From: skindrud@rosebud.berkeley.edu Title: E.T. WAS HERE, SAYS MOD MAN Source: The Observer Date: April 28, 1996
Copyright 1996 Guardian Newspapers Limited
The Observer
April 28, 1996, Sunday
SECTION: THE OBSERVER NEWS PAGE; Pg. 11
LENGTH: 827 words
HEADLINE: ET WAS HERE, SAYS MOD MAN
BYLINE: Ron Mckay
BODY:
IT'S OFFICIAL - there are aliens out there and they have been visiting Earth for years, breaching air defences and endangering national security.
At least this is the belief of a Ministry of Defence official who has
investigated more than 600 alleged UFO sightings and had access to all the
top-secret departmental files over 40 years. Nick Pope, a 30-year-old civil
servant, was in charge of the MoD's X-Files section - prosaically titled
Secretariat (Air Staff) 2a - which handles inquiries into unexplained air
phenomena. He arrived in 1991 as a sceptic and left three years later convinced.
Mr Pope still works for the Ministry, which stresses that his opinions are
his own and are not shared in Whitehall, where the official view is that while
we are open-minded about the possible presence of others in our galaxy, there is no proof they have been parking their spaceships on our lawns.
Mr Pope has a book coming out in June based on his MoD experiences, Open
Skies, Closed Minds, but when the Observer rang him at his desk in Whitehall he was decidedly close-mouthed. 'It's in my interest that the news interest
manifests itself when there is a book on the shelf,' he said.
He did confirm that he now believed in extraterrestrial visitations and that direct experience of investigating sightings had convinced him.
However, the author has been less guarded elsewhere. He spoke at a
conference in London last weekend organised by Fortean Times magazine, and even has his own space on the Internet, where he reveals that his departmental
colleagues have nicknamed him 'Spooky', the same as Fox Mulder's in the X-Files.
'The official reason why the MoD looks at UFO reports is simply to see
whether there is evidence of any threat to the defence of the UK,' he says.
'But how can anybody say there's no threat if they don't know what UFOs are?' Stressing this point to his superiors allowed him to 'investigate UFO
sightings and handle policy in this area'.
Speaking at the London 'Unconvention' conference, Mr Pope said he had dealt with more than 200 sightings a year and, during his spell at the department,
found around 80 that could not be explained. He believes Britain's most famous
alleged sighting, on a December night in 1980 in Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk, was compelling evidence of visitors from outer space. American airmen from two
nearby RAF bases described an object the size of a tank, triangular with three
legs and made out of what looked like black glass, which rose slowly upwards,
hovered briefly and then shot off at incredible speed.
His book has been vetted by the men from the Ministry ('We're quite relaxed about it,' said a spokesman). But he stressed Mr Pope's job had been purely
administrative: 'It was not his job to investigate. I am not aware that our air defence system has ever been penetrated.'
Nonsense, says Mr Pope. 'Not only is the truth out there,' he says 'but it
is much stranger than fiction.'
The Observer, April 28, 1996 LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
LOAD-DATE: April 29, 1996