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Minggu, 16 Maret 2008

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By Leslie Kean (page 1)

Ten years after the Arizona UFO incident known as the “Phoenix Lights,” former Arizona
Republican Governor Fife Symington, III, now says that he himself was a witness to one of
the strange unidentified flying objects, even though he originally did not say so publicly.

“It was enormous and inexplicable,” he said in an exclusive interview from his home in
Phoenix. “Who knows where it came from? A lot of people saw it, and I saw it too.”

On March 13, 1997, during Symington’s second term as Governor, thousands saw multiple
triangular and V-shaped craft, gliding slowly and silently across the sky for half an hour
beginning at approximately 8:15 pm. Awestruck witnesses, throughout the state, estimated
that the eerie, lighted vehicles were bigger than many football fields, up to a mile long.

Arizona Senator John McCain, a friend of Symington’s who the former Governor describes as
“open-minded,” acknowledged at a 2000 press conference that lights were seen over
Arizona. “That has never been fully explained. But I have to tell you that I do not have any
evidence whatsoever of aliens or UFOs,” he said.

The evidence for a possible UFO, which simply means something in the sky that can’t be
identified, lies in the fact that countless witnesses reported seeing low, gigantic, technological
flying machines that blocked out the stars - not merely lights. Now the former Governor
attests to that.

Symington says he saw a large triangular “craft of unknown origin” with lights, moving slowly.
“It was dramatic. And it couldn’t have been flares because it was too symmetrical,” he says.
“It had a geometric outline, a constant shape.”

The sightings of the objects that evening are sometimes confused with the row of lights that
appeared at about 10 pm, near Phoenix, and have been shown repeatedly on television
news. These later lights were probably flares. People witnessed the objects at around 8:30
because they were outside on that pleasant, cloudless night watching the Hale-Bopp Comet.

Symington was known for ridiculing the incident at a spoof press conference, so his
statement marks a dramatic turnaround. He wants to make amends to his constituents and
set the record straight.

On the morning of June 19, 1997, when pressure was building from frustrated citizens who
wanted answers, the Governor announced on television that he was ordering a full
investigation and would make “all the necessary inquiries. We’re going to get to the bottom of
this. We’re going to find out if it was a UFO,” he said in a serious tone.

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Later that same afternoon, Symington suddenly called a press conference and told viewers
that he had found the source behind the Phoenix Lights. His chief-of-staff, Jay Heiler, was
escorted in by public safety police officers while handcuffed, wearing a large rubber mask
and dressed as a space alien. The Governor presented the costumed extraterrestrial as the
“guilty party.” While laughter filled the room, he joked that “this just goes to show that you
guys are entirely too serious.”

“It was an insult to the intelligence of the witnesses,” Barwood recalls. “The message to
Arizona citizens was that reporting this was stupid.”

“If I had to do it all over again I probably would have handled it differently,” Symington
explains. He says that the state of Arizona was “on the brink of hysteria” about the UFO
sighting when he called the press conference, and the frenzy was building. “I wanted them to
lighten up and calm down, so I introduced a little levity. But I never felt that the overall
situation was a matter of ridicule,” he says.

The former Governor, a cousin of the late Missouri Senator Stuart Symington, states that the
incident remains open and unsolved, and should be officially investigated. The US
Government has never acknowledged that something was in the sky that night.

Phoenix city councilwoman Frances Barwood was the only elected official to launch a public
investigation in 1997, but she received no information from any level of government. Barwood
spoke with over seven hundred witnesses, including police, pilots and former military, who
provided very similar descriptions. “The government never interviewed even one witness,”
she says.

Symington also attempted to find an explanation. He called the Commander at Luke Air
Force Base, the General in charge of the National Guard, and the head of the Department of
Public Safety in 1997. None of these officials had answers, and they were “perplexed,” he
says.

In 2000, the Department of Defense maintained that it could not find any information about
the triangular object, in response to a court-ordered search requested by a U.S. District court
in Phoenix, as part of a class action suit filed by witnesses.
.
“How could they possibly not know about these huge craft flying low over major population
centers? That’s inconceivable, but it’s also frightening,” Barwood commented.

Symington’s announcement is bolstered by the fact that similar flying objects have been
documented by the governments of England and Belgium.

On March 30, 1990, the Belgian Air Force sent two F-16s armed with missiles to intercept a
black triangular UFO displaying bright lights on its underside. The object could accelerate or
dive at tremendous speeds, starting from a stationary position, as recorded on radar. It flew
at the speed of sound without making a sonic boom.

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The Belgian Ministry of Defense released all its data on the UFO to the press, after
eliminating American stealth aircraft and all other possible explanations.

On the night of March 30, 1993, three years later to the day, a vast triangular-shaped craft,
also capable of rapidly accelerating in seconds from a virtual hover, was seen by over a
hundred witnesses in England, including police officers and military personnel. The British
Ministry of Defense stated that “none of the usual explanations put forward to explain UFO
sightings seem applicable” and concluded that the evidence showed that “an unidentified
object (or objects) of unknown origin was operating over the UK."

According to an April 1993 MOD document, the agency sent a letter to the US Embassy
which was “disseminated to all ‘interested Agencies’ in the US” to find out whether the March
UFO could have been attributable to some US prototype such as the Aurora.

“The answer I got back was extraordinary,” reports Nick Pope, the MOD official who
investigated the 1993 sighting. “The Americans had been having their own sightings of these
large, triangular-shaped UFOs and wanted to know if the RAF might have such a craft.”

This statement, four years before the display over Arizona, contradicts the 2000 claim by the
US DOD that the department had no information at all about the triangles. To this day, US
officials continue to keep the lid on the Phoenix Lights and other well-documented American
sightings of mysterious giant triangles.

“I wish that government entities would stop trying to shut down these investigations by putting
out some flakey story,” says Symington, a long-time pilot, drawing an analogy to the
November sighting of a hovering disc by many aviation witnesses at O’Hare airport, which the
FAA explained away as a ”weather phenomenon.”

Leslie Kean

is an investigative journalist whose articles have appeared in numerous
newspapers and magazines around the world such as the Boston Globe, Baltimore Sun,
Providence Journal, Sacramento Bee, Atlanta-Journal Constitution, Newark Star Ledger,
The Nation magazine, International Herald Tribune, Globe and Mail, the Sydney Morning
Herald, the Bangkok Post, the Kyoto Journal, and the Journal of Scientific Exploration.
Her stories have been syndicated through Knight-Ridder Tribune, Scripps-Howard, New
York Times Wire Service, Pacific News Service and the National Publishers Association.

She is the co-founder of the Washington-based Coalition for Freedom of Information.