Tuesday, December 23, 2008

U.S. pilot was ordered to shoot down UFO

U.S. pilot was ordered to shoot down UFO

By Peter Griffiths




LONDON (Reuters) - Two U.S. fighter planes were scrambled and
ordered to shoot down an unidentified flying object (UFO) over the
English countryside during the Cold War, according to secret files made
public on Monday.




One pilot said he was seconds away from firing 24 rockets at the
object, which moved erratically and gave a radar reading like "a flying
aircraft carrier."




The pilot, Milton Torres, now 77 and living in Miami, said it spent
periods motionless in the sky before reaching estimated speeds of more
than 7,600 mph.




After the alert, a shadowy figure told Torres he must never talk
about the incident and he duly kept silent for more than 30 years.




His story was among dozens of UFO sightings in defense ministry files released at the National Archives in London.




In a written account, Torres described how he scrambled his F-86 D
Sabre jet in calm weather from the Royal Air Force base at Manston,
Kent in May 1957.




"I was only a lieutenant and very much aware of the gravity of the
situation. I felt very much like a one-legged man in an ass-kicking
contest," he said.




"The order came to fire a salvo of rockets at the UFO. The authentication was valid and I selected 24 rockets.




"I had a lock-on that had the proportions of a flying aircraft
carrier," he added. "The larger the airplane, the easier the lock-on.
This blip almost locked itself."




At the last moment, the object disappeared from the radar screen and the high-speed chase was called off.




He returned to base and was debriefed the next day by an unnamed man who "looked like a well-dressed IBM salesman."




"He threatened me with a national security breach if I breathed a word about it to anyone," he said.




The documents contain no official explanation for the incident,
which came at a time of heightened tension between the West and the
Soviet Union. Planes were on constant stand-by at British bases for a
possible Soviet attack.




The files blame other UFO sightings on weather balloons, clouds or
normal aircraft. Torres said he had been waiting 50 years for an
explanation.




"I shall never forget it," he told the Times. "On that night I was
ordered to open fire even before I had taken off. That had never
happened before."




UFO expert David Clarke said the sighting may have been part of a
secret U.S. project to create phantom aircraft on radar screens to test
Soviet air defenses.




"Perhaps what this pilot had seen was some kind of experiment in
electronic warfare or maybe it was a UFO," he said. "Something very
unusual happened."




The files are online at: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ufos


No comments: