http://www.youtube.c...h?v=EI9ATxRjiMk
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=WTLE4TOut2Y
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=sUjmzcojB_8
The Rendlesham Forest Incident is the name given to a series of reported sightings of unexplained lights and the alleged landing of an extraterrestrial spacecraft in Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk, England in late December 1980. It is perhaps the most famous UFO event to have happened in Britain, ranking amongst the best-known UFO events worldwide. It has been compared to the Roswell UFO incident in the United States and is sometimes referred to as "Britain's Roswell".
Following the event, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) denied that it posed any threat to national security and stated that it was therefore never investigated as a security matter. Later evidence indicated that there was a substantial MoD file on the subject and this led to claims of a cover-up. Some interpreted this as part of a larger pattern of information suppression concerning the true nature of unidentified flying objects, by both the United States and British governments (see the UFO conspiracy theory). However, when the file was released in 2001 it turned out to consist mostly of internal correspondence and responses to inquiries from the public. The lack of any in-depth investigation confirmed that the case was never taken seriously by the MoD.[1]
http://en.wikipedia....Forest_Incident
The Halt Tape - Part 1 on You Tube
The Halt Tape - part 2 on You Tube
I haven't watched, read, listened through all of this yet - but I've heard about this before on a few documentaries I've seen. I've probably read about it too. It's quite well known. I saw something about it on Sky Three's Conspiracies recently.
Strange But True? was a program about the supernatural and paranormal on British TV (ITV) during the 1990s and the Rendlesham episode aired on 09 December 1994.
Rendlesham used to be the seat of East Anglian kings and it meant Rendit's House or something like that. Raedwald, King of the East Angles and Bretwalda - a fairly important protagonist in early English history - had this place as his royal dwelling and some people think that he was the man buried in the longship at Sutton Hoo.
This post has been edited by Bright One: 12 August 2009 - 05:41 PM
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