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RAF Cosford, West Midlands — RAF regiment soldiers reported a large triangular craft flying silently over the base on March 31, 1993, as part of a UK-wide wave

RAF Cosford and Shawbury Incidents

March 31, 1993

RAF Cosford, Shropshire, England, UK

Modern Era

RAF Cosford, West Midlands — RAF regiment soldiers reported a large triangular craft flying silently over the base on March 31, 1993, as part of a UK-wide wave

Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

  • DateMarch 31, 1993
  • LocationRAF Cosford, Shropshire, England, UK
  • Witnesses0
  • ShapeTriangle
  • Credibility★★★★☆
Same eraModern Era
  1. 1992Tří Sekery Radar Incident — Czechoslovak Military Scramble
  2. 1992Uiwangbong Air Force Radar Anomaly
  3. 1993RAF Cosford and Shawbury Incidents
  4. 1993Kelly Cahill Close Encounter — Narre Warren, Victoria
  5. 1994Ariel School Landing, Zimbabwe

Credibility Audit

5 factors
  1. Military Witness+3
  2. Expert Witness+2
  3. Multiple Witnesses+2
  4. Official Report+1
  5. Govt. Acknowledgment+4
Raw total12
Final tier★★★★☆High
Thresholds
  • ★0–3
  • ★★4–7
  • ★★★8–11
  • ★★★★12–16
  • ★★★★★17+

DoD Observables

2 of 5
  • Instantaneous Acceleration
  • Hypersonic Velocity
  • Low Observability
  • Trans-Medium Travel
  • Anti-Gravity Lift

Event Description

Observed Shape
Triangle

Craft morphology

On the night of March 30 to 31, 1993, a sustained wave of UAP sightings swept across the United Kingdom from Devon to Scotland, with reports flooding into police stations, military bases, and civilian authorities for several hours. The wave's most operationally significant events centered on two Royal Air Force installations in the English West Midlands — encounters witnessed by trained military personnel at secure facilities.

At RAF Cosford in Shropshire, an RAF Regiment patrol — soldiers whose professional purpose is the physical security of the base — reported a large triangular craft flying silently over the installation at low altitude, projecting a narrow beam of light beneath it and traveling at speeds inconsistent with any conventional aircraft. Minutes later at RAF Shawbury, approximately 20 miles away, the base meteorological officer — a senior officer trained specifically in the observation and reporting of aerial and atmospheric phenomena — made a sustained observation of the same or a similar object. He described a large triangular craft, estimated at the scale of a jumbo jet, flying slowly and silently overhead with three white lights at each apex and a rotating central light beneath the hull. The craft directed a beam of light toward the ground as if conducting a systematic search of the terrain.

The meteorological officer's account was assessed as highly credible by investigators specifically because of his professional training in aerial observation and his position — a base officer with no motivation to file an unusual report and every professional incentive to avoid embarrassment. His observation lasted several minutes, providing an unusually extended contact window.

Nick Pope, who staffed the Ministry of Defence's UAP investigation desk at the time, later described the Cosford incident as the most significant UAP event in British government records during his service. The MoD investigation produced an internal assessment concluding that a genuine, unexplained phenomenon had been observed by credible military witnesses across multiple installations, and that the object 'showed characteristics that were not immediately obvious or explainable.' The independent consistency of the Cosford and Shawbury accounts — separated by 20 miles and observed by different military units minutes apart — remains the case's most forensically significant feature.

Sources

  1. [1]governmentMoD Defence Intelligence Staff (DI55) investigation — officially investigated, no explanation found
  2. [2]witnessRAF Shawbury meteorological officer — close-range observation, beam of light, slow then rapid departure
  3. [3]witnessNick Pope, MoD UFO desk officer — 'most significant case during my tenure'