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Britain’s first UFO tour begins in a Suffolk forest where 17 strange encounters were reported in 1980.

Britain will host its first UFO tour at the spot where 17 odd objects were seen over four decades ago, according to reports.

The Sun reports that ex-detective Gary Heseltine will lead a two-day tour of Suffolk’s mysterious Rendlesham Forest this summer.

Rendlesham Forest has attracted UFO enthusiasts for decades.

Britain's first ufo tour begins in a suffolk forest where 17 strange encounters were reported in 1980.
Britain's first ufo tour begins in a suffolk forest where 17 strange encounters were reported in 1980.

Mr. Hesteltine is expanding the natural trail around the 1980 red and green lights.

The tours follow the publication of his book ‘Non-Human The Rendlesham Forest Incidents. 42 Years of Denial’, which exposes the murky political world surrounding the incident.

Mr. Heseltine wrote: “The Rendlesham Forest incident has often been referred to as “Britain’s Roswell.” And the comparison is apt in terms of its significance in UFO history.

“However, I must state that the RFI, as it has come to be known, differs significantly in many important areas.

“After nearly 14 years of public research into the RFI, I cannot think of another case that has been the subject of so much misinformation and damaging internal witness “political” infighting,” the author writes.

Military men saw lights hanging in the sky and falling into the woodland three nights before the 1980 New Year.

The Special Air Service (SAS) of the United Kingdom played a scare tactic on the United States Air Force, making them believe these shapes were extraterrestrial spacecraft. This has since been dismissed as a hoax.

At the time, it was rumored that the SAS regularly probed the perimeters of RAF Woodbridge. Which purportedly stored nuclear warheads during the Cold War, to test the security of the United States.

US security allegedly battered and interrogated the Brits before releasing them 18 hours later.

British X-Files expert Dr. David Clarke, a researcher of the case, stated previously, “After their release, the troopers did not complain about their rough treatment, but they were determined to exact revenge on the USAF for the beatings they had received.”

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