Statement by Corporal Proctor:
"I was on duty in the guard room when the other boys outside began shouting. I went out to see what the commotion was about and could see thirteen craft in the skies," he said.Experts from the Ministry of Defence are currently examining the cell phone footage from that night. A MoD spokesperson recently said, "The MoD examines reports solely to establish whether UK airspace may have been compromised by hostile or unauthorised military activity. Unless there is evidence of a potential threat, there is no attempt to identify the nature of each sighting reported. "
"They were zig-zagging, but I filmed two before they disappeared. They were like rotating cubes with multiple colours.
"I made a full report to my commanding officers and gave them my footage. The other lads were as amazed by it as I was."
Source: Telegraph.co.uk
7 comments:
I always find it curious how one may determine the threat or lack thereof of something you can't identify in a situation such as this.
Well said gl, I agree.
This is a challenging post.
Adore your blog. I am so glad I found you. Will be back!
Thanks, I just made some pretty big changes with my template and wasn't sure how my readers would react.
Yes, a definition of threat...?
Hey Aura, I went to your link Telegraph.co, couldn't find the article, probably lost in all the busyness of the paper, terrible layout.
Hey Bob, click on the first link that I provide. You can find the article there.
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