Date:
December 26, 1980
Location: Rendlesham Forest, United Kingdom
What
is widely considered Britains most extraordinary
encounter took place between 26 and 28 December, 1980.
It involved at least a dozen civilians from villages surrounding
Rendlesham Forest, a large pine wood in south east Suffolk,
eight miles from the large town of Ipswich. However, it
also gained a high profile because of its military witnesses,
part of a huge USAF contingent at the twin bases of RAF
Bentwaters and Woodbridge located beside the forest.
Sketch of the craft, taken from Jim Penniston's official
United States Air Force witness statement.
Rendlesham witnesses Technical Sergeant Jim Penniston
(right) (USAF-Ret., Woodbridge
security supervisor), and (left) Colonel Charles Halt
(USAF-Ret., former deputy base
commander of Bentwaters-Woodbridge).
Source:
Jenny Randles
What
is widely considered Britains most extraordinary
encounter took place between 26 and 28 December l980.
It involved at least a dozen civilians from villages surrounding
Rendlesham Forest, a large pine wood in south east Suffolk,
eight miles from the large town of Ipswich. However, it
also gained a high profile because of its military witnesses,
part of a huge USAF contingent at the twin bases of RAF
Bentwaters and Woodbridge located beside the forest. These
had been on long-term lease from the British Ministry
of Defence (MoD) since World War Two.
Although
the twin bases closed with the cessation of the cold war,
other local facilities survive in this high security area.
At RAF Bawdsey, the world's first working radar was developed.
And Orford Ness, a coastal spit five miles from the Woodbridge
base, was for many years a secret research facility. "Over
The Horizon" beam experiments (code named Cobra
Mist) led to warnings that shipping coming too close to
the shore might experience "interference".
The
area surrounding the forest has long been a hotbed of
UFO activity, with fishermen reporting strange blisters
on their skins and the sightings of green fireballs emerging
from the North Sea around the Ness.
Then,
at approximately 3:00 a.m. on 26 December l980, a two-man
USAF security patrol near the East Gate of RAF Woodbridge
observed strange coloured lights above the forest in the
direction of Orford Ness. Assistance was requested and
a security unit was sent out from Bentwaters. The lights
were now deep inside the pine wood and three men, Seargeant
Jim Penniston, his driver, Airman Ed Cabansag, and one
of the two original security officers, airman (later seargeant)
John Burroughs, drove down a logging track that led into
the forest, proceeding the rest of the way on foot owing
to the frozen terrain.
All
three men closed in on an object that resembled an "aircraft
on fire", or, as Burroughs described it, a "multiple
series of lights". At closer proximity, the lights
solidified. Burroughs says that no structured craft ever
emerged, but Penniston claimed that he went close enough
to see an actual object looming from within the glow that
was "the size of a tank...It had a very smooth
surface almost like glass". Cabansag, whilst
more guarded, agrees that strange lights were visible.
At
close proximity, Penniston says "The air was filled
with electricity - like static. You could feel it on your
skin as you approached the object. There was also a sense
of slowness, like time itself was an effort."
Burroughs
concurred: "The nearer we got to that thing, the
more uneasy I felt...it was as if I was moving in slow
motion. I felt really hot and as if the hair was standing
up on the back of my head."
There
was then a silent explosion of light, causing the airmen
to throw themselves to the ground in a defence. The object
disappeared towards the coast and "was gone like
a blur". However, the three men began to follow
a light that had appeared in the distance. Only after
pursuing this for some minutes through the forest, did
they discover that they were chasing the glow from the
lighthouse situated on Orford Ness. They do not believe
this was what they had witnessed earlier at close quarters.
After
discovering "marks" on the forest floor,
the airmen returned to base to be debriefed. British civilian
police sent two officers to the forest and senior policeman,
David King, met with Colonel Ted Conrad on the logging
road at 4:11 a.m. From here, they reported seeing only
the Orford Ness lighthouse, although the UFO had long
since disappeared.
At
10:30 a.m., police were called to the woods again to study
the holes now confirmed as located in the ground at the
landing site and forming a roughly triangular pattern.
In the log report at the Woodbridge police station, these
were noted as possibly having been caused by animals.
The
Suffolk police established that there were several UFO
reports during the previous night, including sightings
on radar screens at Heathrow Airport near London. It is
likely that much of this activity referred to an incident
just after 9:00 p.m. on 25 December, when the booster
from a Soviet space probe had burned up on re-entry over
South East England and fell into the North Sea. This trail
of debris brought a flood of sightings into BUFORA (the
British UFO Research Association) as well as to the Civil
Aviation Authority (CAA), because some witnesses thought
that this was an aircraft exploding in mid-air.
Local
UFOlogists, Brenda Butler and Dot Street, later found
many witnesses in surrounding villages to the lights that
Burroughs had reported over the forest. The Webb family,
returning from a Boxing Night party on the road through
the forest, observed floating lights and had time to slow
their car to a stop, eliminating one theory since proposed
for this UFO: a short duration meteor that astronomers
had witnessed in the sky around this time.
The
sighting by the USAF patrol quickly became the talk of
the base, and next day (27 December) strange lights were
reported again by airmen who were having an unofficial
"sky watch" in the forest. Concerned
about morale, base security chief Lieutenant Bruce Englund,
interrupted an officer's Christmas party on Woodbridge
base to report the new sightings.
Base
commander Colonel Ted Conrad, who had an awards speech
to give at the party, ordered his deputy, Lt. Colonel
Charles Halt to gather a team and sort out the matter
once and for all. Halt duly collected a tape machine to
take notes in the dark woods, and took a small group of
men, including Englund, an officer from the disaster preparedness
team and a base photographer, to prepare for a nocturnal
investigation. Gas-powered "light-all"
searchlights were taken with them, but these constantly
malfunctioned near to the "suspected landing site".
Halt
and his team were in the forest from soon after midnight
early on 28 December through to just before dawn. During
this time, they took samples of soil and damaged tree
bark, photographed the landing marks, measured a hole
in the tree canopy at the point where Burroughs, Penniston
and Cabansag had seen the UFO depart 48 hours earlier
and used geiger counters to take readings that they considered
to be unusual radiation levels within the impact marks.
Halt
intermittently recorded the teams progress onto
the tape, until at 1:48 a.m. some airmen in the party
reported strange activity. This tape runs for 18 minutes
and was released to British UFO investigators in July
l984 by a US Major, who had held a copy for four years.
On this dramatic audio account of the early hours of 28
December, you can hear the following exchange:
Halt:
Zero one forty eight, were hearing very strange
sounds out of a farmers barnyard animals
very,
very active, making an awful lot of noise.
Airman:
There...look.
Halt:
You just saw a light? Where? Slow down
where?
The
witnesses debate this pulsing light, and at one point
(after viewing it through an optical enhancer known as
a starlight scope), it seems to break apart; possibly
an effect of an optical distortion. They then set off
to follow the glow, much as the three airmen did at this
same position two nights earlier, when misperceiving the
Orford Ness lighthouse.
Halt:
We are about 150 to 200 yards from the site. Everything
else is just deathly calm. Theres no doubt about
it, theres some type of strange flashing red light
ahead.
Airman:
Sir, its yellow.
Halt:
I saw a yellow tinge in it, too...Weird! ... it appears
to be moving a little bit this way...Its brighter
than it has been. Its definitely coming this way...Pieces
of it are shooting off...Theres no doubt about it,
this is weird.
Further
sightings continued, mostly of small star-like lights,
moving in box-grid patterns and scattered about the sky.
It seems hard to deny that some of these could be stars
caused to move by the effects of autokinesis (an optical
illusion), the clear night sky and the effects of wind.
But at one point, another very strange event does occur
as Halt and his men report pencil-thin beams of light
coming from the sky.
Halt
(In clearly stunned tones): Now we observe what appears
to be a beam coming down towards the ground...this is
unreal.
Halt
has since explained that this was like a laser and it
struck the ground only feet from the men but also beamed
into the weapons storage area back on base, where, unbeknownst
to British citizens, nuclear weapons were then located.
With
his men now tired, Halt ordered them to return to base.
As the sky lightened, he saw one more "UFO"
still hovering over the woods, but this faded as the sun
came up; behaviour that almost certainly proves this one
to be a star; although it is much harder to account for
the laser beam.
Again,
there were civilian witnesses to events on this second
night. These included local villagers familiar with Orford
Ness and far less likely to be fooled by a lighthouse
than would foreign airmen unused to these woods at night.
Sarah Richardson, for example, observing from her bedroom
in Woodbridge, saw: "three bands of star-like
light and they were bright, coloured red, blue and yellow."
After
taking statements from the witnesses and plaster casts
of the landing marks, there was confusion on base as to
what to do next. It was technically a British matter,
but the Suffolk constabulary had shown no interest in
the story. However, the MoD needed to be informed.
On
13 January, l981, Colonel Halt officially reported the
matter to London at the request of Squadron Leader Donald
Moreland, who acted as liaison between the landlord MoD
and their USAF tennants. Although Moreland personally
saw nothing, he had every confidence in the men who did
and sent a note fully endorsing Halt's memo to the MoD.
Neither
Halt nor Moreland received any further contact from the
British government. This memo was just a one-page summary
of the events. It made no reference to the fact that soil
samples, plaster casts, photographs and other evidence
from the landing site had been taken, nor that a "live"
audio tape existed of the second nights sightings.
Halt says that he would have made this data available,
had the MoD chosen to follow up the case, but they never
bothered to do so.
Unfortunately,
the chronology on the memo is also misleading. It was
apparently put together from memory, three weeks after
the events.
This
memo was eventually secured, using the Freedom of Information
Act, by U.S. group CAUS in June l983; this being two months
after the MoD had finally written to myself and officially
accepted that an unsolved incident had occurred. In this
startling letter, they confirm "unidentified lights"
had been seen and that "no explanation was forthcoming"
an unprecedented admission by British standards.
We
now know that the inaccuracy in these dates misled the
British government. Whilst files regarding Rendlesham
Forest were sealed from public release until 2014, in
an unexpected move, following requests by folklore researcher,
Dr. David Clarke, the MoD agreed to release the entire
case file in summer 2001.
This
150-page file paints a picture of an MoD department baffled
by the events and unable to explain them, but not taking
any urgent action. Although they were aware of reports
of allegedly high radiation readings, they merely sent
letters to various government departments asking for advice
and then waited weeks to get responses despite continued
puzzlement from experts. Yet whilst the case was still
secret, villagers in eastern Suffolk were walking dogs
and picnicking freely around a forest that might have
been irradiated!
It
is likely that the recorded radiation levels were not
dangerous, but the complacency whereby that fact was assumed
certainly was potentially disasterous.
The
MoD file reveals no evidence that the British government
believed this case to be solved, but still regarded it
as having no defence significance. The lack of any unidentified
radar targets that correlated with the UFO sightings was
one key reason. However, the communications between the
MoD and "Eastern Radar" (RAF Watton)
included with the file offer two caveats. The RAF radar
was not apparently working fully at the time. More seriously,
the radar coverage on the night of 26/27 December was
the data being pursued when we know that the first sighting
had really occurred 24 hours earlier.
Opinion
within UFOlogy is seriously divided as to what really
happened inside Rendlesham Forest on those two winter
nights. Some researchers feel it is one of the strongest
examples of a military encounter with a possible alien
craft, and the sincerity of the many independent witnesses
is not in dispute.
However,
it seems likely that a number of factors combined to explain
parts of this case particularly on the second night
(28 December) when stars and the lighthouse do seem to
have been mistaken during phases of this lengthy encounter.
The lighthouse is an unexpected sight, so far inland,
particularly to those not familiar with these woods at
night or the effects of the undulating landscape.
Other
considerations include the presence of sea mist, during
the first sighting particularly, and the possibility of
mirage effects; plus, of course, the covert research known
to have occurred for decades in the vicinity of Orford
Ness.
The
radiation levels seem not to have induced any lasting
ill effects and experts studying the records suggest that
they were not abnormally high for within a pine forest,
especially one close to a nuclear power station.
On
the other hand, there are aspects to this case very difficult
to explain, particularly the alleged physiological effects
and distortions in time and space reported by Burroughs
and Penniston in close proximity to the 26 December UFO.
And, of course, the "laser beams" witnessed
by Halt, 48 hours later.
This
case is certain to remain the source of many arguments
for years to come and has already generated more books
discussing the evidence than any other single case apart
from Roswell.
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case279.htm