If Buran regarded the reports as groundless, why did he call in the British police within 11 minutes of calling the USAF policemen back to base ?
(1) The on-duty USAF Security Police had no business to be off-base, although when there was an initial fear of an aircraft crash (possibly due to the 03:00 fireball) sending a few to check was both civic-minded and understandable. It became clear there hadn't been an air crash, there was no justification for their presence off-base to continue.
(2)
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ARMOLD: Yes, I remember the call was rather late in the shift and I'm certain the decision to call the local constabulary was one that was made late in the morning and with hesitation. You see no one was particularly eager to call the local police and ask silly questions about UFO's. However one also must cover all the bases so we made the decisions to call and ask if they had any reports of aircraft accidents or similar phenomenon.
Skeptoid Website
https://skeptoid.com/episodes/135.
The USAF SPs thought that unusual lights had been seen. They decided to tell the civil power
solely responsible for safety and security around the bases, for which they (USAF personnel) had no responsibility or authority whatsoever about this.
This seems entirely sensible, whatever the misgivings Buran/ Armold might have had about 'phoning in what was effectively a UFO report.
Perhaps some prevarication- an initial reluctance to phone the local police- is also understandable.
He knew people had been out in the woods all day.
Any evidence that "people had been out in the woods all day"? -Preferably from contemporaneous sources; some later claims seem, um, unlikely to be objectively accurate.
What would be the justification? US visiting forces in the UK were not serving on the same basis as US forces in FRG at that time, see above.
They had no legal basis or precedent to conduct operations off-base without the host government's permission.
And as far as history tells us, no need.
Halt's been dragged out into the woods on the entire basis that 'they're back'.
No, Halt
took himself out into the woods. He wasn't following orders to be there, and had no authority there- no more than any member of the public (with possible exceptions re. the behaviour of US personnel under his command, e.g. if a junior rank insulted him off-base, that might not be an offence under UK law but the miscreant might be subject to disciplinary proceedings, maybe prosecution under US service law when back on base).
Halt had the
right to be there, but that's a different thing. He didn't have the right to be conducting ad-hoc operations by uniformed personnel there.
Halt had absolutely zero responsibility for security/ zero right to perform any sort of investigation in the UK outside of US bases.
Even the use of the phrase 'impact point' in the first part of the Halt tape implies something dropped...
Yes, it implies that. Of course, no artefact was found at that location, and there was no crater. There was no radar track of anything dropping. Later, same source, Halt said "landing site".
Halt also implied there were farm animals at the Boast's farm (there weren't).
And Halt also referred to a "blasted area"
in the middle of the three scrapes that local Police officers, who saw them in daylight, thought might have been made by rabbits. Which he failed to consider, if it was a blast area, as a possible security concern.
And claimed he saw lights beaming down. Years later, he would remember- he didn't mention it at the time- that he had seen a beam targeted on the weapons storage area at Bentwaters (refuted by Tim Egercic who was actually in the WSA. Also refuted by Conrad).
Halt believed elevated radiation levels had been detected, they hadn't. Halt also said he had
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... never seen a pine tree that's been damaged react that fast
...though quite what that's based on, or its relevance, is unclear. Maybe Halt had extensive experience of arboriculture/ tree surgery, but I doubt it. He thinks the axe marks left by forestry workers on trees to be felled are something strange.
He believed a Starlight Scope pointed at a tree showed "...some form of energy."
Personally, I think Halt told the truth as he saw it, although we know he was mistaken about some things (certainly the Geiger counter readings, what could be seen through a Starlight Scope, the tree markings). Some of his judgements- the whole foray of 28th December- are questionable.
I believe that Penniston's, Cabansag's and Burrough's statements of January 1980 also reflect what they believed to be true, though Penniston's failure to mention his colleagues conclusion, that they had followed a lighthouse lamp, might be a "sin of omission": he
believed that the lights he saw were of unusual origin, so he didn't mention the lighthouse because he didn't want his account to be diluted by mentioning something mundane which others might interpret as the cause (I have less sympathy for some of his much later claims).
We have evidence that (a very small minority of) USAF personnel* at the twin bases reported seeing UFOs.
We have no credible evidence, from any source, of anything else dramatic happening there over 26th-28th December 1980 (until Loutzenheiser's uncorroborated 2024 claim, which requires us to believe 67th ARRS, effectively a special operations unit, needed a truck driver from outside their squadron and decided to ask a junior rank Security Policeman, not someone whose trade actually involved driving heavy trucks or recovery vehicles for the USAF. Not even someone responsible for driving a nuclear weapons carrier, if there were nuclear weapons present there at that time).
Extraordinary claims are often shown to be inaccurate, but they don't always require another extraordinary, or dramatic, explanation.
*No spouses or teenage kids who might be out and about visiting their neighbours/ friends over the Christmas period. No control tower/ air traffic control staff and no aircrew, who tend to be interested in/ have knowledge of flying things (and none of whom seem to have been approached by Halt for their opinion).