PART
FIVE -- On The Road To Roswell 2007: A Discussion With
Nick Pope
May 27,
2007
RaidersNewsNetwork.com
Editors
note: This is the fifth in a special
series of Raiders News Network interviews
focusing on the 60th Anniversary of the
1947 Roswell, New Mexico UFO Incident. Tom
Horn is joined by Nick
Pope, former project leader for the
British Government's UFO department at the
Ministry of Defence. Initially skeptical,
Nick's research and investigation into the
UFO phenomenon and access to formerly
classified government files on the subject
soon convinced him that the phenomenon
raised important defence and national
security issues, especially when the
witnesses were military pilots or where
UFOs were tracked on radar.
HORN: Nick.
Thanks for joining me today. Earlier this
year I emailed you when Britain declared
it was going to open its MoD UFO files to
the public. Because you had ran this
department for the British Government, I
wanted to know if we should expect
anything unusual in these materials. You
emailed me back to say that I should not
expect a smoking gun, but that there were
some devils in the details. What has been
the result of the MoD files going public?
POPE:
Although a good deal of material is
already available at the National Archives
and on the MoD website, the rest of the
UFO files have yet to be made public. Two
separate things are happening right now.
Firstly, 24 Defence Intelligence Staff UFO
files are going to be considered for
release. These were part of a much larger
batch of files (on various subjects) that
had been contaminated with asbestos. Originally
it was feared they'd have to be destroyed,
sparking outrage from historians and
leading to various conspiracy theories. At
huge cost, the files have now been
decontaminated and can be considered for
release in the normal way. Numerous
ufologists have made Freedom of
Information Act requests in relation to
these files. The second thing that's
happening is that the MoD has decided to
release its entire archive of UFO files,
not least because of the increasing burden
of responding to FOI requests (the MoD get
more FOI requests in relation to UFOs than
on any other subject, including the war in
Iraq). This is a massive job and may take
months, if not years, as personal details
of witnesses have to be removed, along
with any information that would genuinely
compromise national security - e.g.
information on the capability of military
radar systems.
HORN:
When and why was the MoD's UFO Project set
up?
POPE: The
MoD's UFO project has its roots in a 1950
initiative by the then Chief Scientific
Adviser, Sir Henry Tizard. He said
that UFO sightings shouldn't be dismissed
out of hand without some form of proper
scientific study. The MoD then set up
a body called the Flying Saucer Working
Party, to look into the phenomenon. It
reported its sceptical conclusions (that
UFO sightings were attributable to
misidentifications, hoaxes or delusions)
in 1951 and recommended that no further
action be taken. But there was a series of
high-profile UFO sightings in 1952 when
UFOs were tracked on radar and seen by
military pilots. This forced the RAF and
the MoD to think again, and the Department
has been investigating UFO sightings
pretty much continuously since then. To
date, there have been over 10,000
sightings reported to the MoD.
HORN:
What is the MoD's policy on UFOs?
POPE:
The policy is to investigate UFO sightings
to see whether there's evidence of
anything of any defence significance, i.e. evidence
of any threat to the defence of the UK, or
information that may be of use to us,
scientifically or militarily. Having
a UFO project in no way implies a
corporate belief in extraterrestrial
visitation. It simply reflects the
fact that we keep a watchful eye on our
airspace and want to know about anything
operating in the United Kingdom's Air
Defence Region. Although the British
effort was on a much smaller scale, the
terms of reference and methodology were
virtually identical to that of the United
States Air Force study, Project Blue Book.
HORN:
MoD also acknowledged that a government
UFO unit, known as S4F (Air) and DI55,
existed. Tells us about this unit and what
they did (or do).
POPE:
S4(Air) no longer exists. It was a
division that had responsibility for UFO
investigations some years ago. Like any
bureaucracy, the MoD undergoes frequent
reorganisations where divisions are
opened, closed, merged, split or
restructured. It's a nightmare! So, over
the years, all sorts of different areas
have had responsibility for UFOs, leading
some researchers to wrongly conclude there
are many different areas of the MoD all
working on the subject. In fact, at any
one time, there'll be a division that has
the lead for policy and
investigations (i.e. where I worked)
and a number of other areas on whose
specialist skills and expertise the lead
division can call. DI55 is part of the
Defence Intelligence Staff. They were one
of the specialist branches that I
could bring in to assist me with certain
aspects of my UFO investigations. Up until
a few years ago I couldn't talk about this
aspect of my work at all, or even
acknowledge the existence of DI55.
Recently, however, details have
emerged under FOI, including some
documents relating to my own dealings
with them. But as I'm sure you'll
understand, this is still an area of my
work that I can't discuss in any great
detail.
HORN:
How were you recruited into the UFO
Project?
POPE:
I joined the Ministry of Defence in 1985. At
the time, the policy was to move people
every 2 or 3 years - either on level
transfer or promotion - so that everybody
gained experience in a wide range of
different jobs: policy, operations,
personnel, finance, etc. I'd done 2
or 3 different jobs and prior to taking up
my post on the UFO project I was
working in a division called
Secretariat(Air Staff), where I'd been seconded
into the Air Force Operations Room in
the Joint Operations Centre. I worked
there in the run-up to the first Gulf War,
during the war itself, and in the
aftermath of the conflict. It was
while working there that I was approached
and asked whether, after I was released
from duties in the Joint Operations Centre,
I would like to run the UFO project, which
was embedded in another part of
Secretariat(Air Staff). I accepted
the invitation. So, in a sense, I
was headhunted.
HORN:
Did your views change from the time you
started working with MoD until you left
the department?
POPE:
I knew little about the subject before I
joined and I certainly had no belief in
extraterrestrials. So while I was open-minded
in all my investigations, my start
point was broadly sceptical. As I began to
read into the archive of previous files,
and as I began to undertake my own
official research and investigation, my
views began to change and I became more
open to the possibility that some UFOs had
more exotic explanations. What impressed
me most were cases where UFOs were seen by
trained observers such as police officers,
where they were tracked on radar, where
they were seen by pilots, and where there
was evidence to suggest that UFOs were
performing speeds and manoeuvres way ahead
of the capabilities of even our most
advanced aircraft. My position now is that
while I can't say what these UFOs are, the
phenomenon raises important defence,
national security and flight safety
issues. I've seen no proof that these
things are extraterrestrial, but I don't
rule out this possibility.
HORN:
What were your procedures / protocols for
investigating UFO sightings?
POPE: We
used to receive 200 - 300 reports each
year and the methodology of an
investigation is fairly standard. Firstly,
you interview the witness to obtain as
much information as possible about the
sighting: date, time and location of the
sighting, description of the object, its
speed, its height, etc. Then you
attempt to correlate the sighting with
known aerial activity such as civil
flights, military exercises or weather
balloon launches. We could check with
the Royal Greenwich Observatory to see if astronomical
phenomena such as meteors or fireballs
might explain what was seen. We could
check to see whether any UFOs seen
visually had been tracked on radar. If
we had a photograph or video, we could get
various MoD specialists to enhance and
analyse the imagery. We could also
liaise with staff at the Ballistic Missile
Early Warning System at RAF Fylingdales,
where they have space-tracking radar. Finally,
on various scientific and technical
issues, we could liaise with the Defence
Intelligence Staff, although as I've
said previously, this is an area of my
work that I can't discuss in any detail.
HORN:
What did you conclude about the majority
of your investigations?
POPE:
I concluded that sightings could be
categorised as follows. Around 80% could
be explained as misidentifications of
something mundane, such as aircraft lights,
weather balloons, satellites, meteors,
etc. In approximately 15% of cases
there was insufficient information to make
a firm assessment. That left around
5% of sightings that seemed to defy any
conventional explanation. But while we
could say with reasonable certainty what
these 5% weren't, we couldn't say
what they were. They were by
definition unknown, unexplained, or
whatever word you care to use.
HORN:
The Flying Saucer Working Party was set up
in October 1950 by Ministry of Defence
Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Henry Tizard.
Was this a reaction to the 1947 Roswell
incident or something else?
POPE:
It wasn't a reaction to the Roswell
incident, but to increasing numbers
of UFO sightings in the UK and elsewhere,
and to the associated media coverage. As a
scientist, Tizard knew that any assessment
of UFOs not based on investigation was
assumption and guesswork, and therefore
meaningless. He didn't have any firm view
on the phenomenon but he knew UFOs were
being reported in considerable numbers and
he wanted to know what they were.
HORN:
Britain's most sensational UFO case
occurred in December 1980 in Rendlesham
Forest , between RAF Bentwaters and
RAF Woodbridge. Tell us about that.
POPE:
This is the UK's most famous UFO incident
and it's sometimes referred to as
"Britain's Roswell". Over a
series of nights in December 1980
UFOs were seen by dozens of United States
Air Force personnel at Bentwaters and
Woodbridge, two RAF bases operated by the
Americans. On the first night the UFO
landed in Rendlesham Forest (which lies
between the two bases) and one of the
witnesses got close enough to touch it.
Sketches from the USAF witness statements
clearly show a craft with strange markings
on its hull, which have been likened to
Egyptian hieroglyphs. The UFO returned on
another night and was seen by more
witnesses, including the Deputy Base
Commander, Lieutenant Colonel Charles
Halt. At one point the UFO illuminated the
spot where Halt and his team were standing
and at another time the UFO was directly
over Woodbridge, firing beams of light
down at the base. Subsequently, radiation
readings were taken at the location where
the UFO had been seen on the first night.
They peaked in three indentations found
where the craft had apparently landed. The
MoD's Defence Intelligence Staff assessed
that the radiation levels were
significantly higher than background
levels. Subsequently it emerged that a
radar operator at RAF Watton had tracked
an object briefly, over the base. I
re-opened the investigation into this case
but was unable to determine what happened.
It remains unexplained.
HORN:
On 1 November 2006 you were involved
with a Channel Five documentary, The
British UFO Mystery. The programme focused on
a wave of UFO sightings that occurred
on 30 and 31 March 1993 -- The Cosford
Incident -- where many of the witnesses
were police officers and military
personnel. What did you conclude about
this case?
POPE:
We had a wave of UFO sightings over the UK
for a period of about six hours. Many
of the witnesses included police officers
and military personnel. At one point the
UFO flew over RAF Cosford and RAF Shawbury.
Witnesses described a vast
triangular-shaped craft capable of moving
from a virtual hover to speeds of well
over a thousand miles an hour in seconds.
I led the investigation at the time and
even my Head of Division, who was
extremely sceptical about UFOs, was
intrigued by this case. We even briefed
the Assistant Chief of the Air Staff, one
of the UK's most senior RAF officers.
Channel Five's recent investigative
documentary exposed the case to over a
million viewers on primetime terrestrial
TV and led to over 30 new witnesses coming
forward. The production company had
obtained the MoD case file on the incident
(which ran to over 100 pages of
documentation) under the Freedom of
Information Act and asked me to front the
programme, talking viewers through the
case an the MoD investigation. As a result
of the interest generated by the programme,
the MoD made the file available on its
website. The file includes my sceptical
Head of Division's briefing to the
Assistant Chief of the Air Staff, which
states "In summary, there would seem
to be some evidence on this occasion that
an unidentified object (or objects) of
unknown origin was operating over the
UK". This is as close as
the MoD will ever get to saying that
there's more to UFOs than
misidentifications or hoaxes.
HORN:
What were some of the other interesting
UFO cases you investigated?
POPE:
It's difficult to single out interesting
cases unless they're on the scale of
something like Rendlesham Forest or the
Cosford Incident. Also, it's
difficult for me to talk about cases the
MoD hasn't yet released. I can't
anticipate what the Department will
release and what they may withhold, so
you'll have to await the release of the
files. But in general terms I can say that
other interesting cases included some
radar/visual cases, cases where UFOs were
seen close to military bases, and some
interesting sightings by civil and
military pilots - including a few
near-misses, where collisions were only
narrowly avoided. Both the MoD and our
Civil Aviation Authority has information
on several such cases, and whatever one's
beliefs about UFOs, the flight safety
implications should be of concern to
everyone. When the MoD released Project
Condign last year (a highly classified
study that had its roots in discussions I
had with the Defence Intelligence Staff in
1993) some of the most interesting
recommendations related to this point. One
read "No attempt should be made to
out-manoeuvre a UAP during
interception". Another recommendation
states "At higher altitudes, although
UAP appear to be benign to civil
air-traffic, pilots should be advised not
to manoeuvre, other than to place the
object astern, if possible". UAP
was the abbreviated form of Unidentified
Aerial Phenomena, a term we decided
to use instead of UFO, as it sounded
more scientific.
HORN:
Why did you leave the MoD's UFO
department?
POPE:
After having done the job for 3 years I
was promoted and moved to another post at
a higher grade. There's certainly no
truth to the rumour that I was moved
because I was getting too close to the
truth, as some conspiracy theorists
allege. After I left, I took up a
financial policy post, before moving to a
security-related job.
HORN:
Yet you still work in a different capacity
at the Ministry of Defence, correct?
POPE:
No. I resigned last year and left the MoD
at the end of October. I'd greatly enjoyed
my 21 year career, but decided it was time
to seek fresh challenges. I have a number
of business interests and I now have more
time to pursue these.
HORN:
I once asked Stanton Friedman a similar
question I'd like to ask you. How do you
respond to allegations that you're
involved in a cover-up or that you're a
disinformation agent?
POPE:
How can I respond? You can't
prove a negative. The rumour
isn't true, but if people believe this
sort of thing they won't believe my
denial, or the MoD's confirmation of my
departure. I can't win. It does amaze
me though, how many people genuinely seem
to believe this. I get asked it a lot and
see the theory discussed frequently on
various websites and discussion lists. The
bottom line is that I worked for the
Government for 21 years, for the very
people who many conspiracy theorists
believe are covering up the truth about
UFOs. To them, the government are the bad
guys, so I'm the bad guy, who's part of
the conspiracy.
HORN:
Your
investigations ultimately led to other
unexplained phenomena. What do you make of
so-called alien abductions?
POPE:
While none of these other subjects
were in the UFO project's terms of
reference, they inevitably ended up on my
desk, because there was nowhere else to
send them. I've probably looked into
around 100 cases of alien abduction. Some
of these cases were reported to me at the
MoD, but most people contacted me after
I'd written a book on the subject, called
The Uninvited. Some sceptics say
these people are attention seekers after
their 15 minutes of fame, but this clearly
isn't true. Out of the hundred or so
abductees I've been involved with,
maybe half a dozen are interested in
engaging with the media or the UFO
community. Most aren't interested. Other
people suggest these people are
delusional, but again, this theory doesn't
stand up to scrutiny. The few scientists
who have looked at this phenomenon have
found no signs of psychopathology in the
abductees, and evidence (in terms of
increased heartrate and perspiration) that
they genuinely believe they've had these
experiences. The use of regression
hypnosis in some of these cases clouds the
issue. The scientific community
generally doesn't accept the validity of
the technique in recovering suppressed
memories, and indeed many believe it can
distort memories or even create false
ones. But regression hypnosis isn't used
in all abduction cases, so we can't say
False Memory Syndrome is the answer.
Something's going on with these people,
but the truthful answer is that we don't
know what's happening.
HORN: Crop
circles?
POPE:
Some of the small, single circles (and
that's where the phenomenon started) may
be attributable to some form of
meteorological phenomenon such as a
whirlwind or wind vortex. As for the
more complex ones - the so-called
pictograms - there's no doubt in my mind
that most of them are made by people. I've
seen it done. Some of the people
involved in this are highly skilled and
motivated, plan the formations
meticulously, well in advance, and split
the work between several people. Some
people call them hoaxers but many of the
people involved see themselves as
conceptual artists. Do I completely
rule out a more exotic explanation? No. In
my line of work, I tried never to rule
anything out altogether, and always tried
to keep an open mind.
HORN:
Ghosts?
POPE:
People associate ghosts with old houses,
churches or pubs, but in my experience
there are just as many reports of ghosts
on military bases as anywhere else. I've
received numerous such reports, often from
the MoD Police officers or guards who have
to patrol these areas at night. Now, these
are pretty tough guys, as you can imagine,
but some of them have been really spooked
by what they've seen. All the classic
signs are present in many of these cases: unexplained
cold spots, guard dogs growling, with
their hackles rising, at certain locations.
And actual ghosts seen at sights where
people have been killed. Ghosts have
even been seen in MoD Main Building
itself, where the modern headquarters is
built on the site of the much older
Whitehall Palace. The remains of Henry
VIII's wine cellar are perfectly preserved
in the basement, and there are some
areas of the building where guards don't
like to patrol alone at night. Perhaps the
oddest report I received was an animal
ghost story. During the Second World War,
Wing Commander Guy Gibson (who led
the famous Damn Busters raid) had a dog
that was knocked down by a car and
killed, shortly before the raid. The ghost
of this dog has been seen several times at
RAF Scampton.
HORN:
You've written extensively about your work
with MoD. Is this not a problem since you
signed the Official Secrets Act?
POPE:
I signed the Official Secrets Act on my
first day in the MoD and even though I've
left, it binds me for life. But it
doesn't preclude writing or speaking about
my work. Politicians invariably keep
diaries and write memoirs, and military
officers often write accounts of their
careers. There's no bar on this sort
of activity, provided you follow various
rules and procedures, the most obvious one
being the absolute prohibition on
revealing any classified information.
HORN:
Your books include "Open Skies,
Closed Minds", "The
Uninvited", "Operation Thunder
Child", and "Operation Lightning
Strike". Anything else you are
working on?
POPE:
Researching and writing a book typically
takes me between 6 months and a year.
While I intend to write further books
(both non-fiction and fiction) at some
stage, the pressure of other commitments
means that I simply don't have time for
this at the moment. I have numerous media
commitments (mainly television work) and
various private business interests to look
after. These are my priorities at present.
HORN:
This is the 60th anniversary of the
Roswell UFO incident. What is your opinion
about what happened there in 1947?
POPE:
Clearly something crashed. But
in my experience, if UFO sightings aren't solved
quickly, they're unlikely to be solved at
all. With that in mind, 60 years on,
with most of the direct participants dead,
the chances are we'll never be certain
what happened at Roswell. Unless some
'smoking gun' emerges that's beyond
dispute, I suspect the events will remain
a mystery.
HORN:
How do you think ufology can best use the
60th anniversary of Roswell to promote the
subject?
POPE:
To keep the subject in the public eye and
generate as much serious, mainstream media
coverage as possible. Spin-off benefits
from this should include encouraging more
people to report their UFO sightings, and
bringing new people to the subject. But,
fascinating though Roswell is, ufology
should look forward as well as back.
Promoting ufology should involve not just
the old cases, but recent ones such as the
sighting of a UFO over O'Hare airport or
the sighting by the pilot who saw a UFO in
the vicinity of the Channel Islands. It
should also focus on the release of UFO
files by the British and French
governments. Finally, ufology might also
consider how it could best engage
with the scientific community, and in
particular engage in constructive dialogue
with those involved in SETI research.
HORN:
Will you be in Roswell this July?
POPE:
I have no current plans to come to
Roswell this July, but I'll probably be
doing some media interviews here in
the UK, to tie in with the
anniversary.
HORN:
Thank you for taking time to do this
interview.
Authors,
Researchers & Lecturers at this year's
60th Roswell festival include Dennis
Balthaser, Greg
Bishop, Donald
Burleson, PhD, Stephen
Bassett, Richard
Dolan, Adam
GoRightly, John
Greenewald, Paola
Harris, Michael
S. Heiser PhD, Tom
Horn, Dr.
Roger Leir, Guy
Malone, Nicholas
Redfern, John
Rhodes, Peter
Robbins, Rob
Simone and MANY MORE TBA!
Learn more about the 60th Anniversary
Roswell Festivals see both websites: http://www.roswellufofestival.com
http://www.roswellufomuseum.com/festival.htm