Unveiling Britain’s Secret UAP Files: The Ministry Of Defence’s 1990s Investigation

In the rarefied realm of national security, the British military’s erstwhile fascination with Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) has been unearthed from the dusty recesses of the National Archives in Kew. Confidential memos, penned by the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS) within the Ministry of Defence, reveal a tantalizing tale of intrigue and technological one-upmanship. During the 1990s, intelligence officers were exercised by the prospect of UAPs posing a “potential threat” to the UK’s defence infrastructure.
Their concerns were fueled by a spate of sightings, including the legendary Rendlesham Forest incident, which was corroborated by US military personnel. The veracity of these encounters was taken sufficiently seriously to warrant internal correspondence, one missive from March 4, 1997, noting that “logic would indicate that if significant numbers are reporting seeing strange objects in the sky then there may be a basis in fact.” The phenomenon of large, silent, low-flying black triangles, dubbed “Belgian deltas,” had particularly piqued the interest of intelligence officers.
These enigmatic objects, which hovered for extended periods before accelerating to supersonic speeds, had been observed in their thousands over Belgium between November 1989 ← →
The British military thought there was ‘basis in fact’ to UFO sightings and wanted to get their hands on the ‘extraterrestrial’ technology, …
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