Source: Xtraeme (YouTube channel)
The segment is from the Channel 5 (London, UK)
documentary film, Britain’s Closest
Encounters - Alderney Lights.
When this UFO incident occurred, Alan Turner was Duty Military Supervisor
and had the responsibility for monitoring the skies on radar screens for
potential Soviet incursions.
A stunned RAF
Coordinator first discovered two blips on the radar screen. Then more and more
unknown objects came into view on the radar screen, according to Turner’s
testimony in the documentary segment. They counted 35 in total. All
the UFOs followed a north to south east track.
When the objects first appeared on the screen
they flew 3,000 feet
above ground level and climbed so rapidly, that by the time the UFOs
disappeared from radar they were in excess of 60,000 feet.
Alan Turner was determined to solve the mystery.
He diverted an RAF Canberra jet, which was on a return flight from West Germany.
When the pilot got within one mile of one
particular blip, he said, in a very agitated voice, that the unknown object was
“climbing like the clappers” (according to Turner) on the jet’s radar screen.
The Canberra
pilot and his navigator never made visual contact with the object.
The objects were first sighted north east of the
Salisbury Plain Danger Area (UK MoD military training area) and they left the
radar screen south east of Salisbury Plain.
A few days after this UFO incident, Alan Turner
was summoned into the Squadron Leader's office and questioned by two
civilian-clothed men about the incident. The two men were not identified.
“I, along with all the others who were in the
room on that day, were told in no uncertain terms not to relate what we had
seen until cleared to do so,” Alan Turner said in an interview.
Turner has been assured by RAF officers that
there were no training operations, classified or otherwise, going on at the
time and there were no weather balloons or probes in the area at the time of
the UFO incident.
Quote from Alan Turner’s testimony in the documentary
film segment:
“There were seven technically different radars (my
comment: both ground and airborne radar) – all seeing exactly the same thing.
There are two types of tape. One is the video tape
taken from the radar, and the other is the voice tape. And that is air to
ground, ground to air; that is all the land lines and all the converstions
between the controllers and each other. I have absolutely no idea where it is
or even if it still exists. All I do know is that it did exist.
I am absolutely certain that it was some very strange
phenomenon on radar – which no one has yet to come up with any rational
explanation for.”
Alan Turner was awarded the MBE in 1984, and he retired from the RAF in
1995.
The information in this
article is taken from several credible sources.
I first reported about this documentary film segment
on 5 August 2009.
Related posts:
realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=1971
Wing Commander Alan Turner, Royal Air Force (Ret.)
(gstatic.com photo)
GCI (Ground Control of Interception) radar installation at RAF Sopley, Hampshire, 1945 (text by commons.wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org) (wikimedia.org photo)
(tageo.com photo)