Lakenheath-Bentwaters Incident
RAF and USAF radar tracked UFOs performing impossible maneuvers over two airbases. A Venom fighter was sent to intercept and was itself pursued by the object it was chasing.
The Lakenheath-Bentwaters Incident
On the night of August 13-14, 1956, RAF and USAF personnel at two English air bases tracked unidentified objects on radar and visually observed strange lights. When a fighter was scrambled to intercept, the pursued became the pursuer in one of the best-documented military UFO encounters of the Cold War era.
The Bases
Two facilities involved:
- RAF Bentwaters
- RAF Lakenheath
- Both in Suffolk, England
- USAF operated
- Cold War installations
The First Contacts
Beginning around 9:30 PM:
- Radar contacts at Bentwaters
- Multiple targets
- Moving at impossible speeds
- Some 4,000 mph estimated
- Controllers alerted
The Objects
Radar showed:
- Fast-moving targets
- Sudden stops
- Course reversals
- Merged and separated
- No known aircraft capable
Visual Confirmation
Tower personnel:
- Observed lights
- Confirmed radar returns
- Bright white light
- Moving erratically
- Corroborated data
Lakenheath Contact
Shortly after:
- Lakenheath radar
- Same or similar objects
- Tracked independently
- Coordinated response
- Fighter scrambled
The Venom Intercept
RAF De Havilland Venom:
- Scrambled to intercept
- Pilot gained radar lock
- Approached object
- Then extraordinary happened
The Pursuit Reversal
Remarkably:
- Object circled behind fighter
- Locked onto Venom
- Pursued the interceptor
- Pilot could not shake it
- Stayed on his tail
Pilot’s Attempts
The RAF pilot:
- Tried evasive maneuvers
- Dives, climbs, turns
- Object stayed behind
- Eventually object broke off
- Pilot returned shaken
Second Fighter
Another Venom sent:
- Developed mechanical issues
- Had to return
- No intercept made
- Objects still present
- Eventually departed
Official Documentation
Both American and British:
- Reports filed
- Radar data recorded
- Witnesses interviewed
- High strangeness noted
- Never explained
The Condon Committee
Later examined case:
- University of Colorado study
- Found unexplainable
- One of few admitted unknowns
- Strong evidence
- No conventional explanation
The Duration
Events continued:
- For several hours
- Multiple contacts
- Various locations
- Eventually ceased
- Mystery remained
Significance
The Lakenheath-Bentwaters case is significant for:
- Dual radar confirmation
- Fighter intercept
- Pursuit reversal
- Official documentation
- Admitted unknown by Condon
Legacy
The Lakenheath-Bentwaters incident is considered one of the most compelling military UFO cases in history. The radar evidence, the fighter intercept, and the unprecedented pursuit reversal make it a cornerstone case that even skeptical studies couldn’t explain away.