do two things: either to kill any media story on the subject, or if a
media story ran, insure that it ran in such a way that it would make the
subject seem ridiculous and that it would make people who were interested in
this seem ridiculous."
WATCH:
Pope further
admits that he may have been the one who drafted actual MoD statements that
contributed to the ridicule policy.
"If it
was my words, then I apologize, I'm very sorry for that. I believe in open
government and freedom of information. I believe that the UFO phenomenon does
raise important defense, national security and air safety issues, and if I
helped kill any initiative on that, I'm deeply sorry."
Some U.K.
cases were apparently easier than others in trying to make them seem
non-credible. Like the file that describes UFOs reported at the June 2003
Glastonbury Music Festival.
"It
was very easy to find an incident where something is seen at an event like a
rock concert," Pope noted. "You don't even need to say a thing
without the public or media perception being that drugs and alcohol might have
played a part. It was all part of the way in which we spun the subject, to try
and discredit it."
Despite the
thousands of pages of documents released -- with one final batch of files yet
to come, sometime early next year -- Pope concedes there's still no written
evidence confirming alien visits to Earth.
"Not
just yet -- there's no spaceship-in-a-hangar smoking gun. However, there are
plenty of sightings that I think show that we're dealing with more than just
aircraft lights and weather balloons."
The latest
34 U.K. UFO files can be downloaded free of charge for the next month at the
National Archives website.
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