| 
	
	by J.Marrs 
	extracted from 'Secret Societies Threaten to Take Over America' 
	2008 
	from
	
	SlideShare Website 
	  
	
	Just six days after the D-Day Invasion of 
	Europe, on June 12, 
	1944, the residents of London were startled to hear a droning buzz in the 
	skies over their city. They were more startled when the sound suddenly 
	stopped and moments later a huge explosion rocked the East London 
	neighborhood of Mile End, killing eight civilians.
 It was the first of the V-1 Buzz bombs - a forerunner of today’s cruise 
	missiles.
 
 The V-1 and the later V-2 rockets that terrorized London are two of the more 
	famous examples of German war technology. These Vergeltungswaffe, or 
	retaliation weapons, were developed at the secret German rocket facility 
	Peenemunde and put into operation just after the D-Day landings in Normandy, 
	France.
 
	
	From June 12, 1944, until August 20, more than eight thousand of the 
	V-1 rockets (each carrying a ton of explosives) rained down on London, 
	inflicting 45,479 casualties and destroying 75,000 buildings. The less 
	numerous V-2 rockets - which, unlike the V-1, could not be seen, heard, or 
	intercepted in flight - nevertheless produced more than 10,000 casualties in 
	the British capital.
 In addition to the vengeance weapons, the Germans produced a number of 
	scientific breakthroughs in their quest for weapons technology during World 
	War II. German ingenuity and efficiency appeared capable of overcoming 
	almost any obstacle. One clear example may be found simply by comparing 
	figures from its armaments industry. Despite constant bombing by the Allies, 
	overall production of tanks, small arms, ships, and aircraft was higher at 
	the beginning of 1945 than in 1941, when Germany was victorious on all 
	fronts and America had not yet entered the war.
 
 Technological advances were seen in almost every area. The rate and quality 
	was astounding.
 
	
	Plastics, which only came into general use in the United 
	States during the 1950s, were developed in Nazi Germany. Bakelite, 
	polystyrene (under the name Trolitul), Plexiglas, polyethylene (forerunner 
	of today’s plastic Baggies and syringes), polyamide (nylon), and aldols 
	(a derivative of polyvinyl) were all produced during wartime.  
	
	The various forms of plastic were produced under 
	a consortium of companies but led by
	
	I.G. Farben, which also in 1941 synthesized the opiate methadone and Demerol 
	under the name “pethidine.”
 Television, which most Americans did not get to see until the early 1950s, 
	was highly developed in Nazi Germany. More than 150,000 persons in 
	twenty-eight public viewing rooms in Berlin saw clear television broadcasts 
	of the 1936 Olympics.
 
	
	They watched screens equipped with Fernseh 180-line 
	cathode ray tube projectors that presented a picture about forty-eight by 
	forty-two inches. In 1939, the German firm Fernseh began developing a 
	miniaturized TV system that allowed pilots to guide both bombs and missiles 
	after launching.  
	
	This system was used in the anti-aircraft rocket Wasserfall, or waterfall.  
	
		
		“Many of these tests failed,” noted author Joseph 
	P. Farrell. “But by the war’s end, a successful test of the television-guided ‘Tonne’ missile was conducted by German scientists for the Allies in 
	Berlin, with the target being a photograph of a little girl’s face. The test 
	was successful, much to the impressed, and doubtless shocked, Allied 
	observers.” 
	
	Tanks, which began the war as little more than armor-plated bulldozers 
	designed to support infantry, were developed into independent, thickly 
	armored machines powered by gas turbines, with guns stabilized while moving, 
	hydrokinetic power transmissions, and defenses against chemical and 
	biological attacks.  
	
	Some German tanks were so far ahead of their time, they 
	were still being utilized in other nations as late as battles in the 1970s. 
	To counter the threat of modern tanks, the Germans developed simple, but 
	very effective, portable rocket launchers armed with a hollow charge such as 
	the Panzerschreck bazooka and the easily produced Panzerfaust, a forerunner 
	of today’s hand-carried rocket-propelled grenade (RPG).  
	
	The innovative 9-mm 
	German MP-40 Schmeisser machine pistol saw extensive use during the war, and 
	its successors, the MP-43 and the MP- 44 assault rifles, became the 
	forerunners of today’s ubiquitous AK-47. Late in the war, some MP-44s 
	carried an early but effective night- vision light and scope called the 
	Vampyr, or Vampire.
 At the end of the war in 1945, American military intelligence officers were 
	shocked by the technology they found as Allied forces overran German 
	research facilities.
 
	
	Supersonic rockets, nerve gas, jet aircraft , guided 
	missiles, stealth technology, hardened armor - even flying saucers - were just 
	some of the groundbreaking technologies being developed in Nazi 
	laboratories, workshops, and factories. To give some idea of the aspirations 
	of Nazi scientists, the huge ME-264 was dubbed the “America Bomber,” while a 
	three-stage rocket was named the “Mars Rocket.”
 As respected British historian Barrie Pitt noted,
 
	
		
		“[T]he Nazi war machine 
	swung into action utilizing as much as it could of the most up-to-date scientific knowledge available, and as the war developed, the list of 
	further achievements grew to staggering proportions. From guns firing 
	‘shells’ of air to detailed discussions of flying saucers; from beams of 
	sound that were fatal to a man at 50 yards, to guns that fired around 
	corners and others that could ‘see in the dark’ - the list is awe-inspiring in 
	its variety.”  
	Pitt stated that while some German technology was less 
	developed than imagined at the time,  
		
		“some were dangerously near to a 
	completion stage which could have reversed the war’s outcome.” 
	
	Former Polish military journalist Igor Witkowski described German wartime 
	research as “the greatest technological leap in the history of our 
	civilization.”  
	
	He said the Germans ignored Einstein and developed an 
	approach to science based on quantum theories.  
	
		
		“Don’t forget that Einsteinian physics, relativity physics, with its big-picture view of the 
	universe, represented Jewish science to the Nazis. Germany was where 
		
		quantum 
	mechanics was born. The Germans were looking at gravity [and other matters] 
	from a different perspective to everyone else. Maybe it gave them answers 
	to things that pro-relativity scientists hadn’t even thought of,” explained 
	Witkowski, who had unprecedented access to German wartime documents that 
	only recently because available, due to the collapse of communism. 
	
	Consider that at the beginning of the war, aircraft were made of canvas 
	stretched over a wooden frame. By 1945, Germany had become the first nation 
	in the world to put into service an all-metal, jet-propelled jet fighter - the
	Messerschmitt-262.  
	
	They also produced the world’s first operational 
	helicopter and vertical takeoff and landing aircraft .
 As German scientists worked feverishly to perfect the V-2 rockets and other, 
	more secret weapons, SS chief Heinrich Himmler was taking steps to separate 
	his SS from normal party and state control. “In the spring of 1944 Hitler 
	approved Himmler’s proposal to build an SS-owned industrial concern in order 
	to make the SS permanently independent of the state budget,” wrote Nazi 
	armaments minister Albert Speer.
 
	
	Employing methods later used by the CIA, SS 
	leaders created a number of business fronts and other organizations - many 
	using concentration camp labor - with an eye toward producing revenue to 
	support SS activities. These highly compartmentalized groups headed by 
	young, ambitious SS officers neither required nor desired any connection 
	with Germany’s high-profile leaders. Their purpose was to create an economic 
	base that could continue pursuing Nazi goals long after the defeat of 
	Germany.
 Armaments minister Speer conceded that there were weapons development 
	programs that he knew nothing about. He admitted that an SS scheme in 1944 
	to construct a secret weapons plant requiring 3,500 concentration camp 
	workers had been concealed from him. Speer even hinted at the possibility of 
	secret weapons that “were secretly produced by the SS toward the end of the 
	war and concealed from me.”
 
 While the V-2 rocket program began under the aegis of the German Army, and 
	the ME-262 jet fighter under the Luftwaffe, they were ultimately 
	transferred to SS control.
 
	
		
		“In short, anything that had shown any real 
	promise as a weapon system - in particular, anything that appeared to 
	represent a quantum leap over the then- state-of-the-art - had ended up under 
	the oversight of the SS,” noted Nick Cook, an aviation editor and aerospace 
	consultant to Jane’s Defence Weekly.  
	
	With 
	
	secret projects in the hands of 
	hardcore SS fanatics, and with factories and research facilities scattered 
	over - and under - the countryside, it is entirely conceivable that weapons far 
	in advance of the V rockets could have been developed without the knowledge 
	of anyone except Himmler and his top lieutenants.
 Other notable secret Nazi weapons nearing completion in 1945 included the 
	Messerschmitt-163 Komet and the vertically launched Natter rocket fighters, 
	the jet-powered flying wing Horten Ho-IX and the delta-winged Lippisch DM-1. 
	It has been noted that some of top-secret Nazi weaponry development was 
	moved outside Germany, to such places as Blizna, Poland - the same area where 
	Allied aircrews first encountered the infamous “foo-fighters,” small glowing 
	balls of light that shadowed Allied bombers.
 
	
	The “foo-fighters” soon caught 
	the attention of the American news media. The New York Times, on December 
	13, 1944, reported news authorized by the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied 
	Expeditionary Force.  
	
		
		“Floating Mystery Ball Is New Nazi Air Weapon,” read 
	the headline.  
	
		
		Airmen of the American Air Force report that they are encountering
	silver-colored spheres in the air over German territory. The spheres
	are encountered either singly or in clusters. Sometimes they are
	semi- translucent.
 The new device, apparently an air defense weapon, resembles the
	huge glass balls that adorn Christmas trees. There was no information available as to what holds them up like stars in the sky, what is in
	them or what their purpose is supposed to be.
 
	
	According to author Renato Vesco, the “foo-fighters” were actually the 
	Feuerball, or fire ball, which was, 
	
		
		“a highly original flying machine... 
	circular and armored, more or less resembling the shell of a tortoise, and 
	was powered by a special turbojet engine, also flat and circular, whose 
	principles of operation... generated a great halo of luminous flames.... Radio-controlled at the moment of takeoff, it then automatically followed 
	enemy aircraft, attracted by their exhaust flames, and approached close 
	enough without collision to wreck their radar gear.”  
	
	Vesco claimed that the 
	basic principles of the Feuerball were later applied to a “symmetrical 
	circular aircraft” known as the Kugelblitz, or ball lightning, automatic 
	fighter that became an “authentic antecedent of the present- day flying 
	saucers.”  
	
	He said this innovative craft was destroyed after a “single lucky 
	wartime mission” by retreating SS troops.
 Even though the public has been conditioned for more than sixty years to 
	dismiss any notion of flying saucers, or UFOs, the accumulation of evidence 
	available today makes it impossible to reject the reality of such craft out 
	of hand. Obviously, the Nazis were experimenting with new and exotic energy 
	technology. The extraordinary development of the Feuerball may have provided 
	the fi rst public glimpse into the heart of Nazi super-science.
 
 Several writers have produced articles about the Nazi development of flying 
	saucers. British author W. A. Harbinson claimed that he got his ideas after 
	discovering postwar German articles mentioning a former Luftwaffe engineer, 
	Flugkapitan Rudolph Schriever.
 
	
	According to information gleaned by Harbinson 
	from articles in Der Spiegel, Bild am Sonntag, Luftfahrt International, and 
	other German publications, Schriever claimed to have designed a “flying top” 
	prototype in 1941, which was actually test-flown in June 1942.  
	
	In 1944, Schriever said he constructed a larger, jet version of his circular craft, 
	with the help of scientists Klaus Habermohl, Otto Miethe, and an Italian, 
	Dr. Giuseppe Belluzzo.  
	
	Drawings of this saucer were published in the 1959 
	British book German Secret Weapons of the Second World War and Their Later 
	Development, by Major Rudolph Lusar, an engineer who worked in the German 
	Reichs-Patent Office and had access to many original plans and documents. 
	Lusar described the saucer as a ring of separate disks carrying adjustable 
	jets rotating around a fixed cockpit. The entire craft had a height of 105 
	feet and could fly vertically or horizontally, depending on the positioning 
	of the jets.
 Schriever later said the Allied advance into Germany put an end to his 
	“flying disc” experiments, with all equipment and designs lost or destroyed. 
	However, a Georg Klein told the postwar German press that he had witnessed 
	the Schriever disc, or something like it, test-flown in February 1945.
 
 Schriever reportedly died in the late 1950s and, according to a 1975 issue 
	of Luftfahrt International, notes and sketches related to a large flying 
	saucer were found in his effects. The periodical also stated that Schriever 
	maintained until his death that his original saucer concept must have been 
	made operational prior to war’s end.
 
	
	This possibility is acknowledged by 
	British author Brian Ford, who wrote,  
	
		
		“There are supposed to have been 
	‘flying saucers’ too, which were near the final stages of development, and 
	indeed it may be that some progress was made toward the construction of 
	small, disc-like aircraft, but the results were destroyed, apparently before 
	they fell into enemy hands.” 
	
	These accounts would seem to be corroborated by a CIA report dated May 27, 
	1954. As reported in Nick Redfern’s 1998 book, The FBI Files: The FBI’s UFO 
	Top Secrets Exposed, the document stated,  
	
		
		“A German newspaper (not further 
	identified) recently published an interview with Georg Klein, famous German 
	engineer and aircraft expert, describing the experimental construction of 
	‘flying saucers’ carried out by him from 1941 to 1945. Klein stated he was 
	present when, in 1945, the first piloted ‘flying saucer’ took off and 
	reached a speed of 1,300 miles per hour within three minutes.    
		The 
	experiments resulted in three designs - one designed by Miethe was a disk- 
	shaped aircraft, 135 feet in diameter, which did not rotate; another, 
	designed by Habermohl and Schriever, consisted of a large rotating ring, in 
	the center of which was a round, stationary cabin for the crew. When the 
	Soviets occupied Prague, the Germans destroyed every trace of the ‘flying 
	saucer’ project and nothing more was heard of Habermohl and his assistants. 
		   
		Schriever recently died in Bremen, where he had been living. In Breslau, the 
	Soviets managed to capture one of the saucers built by Miethe, who escaped 
	to France. He is reportedly in the USA at present.” 
	
	Another candidate for inventor of a German UFO is the Austrian scientist 
	Victor Schauberger, who, after being kidnapped by the Nazis, reportedly 
	designed a number of “flying discs” in 1940, using a flameless and 
	smokeless form of electromagnetic propulsion called “diamagnetism.” 
	 
	
	Schauberger reportedly worked for the U.S. government for a short time after 
	the war before dying of natural causes. Prior to his death, he was quoted as 
	saying, “They took everything from me. Everything.” No one knows for certain 
	if he meant the Nazis or the Allies.
 That someone was flying highly unconventional disc- shaped objects shortly 
	after World War II was made plain by the now-public comments of U.S. Army 
	Lieutenant General Nathan Twining, then in charge of the Army Air Forces’ 
	Air Material Command (AMC).
 
 In mid-1947, two years after the war ended, “flying saucers” were being 
	reported both in Europe and America. General Twining wrote that the 
	“phenomenon reported is something real and not visionary or fictitious.”
 
	
	He 
	went on to describe attributes of such discs as having,  
	
		
		“extreme rates of 
	climb, maneuverability (particularly in roll), and action which must be 
	considered evasive when sighted or contacted by friendly aircraft and radar, lend[ing] belief to the possibility that some of the objects are controlled 
	either manually, automatically or remotely.” 
	
	Allowing a small glimpse into the reality of such radical technology, 
	Twining concluded,  
	
		
		“It is possible within the present U.S. knowledge 
		-  
	provided extensive detailed development is undertaken - to construct a piloted aircraft which has the general description of the object [described 
	above] which would be capable of an approximate range of 7,000 miles at 
	subsonic speeds.” 
	
	If technical knowledge in the 1940s was advanced enough to construct a 
	workable flying saucer, the public was never to hear about it. Beginning in 
	the late 1940s, a national security “lid” was placed on the subject.
 But it is fascinating to recall that one of the first and best documented 
	cases of mysterious abductions took place in September 1961, when 
	
	Betty and 
	Barney Hill under hypnosis recalled being taken aboard a circular craft 
	manned by men in black uniforms.
 
	
	Barney Hill described the leader as a 
	“German Nazi” wearing a shiny black jacket, scarf, and cap.
 Before anyone rushes out to proclaim that all UFOs are really secret Nazi 
	technology, serious attention should be given to the wealth of public 
	literature that clearly indicates that while some saucers, especially in the 
	years following World War II, may indeed have been Nazi test vehicles, any 
	objective review of the material suggests the presence of some 
	unconventional source as well.
 
 Another amazing - and chilling - aspect of Nazi technology involved their 
	development of nuclear weapons. Researcher and author Farrell concluded from 
	new material released from the former East Germany that the Nazis were much 
	closer to developing an atomic bomb than previously accepted by postwar 
	writers.
 
	
	He characterized the idea that the Germans had neither the talent 
	nor the capability to construct an operational atomic bomb - recall the 
	well-known story of the destruction of the heavy-water plant in Norway by 
	commandos - an “Allied Legend” designed to distract the public from a horrible 
	reality.  
	
		
		“[A]ll the evidence points to the conclusion that there was a 
	large, very well-funded, and very secret German isotope- enrichment program 
	during the war, a program successfully disguised during the war by the Nazis 
	and covered up after the war by the Allied Legend,” wrote Farrell, after 
	concluding that the conventional story that “the German failure to obtain 
	the atom bomb because they never had a functioning reactor is simply utter 
	scientific nonsense because a reactor is needed only if one wants to produce 
	plutonium. It is an unneeded, and expensive, development, if one only wants 
	to make a uranium A-bomb [emphasis in the original].” 
	
	Plus, there is the cryptic remark made by Kurt Diebner, a physicist involved 
	with the Nazi atomic bomb project.  
	
	Surreptitiously recorded by British 
	intelligence during postwar internment at Farm Hall, England, Diebner 
	mentioned a “photochemical process” to enrich uranium bypassing the need 
	for a centrifuge. Since no modern researcher understands what process was 
	referred to by Diebner, this may mean that the Nazis discovered a method of 
	isotope separation and uranium enrichment that even now remains classified.
 Adding to the idea that the Nazis already had perfected a method of 
	enriching uranium are the words of nuclear scientist Karl Wirtz, who was 
	also secretly taped at Farm Hall.
 
	
	Upon learning of the atomic bomb dropped 
	on Hiroshima, Otto Hahn, who discovered atomic fission, commented,  
	
		
		“They 
	can only have done that if they have uranium isotope separation.” 
		 
	
	To which Wirtz agreed by responding,  
	
		
		“They have it too,” a clear indication that he 
	knew of a German separation process.  
	
		
		“Thus, there is 
	sufficient reason, due to the science of bomb-making and the political and 
	military realities of the war after America’s entry, that the Germans took 
	the decision to develop only a uranium bomb, since that afforded the best, 
	most direct, and technologically least complicated route to acquisition of a 
	bomb.” 
	
	Based on his research, Farrell wrote,  
	
		
		“American progress in the plutonium 
	bomb, from the moment [physicist Enrico] Fermi successfully completed and 
	tested a functioning reactor in the squash court at the University of 
	Chicago, appeared to be running fairly smoothly, until fairly late in the 
	war, when it was discovered that in order to make a bomb from plutonium, the 
	critical mass would have to be assembled much faster than any existing 
	Allied fuse technologies could accomplish.    
		Moreover, there was so little 
	margin of error, since the fuses in an implosion device would have to fire 
	as close to simultaneously as possible, that Allied engineers began to 
	despair of making a plutonium bomb work.... I believe a strong prima 
	facie case has been outlined that Nazi Germany developed and successfully 
	tested, and perhaps used, a uranium atom bomb before the end of World War 
	II,” Farrell concluded. 
	
	Farrell was not alone in this assessment. In 2005, Berlin historian Rainer 
	Karlsch, in a book titled Hitlers Bombe, claimed that the Nazis indeed 
	tested nuclear weapons on Rugen Island near Ohrdruf, Thuringia, site of a 
	subsidiary concentration camp to the infamous Buchenwald. Reportedly, many 
	prisoners were killed during these tests, which were conducted under the 
	supervision of the SS.  
	
	Karlsch’s primary evidence consists of “vouchers” for 
	“tests” and a patent for a plutonium weapon dated 1941. He also claimed to 
	have found traces of radioactivity in soil from the site. However, in 
	February 2006, the German government reported no abnormal radiation levels 
	at the site, even after taking into account elevated levels due to the 1986 
	Chernobyl disaster in Russia.
 Although Nazi armaments minister Speer was questioned about a mysterious 
	blast at Ohrdruf during the Nuremberg war crimes trials, no significant 
	information on a nuclear test was found, either because it never happened or 
	because a postwar cover-up was quite successful.
 
 Mainstream historians, at the mercy of carefully concocted cover stories in 
	both Germany and the USA, have remained skeptical that Nazi scientists could 
	have advanced their nuclear knowledge to the point of actual testing.
 
	
	However, evidence that the Nazis were planning a nuclear strike near the end 
	of the war came from varied sources, including a news article in the 
	Washington Post dated June 29, 1945, which reported on an amazing find by 
	Allied troops in Norway: 
	
		
		R.A.F. [Royal Air Force] officers said today that the Germans had nearly 
	completed preparations for bombing New York from a “colossal air field” near 
	Oslo when the war ended.
 Forty giant bombers with a 7,000-mile range were found on this base 
		- “the 
	largest Luftwaff e field I have ever seen,” one officer said.
 
 They were a new type bomber developed by Heinkel. They now are being 
	dismantled for study. German ground crews said the planes were held in 
	readiness for a mission to New York.
 
	
	It should also be noted that the Nazis had two prototypes of the Junkers- 
	390, a massive six- engine modification of the Junkers-290, known to have 
	made flights to Japanese bases in Manchuria.
 In late 1944, one JU-390 was flown from a base in Bordeaux, France, to 
	within twelve miles of New York City, snapped photographs of the skyline, 
	and returned - a nonstop flight of thirty-two hours.
 
 What weapon was to be transported by these massive bombers? After the war, 
	authorities discovered a feasibility study by the German Luftwaffe 
	detailing the blast effects of an atomic bomb over New York’s Manhattan 
	Island. The Nazi study was based on an atomic bomb in the fifteen-to 
	seventeen-kiloton range, approximately the same yield as the Little Boy 
	uranium bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
 
 If Nazi Germany had a nuclear weapon, they surely must have tested it, and a 
	collection of disparate sources seems to indicate this was accomplished.
 
	
	Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, in a “Political Testament” written 
	shortly before his death at the hands of partisans in April 1945, stated,  
	
		
		“The wonder weapons are the hope. It is laughable and senseless for us to 
	threaten at this moment, without a basis in reality for these threats. The 
	well-known mass destruction bombs are nearly ready. In only a few days, with 
	the utmost meticulous intelligence, Hitler will probably execute this 
	fearful blow, because he will have full confidence.... It appears there 
	are three bombs - and each has an astonishing operation. Th e construction of 
	each is fearfully complex and of a lengthy time of completion.” 
	
	Mussolini’s mention of three bombs is intriguing because of a statement of a 
	former Russian military translator who served on the staff of Marshal Rodion 
	Malinovsky, the officer who took Japan’s surrender to the Soviet Union in 
	1945.  
	
	As reported by the German magazine Der Spiegel in 1992,
	Piotr 
	Titarenko had written a letter to the Communist Party Central Committee, in 
	which he stated that the three atomic bombs were dropped on Japan. One of 
	these, dropped on Nagasaki prior to the blast of August 9, 1945, failed to 
	detonate and subsequently was given to the Soviet Union by Japanese 
	officials.  
	
	If Titarenko’s account is accurate, this would mean that America 
	had three atomic bombs on hand in the summer of 1945. Yet, a report to 
	Manhattan Project leader Robert Oppenheimer just days after President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945, stated that not enough enriched uranium 
	existed to create a viable critical mass for even one atomic bomb.
 News stories in Britain point to a possible Nazi atomic bomb test in 1944.
 
	
	An August 11, 1945, article in London’s Daily Telegraph reported,  
	
		
		“Britain 
	prepared for the possibility of an atomic bomb attack on this country by 
	Germany in August 1944. It can now be disclosed that details of the expected 
	effect of such a bomb were revealed in a highly secret memorandum which was 
	sent that summer to the chiefs of Scotland Yard, chief constables of 
	provincial forces and senior officials of the defense services.”  
	
	Another odd 
	story also was published in En gland’s Daily Mail on October 14, 1944, under 
	the headline “Berlin Is ‘Silent’ 60 Hours, Still No Phones.”  
	
	The story, 
	filed by a correspondent from Stockholm, stated that all telephone service 
	in Berlin had been interrupted for three days with “no explanation for the 
	hold-up, which has lasted longer than on any previous occasion.”  
	
	The story 
	ended by saying,  
	
		
		“It is pointed out, moreover, in responsible quarters that 
	if the stoppage were purely the technical result of bomb damage, as the 
	Germans claimed, it should have been repaired by now.”  
	
	A modern readership 
	would know that such disruption can be caused by the electromagnetic pulse 
	associated with a nuclear detonation.
 Other intriguing hints of a German atomic test came in the form of three 
	separate intelligence reports. A once-classified U.S. military intelligence 
	report dated August 19, 1945, and titled “Investigations, Research, 
	Developments and Practical Use of the German Atomic Bomb” details the 
	experience of a German pilot named Hans Zinsser, a Flak rocket expert, while 
	piloting a Heinkel bomber over northern Germany. Note that his experience 
	coincides with the dates of the Berlin telephone blackout.
 
	
		
		At the beginning of October 1944, I flew from Ludwigslust (south of Luebeck) 
	about 12 to 15 km from an atomic bomb test station, when I noticed a strong, 
	bright illumination of the whole atmosphere, lasting about 2 seconds.
 The clearly visible pressure wave escaped the approaching and following 
	cloud formed by the explosion. This wave had a diameter of about 1 km when 
	it became visible and the color of the cloud changed frequently.... 
	Personal observations of the colors of the explosion cloud found an almost 
	blue-violet shade.
   
		During this manifestation reddish-colored rims were to be 
	seen, changing to a dirty-like shade in very rapid succession. The 
	combustion was lightly felt from my observation plane in the form of pulling 
	and pushing.... About an hour later... I passed through the almost 
	complete overcast (between 3,000 and 4,000 meter altitude). A cloud shaped 
	like a mushroom with turbulent billowing sections (at about 7,000 meter 
	altitude) stood, without any seeming connections, over the spot where the 
	explosion took place.    
		Strong electrical disturbances and the impossibility 
	to continue radio communications turned up. Because of the P-38s operating 
	in the area Wittenberg-Mersburg I had to turn to the north but observed a 
	better visibility at the bottom of the cloud where the explosion occured 
	[sic].    
		Note: It does not seem very clear to me why these experiments took 
	place in such crowded areas. 
	
	Then there was the report of an Italian officer, 
	Luigi Romersa, who
	claimed to have been present at the testing of a “disintegration bomb” on
	the night of October 11-12, 1944. Romersa was granted a special pass
	from Oberkommando Der Wehrmacht, or German High Command, to
	visit the test site on the island of Rugen.  
	
	Romersa was a special envoy from
	Mussolini, who had wanted more information since Hitler had mentioned
	to him,  
	
		
		“a bomb with a force which will surprise the whole world.”
		 
	
	According 
	to Romersa, he and others were told the “disintegration bomb” was “the most 
	powerful explosive that has yet been developed” and that “nothing can 
	withstand it.”  
	
	They were sent to a bunker about a mile from the actual test 
	site.  
	
	He also was warned against radioactivity.  
	
		
		“Around 4 P.M., in the 
	twilight, shadows appeared, running toward our bunker,” recalled Romersa. 
		   
		“They were soldiers and they had on a strange type of ‘diving suit.’ They 
	entered and quickly shut the door. ‘Everything is kaput,’ one of them said 
	as he removed his protective clothing. We also eventually had to put on 
	white, coarse, fibrous cloaks. I cannot say what the material was made of, 
	but I had the impression that it could have been asbestos. The headgear has 
	a piece of Glimmerglas [mica glass?] in front of the eyes.” 
	
	After making their way to the test site proper, Romersa stated,  
	
		
		“The houses 
	that I had seen only an hour earlier had disappeared, broken into little 
	pebbles of debris. As we drew nearer [to the point of explosion], the more 
	fearsome was the devastation. The grass had the same color as leather. The 
	few trees that still stood upright had no more leaves.” 
	
	Romersa’s credibility is supported by the fact that he eventually came to 
	the United States, where he was granted a high-security clearance.
 A third report dated December 14, 1944, but only declassified by the 
	National Security Agency in 1978, is titled “Reports on the Atom-splitting 
	Bomb.” This purports to be a decoded intercept of a message from the 
	Japanese embassy in Stockholm to headquarters in Tokyo.
 
	
		
		This bomb is revolutionary in its results, and will completely upset all 
	ordinary precepts of warfare hitherto established. I am sending you, in one 
	group, all those reports on what is called the atom- splitting bomb. It is a 
	fact that in June of 1943, the German Army tried out an utterly new type of 
	weapon against the Russians at a location 150 kilometers southeast of 
	Kursk.    
		Although it was the entire 19th Infantry Regiment of the Russians 
	which was thus attacked, only a few bombs (each round up to 5 kilograms) 
	sufficed to utterly wipe them out to the last man. 
	
		
		The following is according to a statement by Lieutenant Colonel... Kenji, 
	adviser to the attaché in Hungary and formerly... in this country, who by 
	chance saw the actual scene immediately after the above took place: 
		 
			
			“All 
	the men and the horses [within radius of] the explosion of the shells were 
	charred black and even their ammunition had all been detonated. Moreover, it 
	is a fact that the same type of war material was tried out in the Crimea 
	too. At that time the Russians claimed that this was poison gas, and 
	protested that if Germany were ever again to use it, Russia, too, would use 
	poison gas.” 
		... Recently the British authorities warned 
		their people of the possibility that they might undergo attack by German 
		atom- splitting bombs. The American authorities have likewise warned 
		that the American east coast might be the area chosen for a blind attack 
		by some sort of flying bomb... 
	
	The Japanese report then goes into a remarkably accurate description of the 
	splitting of the atom, ending with the statement,  
	
		
		“[T]he German 
	atom-splitting device is the Neuman disintegrator. Enormous energy is 
	directed into the central part of the atom and this generates an atomic 
	pressure of several tens of thousands of tons per square inch. This device 
	can split the relatively unstable atoms of such elements as uranium. 
	Moreover, it brings into being a store of explosive atomic energy.... 
	That is, a bomb deriving its force from the release of atomic energy.” 
	
	Some elements of the Japanese report were obviously in error, such as the 
	confusion over descriptions of a fission versus a fusion bomb and the date 
	of the Kursk offensive, which did not begin until July 5, 1943. Mistakes 
	notwithstanding, it is clear that Japanese intelligence was firmly convinced 
	that the Germans had used a revolutionary type of weapon on the Eastern 
	Front.
 But if the Nazis had deployed a tactical nuke or other exotic weapon on the 
	Eastern Front, why would the Soviets have kept such an attack secret? 
	Farrell pointed out that had Nazi Germany used such a weapon, it would most 
	likely have been against the Russians, whom the Nazis considered 
	“subhuman,” in Nazi ideology.
 
	
	Fully one-half of the 50 million casualties of 
	the war occurred in Russia, and several massive explosions, such as the one 
	that destroyed a section of Sevastopol, have never been fully explained. It 
	was announced that a hundred-foot below-ground ammunition bunker was 
	destroyed after being struck by a lucky shot from Dora, a 311/2- inch German 
	railway gun considered the largest in the world.
 Such attacks were never reported by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, due to the 
	fear of losing control over a panicked and war-weary Russian population. 
	The use of a super-weapon on the Eastern Front also might explain why more 
	is not known about this issue. Accurate war news from Russia was extremely 
	hard to come by during the war and grew more so during the Cold War.
 
	
	To make 
	public the use of a nuclear or unconventional weapon “would have been a 
	propaganda disaster for Stalin’s government,” noted Farrell.  
	
		
		“Faced with an 
	enemy of superior tactical and operational competence in conventional arms, 
	the Red Army oft en had to resort to threats of execution against its own 
	soldiers just to maintain order and discipline in its ranks and prevent mass 
	desertion. Acknowledgment of the existence and use of such weapons by the 
	mortal enemy of Communist Russia could conceivably have ruined Russian 
	morale and cost Stalin the war, and perhaps even toppled his government.” 
	
	If the Nazis had operational atomic weapons, is it possible they were 
	transferred to the United States?  
	
	Documents exist showing that America’s 
	secret development of the atomic bomb, the Manhattan Project, could not have 
	produced enough enriched uranium to make a bomb by mid-1945. Since only a 
	plutonium bomb was tested at Alamogordo, New Mexico, on July 16, 1945, 
	researchers have wondered where America acquired the uranium bombs dropped 
	on Japan less than a month later.  
	
	Some have speculated that the United 
	States used a Nazi bomb or used Nazi enriched uranium to manufacture its 
	bombs.
 The Trinity bomb exploded near Alamogordo, New Mexico, on July 16, 1945, was 
	a plutonium bomb. Why then would the United States first drop the Little 
	Boy, an untested uranium bomb, on Japan on August 6, 1945?
 
	
		
		“A rational 
	explanation is [that] ‘Little Boy’ was not tested by the Americans because... [t]he Americans did not need to test it, because its German designers 
	already had,” surmised Farrell. This idea is supported by the statement of 
	German authors Edgar Meyer and Thomas Mehner that J. Robert Oppenheimer, 
	the “father of the atomic bomb,” maintained that the bomb dropped on Japan 
	was of “German provenance.”  
	
	Of course, this idea would fly in the face of 
	the long- accepted Allied Legend that Germany simply couldn’t manufacture an 
	atomic bomb by the war’s end.
 Where could the Nazis have obtained enriched uranium for such a bomb?
 
	
	One 
	potential source was the secure underground laboratory of Baron Manfred von Ardenne, built in Lichterfelde outside Berlin, which contained a 
	2-million-volt electrostatic generator and a cyclotron. In 1941, von Ardenne, 
	along with Fritz Houtermans, had calculated the critical mass needed to 
	create U-235. It should be noted that Hitler visited the laboratory toward 
	the end of the war, at a time when he spoke enthusiastically of a new wonder 
	weapon that would turn the tide in Germany’s favor.
 Some researchers contend that the Nazi development of a uranium bomb was 
	kept secret because the work was not part of the German military- industrial 
	system but hidden within the German Postal Service.
 
	
		
		“[A]ll of Ardenne’s facilities... were provided by and ongoing funding 
	made available through, the patronage of one man, Reich minister of posts 
	and a member of the Reich President’s Research Council on Nuclear Affairs, 
	Wilhelm Ohnesorge.” 
	
	Reportedly, Hitler once remarked that while his party and military 
	leadership worried about how to win the war, it was his postal minister who 
	brought him the solution.
 Farrell explained that the Reichspost was,
 
	
		
		“awash with money, and could 
	therefore have provided some of the massive funding necessary to the 
	[uranium enrichment] project, a true ‘black budget’ operation in every 
	sense.” 
	
	Another source may have been a giant 
	synthetic-rubber plant built by 
	
	I.G. Farben next to Auschwitz, the notorious death camp. The site was 
	chosen for its proximity to transportation hubs, both rail lines and rivers, 
	as well as the nearby supply of slave labor found at the Auschwitz camp. 
	This site probably was also selected with the idea that the Allies would not 
	bomb a concentration camp, a supposition that proved correct.  
	
	Yet, despite 
	the facts - established during the Nuremberg trials - that more than $2 billion 
	in today’s dollars were spent; that 300,000 slave laborers had been used in 
	both the construction and operation of this plant; and that it had consumed 
	more electricity than Berlin, not one pound of buna, or synthetic rubber, 
	was ever produced.
 So, what was produced?
 
	
		
		“The facility has all of the characteristics of a 
	uranium enrichment plant,” noted Hydrick, adding, “the various components of 
	the German atomic bomb efforts could have been implemented with a high 
	degree of secrecy, even from other high-level Nazis, given Bormann’s 
	close-knit relationships with Ohnesorge; Schmitz, who was chief of I.G. Farben; [Rudolf ] Hoess, the commandant of Auschwitz; and Heinrich Mueller, 
	who, among his many other duties as head of the Gestapo, oversaw the 
	supplying of forced laborers to Auschwitz.” 
	
	A theory has been offered that, late in the war, certain Nazis arranged the 
	transfer of enriched uranium to the United States in exchange for immunity 
	from prosecution. At the heart of this transfer theory lies the saga of a 
	Nazi submarine - the U-234.
 Unterseeboot-234 was originally designed as a mine-layer but was converted 
	to a cargo carrier prior to its only mission into enemy waters: the last 
	German shipment to its ally, Japan. It sailed from Kiel in March 1945, with 
	a most unusual cargo consisting of several high-level German officials, 
	including Dr. Heinz Schlicke, the inventor of fuses for atomic bombs, and 
	two Japanese officers - Air Force Colonel Genzo Shosi and Navy Captain 
	Hideo Tomonaga.
 
	
	Also listed on the boat’s manifest of 240 metric tons of cargo 
	were two dismantled ME-262 jet fighters, ten gold-lined cylinders containing 
	560 kilograms of uranium oxide, wooden barrels of “water,” and infrared 
	proximity fuses.
 On May 14, 1945, six days after the German surrender, the U-234 was 
	intercepted by the USS Sutton and taken into captivity. Oddly enough, the 
	sub had been overflown several times by Allied aircraft but never fired 
	upon. The circumstances implied a preplanned meeting and surrender. Here the 
	mystery began. Who issued the orders for this enemy sub to surrender, and 
	why to the Americans? Upon arrival at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, it appeared 
	that some of the boat’s cargo was missing.
 
 The two Japanese officers, after learning that the ship’s captain planned 
	to surrender, had committed suicide and were buried at sea with full honors. 
	But, suspiciously, the two ME-262s were missing, as well as the uranium 
	oxide. In fact, when the U.S. Navy prepared its own manifest for the U-234, 
	there was no accounting for seventy tons of cargo.
 
 Dr. Velma Hunt, a Colorado environmental scientist, said she uncovered 
	information that the U-boat made a secret stop at South Portland, Maine, 
	sometime between May 14 and May 17, 1945, where the cargo in question could 
	have been unloaded. There has been controversy as to whether this uranium 
	had been enriched enough for use as a weapon.
 
 Cook noted that the gold-lined cylinders indicated the uranium was emitting 
	gamma radiation, which meant the normally harmless uranium oxide had been 
	brought to enrichment through the use of a working nuclear reactor.
 
	
		
		“And 
	yet, officially, there had been no nuclear reactor in Germany capable of 
	fulfilling this task,” wrote Cook. “[At least] not in Speer’s orbit of 
	operations.” 
	
	Farrell further explains,  
	
		
		“The use of gold-lined cylinders is explainable by 
	the fact that uranium, a highly corrosive metal, is easily contaminated if 
	it comes into contact with other unstable elements. Gold, whose radioactive 
	shielding properties are as great as lead, is also, unlike lead, a highly 
	pure and stable element, and is therefore the element of choice when storing 
	or shipping highly enriched and pure uranium for long periods of time, such 
	as a voyage.    
		Thus, the uranium oxide on board the U-234 was highly enriched 
	uranium, and most likely, highly enriched U-235, the last stage, perhaps, 
	before being reduced to weapons grade or to metallization for a bomb (if it 
	was already in weapons grade purity) [emphasis in the original].” 
	
	Adding weight to Farrell’s deduction is an anecdote regarding the German 
	crew of the U-234. Some crew members were amused when they saw the Japanese 
	officers bring on board cargo marked “U-235.”  
	
	They apparently thought their 
	Japanese guests couldn’t even get the number of the boat correct. Some now 
	believe the labels indicated the presence of uranium 235, the only isotope 
	found in nature that has the ability to cause an expanding fission chain 
	reaction - in other words, the element needed for a uranium fission bomb. 
	Uranium that has undergone an extraction process to boost its U-235 
	proportion is known as enriched uranium.
 Wolfgang Hirschfeld, radioman on the U-234, stated the submarine’s orders 
	were “only to sail on the orders of the highest level. Fuehrer HQ.” He also 
	revealed after the war that crew members believed Japan had succeeded in 
	testing an atomic weapon before their departure from Germany in March 1945. 
	The U-234 met an inglorious end in November 1947, when it was used as a 
	torpedo target and sunk off Cape Cod.
 
 Hydrick published copies of documents from the National Archives to show a 
	connection between the Manhattan Project and the U-234. One such document is 
	a secret cable from the commander of naval operations directing that a 
	three-man party take possession of the sub’s cargo. In addition to two naval 
	officers was the name of Major John E. Vance with the Army Corps of 
	Engineers, the department of the army under which the Manhattan Project 
	operated.
 
 A few days after the visit by Vance, a manifest of the cargo indicated the 
	uranium was no longer in navy possession.
 
	
	Furthermore, telephone transcripts 
	between Manhattan intelligence officers about a week later stated a captured 
	shipment of uranium powder was being tested by a person identified only as 
	“Vance.”  
	
		
		“That there could have been another ‘Vance’ who was working with 
	uranium powder - especially ‘captured’ uranium powder - is improbable,” noted Hydrick. 
	
	But author Henry Stevens found an even more disturbing cover-up. After 
	receiving a statement from the National Archives denying that any canisters 
	containing fissionable material was onboard the U-234, Stevens, recalling 
	that the submarine had surrendered to the USS Sutton, wrote to the Naval 
	Historical Center at the Washington Navy Yard requesting a cargo manifest 
	from the U-234 in the files of the Sutton.  
	
	For a $5 microfiche charge, 
	Stevens received the manifest that was identical to the one from the 
	National Archives except that the uranium oxide canisters were listed. This 
	discrepancy in the manifests can only be explained by someone altering the 
	documents.
 A plutonium bomb, such as the one Manhattan scientists were developing, 
	required a critical mass to be achieved within 1/3000th of a second, a speed 
	far exceeding the capabilities of fuses available at that time. According to 
	Farrell, there is evidence to support the idea that the necessary fuses were 
	obtained from U-234 passenger Dr. Schlicke.
 
	
	A message from the chief of 
	Naval Operations to the authorities in Portsmouth, where the U-234 was taken 
	after its surrender, indicated that Dr. Schlicke along with his fuses were 
	to be taken to Washington accompanied by naval officers. Once there, the 
	doctor was scheduled to present a lecture on his fuses in the presence of a 
	“Mr. Alvarez,” apparently meaning Dr. Luis Walter Alvarez, the man who is 
	credited with producing fuses for the plutonium bomb.  
	
	Alvarez and his 
	student Lawrence Johnson are credited with designing the exploding-bridgewire 
	detonators for the spherical implosives used in the Trinity bomb test as 
	well as the Nagasaki bomb.
 On March 3, 1945, President Roosevelt received an ominous memo from Senator 
	James F. Byrnes, a Democrat from South Carolina and a longtime confidant to 
	the president.
 
	
	This “Memorandum for the President” stated,  
	
		
		“I understand 
	that the expenditures for the Manhattan Project are approaching 2 billion 
	dollars with no definite assurance yet of production.... Even eminent 
	scientists may continue a project rather than concede its failure.” 
		 
	
	Byrnes, 
	who went on to become a secretary of state and a Supreme Court justice, was 
	voicing the concern of many that the atom bomb project was foundering and 
	might even prove a failure. Byrnes may have been aware of a letter dated 
	December 28, 1944, in which Eric Jette, chief metallurgist at Los Alamos, 
	expressed reservations over the lack of sufficient amounts of uranium for 
	the atomic bomb.  
	
		
		“A study of the shipment of [weapons grade 
	uranium] for the past three months shows the following... : At present 
	rate we will have 10 kilos by February 7 and 15 kilos about May 1.” 
	 
	
	According to Hydrick, Edward Hammel, a metallurgist who worked at Los 
	Alamos, where enriched uranium was made into material for the atomic bomb, 
	reported that very little enriched uranium was received there until less 
	than a month before the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
 Little Boy, the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, carried 64.15 kilograms of 
	enriched uranium, virtually the entire quantity that could have been 
	produced since mid-1944 by the enrichment facilities at Oak Ridge, 
	Tennessee, even working around the clock. One explanation for the lack of 
	enriched uranium was that some of this fissionable material had been used to 
	produce plutonium in Enrico Fermi’s breeder reactors at Hanford, Washington.
 
 The mounting pressure on Manhattan Project directors to produce a bomb 
	before the planned invasion of the Japanese home islands must have been 
	terrific. If the submarine’s cargo did indeed include U-235 and Dr. 
	Schlicke’s fuses, its acquisition by the United States solved two pressing 
	problems of the Manhattan atomic bomb project - a lack of sufficient amounts 
	of uranium and adequate fuses.
 
	
	The American bomb-makers may have been 
	greatly relieved that the two major problems facing the Manhattan Project 
	were solved with the surrender of the U-234.  
	
		
		“The fact that U-234 arrived 
	on American soil carrying 560 kilograms of uranium that was enriched and 
	went on to be used in the bombs that were dropped on Japan can scarcely be 
	argued any longer except by those who refuse to consider the evidence,” 
	concluded Hydrick.  
	
	While it may remain a controversy whether the acquisition 
	of the U-234 was a fortuitous capture or the planned transfer of technology 
	from Germany to the United States, the evidence strongly indicates the 
	latter.
 If additional uranium was obtained from the U-234, this would have provided 
	more than could ever have been produced by the Manhattan Project, and the 
	equivalent of about eight Hiroshima bombs. It also means the German nuclear 
	program was much further advanced than believed by conventional historians. 
	In late July 1945, atomic bomb components -  and perhaps additional German 
	uranium bombs - were delivered to Tinian Island in the Pacific following a 
	secret and rushed voyage from California by the USS Indianapolis.
 
	
	After 
	delivering its deadly cargo, this Portland-class heavy cruiser suffered the 
	largest single at-sea loss of life in
	U.S. naval history and became the last American ship sunk in World War II 
	after being torpedoed by a Japanese submarine in the Philippines.
 Farrell voiced the suspicion that the Indianapolis may have delivered much 
	more than America’s atomic bomb - it may have carried a German bomb in 
	addition to its cargo of uranium and fuses.
 
	
	He was supported by Stevens, who 
	wrote that the,  
	
		
		“unexploded German atomic bombs fell into the hands of the 
	Americans at the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, two months before the 
	‘first’ explosion of an atomic weapon in the New Mexico desert. What a 
	present for the Americans!    
		All they did was to put new tail fins on the 
	bombs, repaint them, and drop them on Japan. Naturally, the American 
	scientists involved with the Manhattan Project were given credit.” 
	
	But, if the Nazis had developed a working atomic bomb, why was it not used 
	as Allied armies closed in on Germany? One answer seems to be that they did 
	not have a reliable delivery system in place.  
	
	The Nazis’ V-3, a smooth-bore 
	150-mm gun dubbed the Centipede, designed to launch large-finned shells into 
	London, along with its multistage A-10 rocket, was still undependable.  
	
	Witkowski voiced his suspicions that the fatal flight of Lieutenant 
	Joseph 
	Kennedy, older brother to the future president, might have been an ill-fated 
	attempt to destroy the V-3 complex at Mimoyecques, France. The giant 
	airfield in Norway, home to the massive six-engine bombers, had not yet been 
	completed.
 This idea was echoed by Stevens, who became convinced that the Third Reich 
	produced an atomic bomb.
 
	
		
		“The Germans did make atomic bombs,” he stated 
	emphatically. “Not only did they make atomic bombs, they made uranium as 
	well as plutonium bombs and other atomic weapons which remain somewhat of a 
	mystery. What the Germans could not do, in these dying days of the Third 
	Reich, was to match up one of these nuclear weapons with an effective 
	delivery system. The reasons for this differ with each weapon, individually, 
	and run the [gamut] from mistake to treachery to incompetence.” 
	
	One thought that must have crossed the minds of Nazi leaders was the total 
	destruction of Germany that would have resulted from the use of a nuclear 
	weapon.  
	
	The devastation of London or New York would not have materially 
	altered the course of the war in the spring of 1945. And the retaliation of 
	the Allies would have been unimaginable. Further, high-ranking Nazis, such 
	as Hitler’s secretary Martin Bormann, who by war’s end had become the second 
	most powerful man in Nazi Germany, realized the war was lost, and used 
	advanced technology as a bargaining chip with the Western allies.
 Hydrick proposed just that intriguing possibility: that the U-234 was 
	purposely handed over to U.S. authorities on the order of Bormann in 
	exchange for immunity as part of a covert plan for the continuation of Nazi 
	research.
 
	
	Although there was criticism over Hydrick’s technical descriptions 
	of both the atomic bomb and its detonators, his mass of documentation 
	concerning the transfer of nuclear technology from Germany to America is 
	compelling.  
	
	Hydrick’s claim is supported by Farrell, who wrote,  
	
		
		“I have 
	argued that most likely all of it [extra uranium and even atom bombs] came 
	from Nazi Germany, courtesy of Nazi Party Reichsleiter Bormann and SS 
	Obergruppenfuehrer Hans Kammler.” 
	
	But Farrell had an even more horrifying thought about why the Nazis did not 
	drop an atomic bomb. Considering Nazi research into quantum physics and 
	energy manipulation, Farrell speculated that their atomic bombs “were being 
	developed as detonators for something far more destructive.” Since only a 
	few scattered plans to Nazi super-science were recovered after the war, the 
	question arises, “What became of their advanced technology?”  
	
	There has never 
	been a public answer.
 However, the answer to this question may be found by studying the 
	man in charge of Germany’s high-tech weapons programs, Dr. Engineer Hans Kammler.
 
 Kammler, whose name has been largely lost to history, may have played a 
	large role in developing and hiding away the technology secrets of Hitler’s 
	Third Reich. Kammler did not have higher purposes in mind when he set out to 
	develop rockets and energy manipulation. He was searching for new weapons.
 
 Born in 1901, Kammler completed engineering studies at a technical 
	university and began working for the German Air Ministry. Aft er joining the 
	Nazi SS, he managed finances and construction for the SS until 1942, when he 
	became chief of Group C under the Wirtschafts und Verwaltungshauptamt, or 
	the Economic and Administrative Central Offi ce (WVHA) of the SS, one of 
	five key branches of the Black Shirts.
 
	
	This branch controlled all economic 
	enterprises as well as all concentration and extermination camps. Beginning 
	in 1943, Kammler took control of all “special tasks,” which included 
	“Kammler special construction” - the creation of secret underground facilities 
	as well as exotic weapons programs. His official title was SS Obergruppenfuehrer, or lieutenant general, and he had worked his way up to 
	command the Third Reich’s most precious war time secrets.
 In mid-1943, SS chief Heinrich Himmler sent a letter to armaments minister 
	Speer. “With this letter, I inform you that I, as SS Reichsfuehrer... do 
	hereby take charge of the manufacture of the A-4 instrument,” it read. The 
	A-4 rocket was later designated by Hitler as the V-2. Himmler then placed Kammler in charge of the project, one of Germany’s most secret high-tech 
	weapons systems.
 
	
	Due to the devastation brought on by incessant Allied air 
	raids, by the end of 1944, Kammler had taken control of weapons research as 
	well as the construction of underground factories and concentration camps. 
	
		
		“Thus - just a few weeks before the end of the war 
		- he had become commissioner 
	general for all important weapons,” wrote Speer, who later bemoaned the fact 
	that Himmler’s SS gradually assumed total control over Germany’s weaponry, 
	production, and research. 
	
	In connection with his new responsibilities, Kammler created an SS 
	Sonderkommando, or special command, independent from the normal German 
	military and bureaucracy.  
	
		
		“What Kammler had established was a ‘special 
	projects office,’ a forerunner of the entity that had been run by the bright 
	young colonels of the USAF’s stealth program in the 1970s and 1980s,” noted 
	Cook. It was “a place of vision, where imagination could run free, 
	unfettered by the restraints of accountability. Exactly the kind of place, 
	in fact, you’d expect to find anti- gravity technology, if such an 
	impossible thing existed.” 
	
	Kammler also had use of computer technology that was only dreamed of in 
	American science fiction stories.  
	
		
		“Dr. Kammler had the benefit of 
	knowledge, hardware and software that was developed by the computing 
	pioneer, Dr. Konrad Zuse,” wrote Stevens.    
		“In spite of everything churned 
	out by the computer industry and ‘history’ as we know it, Dr. Zuse built the 
	first digital computer in 1938 and the first programmable soft ware 
	language, Plankaikuel. He also was instrumental in developing magnetic tape 
	as a computer storage medium. By 1944 the Germans were using computers, the 
	Zuse-built Z-3, to plot the course of ballistic attack by the V-2 at 
	Peenemunde and Nordhausen.”  
	Stevens, who spent more than fifteen years 
	researching the Reich’s most secret technology, including flying saucers, 
	wrote,  
		
		“By the end of the war a whole new research and production command 
	and control structure had been set up which reduced or replaced the figures 
	we normally think of as running the Th ird Reich, such as, for instance, 
	Hermann Goering and Albert Speer.”  
	
	It was Kammler and his Sonderkommando 
	that became the repository for the Reich’s most advanced technology, going 
	far beyond the rockets and flying discs.
 But Kammler’s immediate concern was the V-2 rocket program. Kammler worked 
	closely with Wernher von Braun and his superior, Luftwaffe Major General 
	Walter Dornberger.
 
	
	Von Braun, who had been a member of the SS since 1940, 
	carried the rank of SS Sturmbannfuehrer, or major.
 Alarmed by progress on the V-2 rockets, Britain’s Bomber Command sent 597 
	bombers on the night of August 16–17, 1943, to raid Peenemunde - Germany’s 
	top-secret rocket facility built on an island at the mouth of the Oder River 
	near the border of Germany and Poland. Because of a navigation “blunder,” 
	much of the underground and well-camouflaged Peenemunde site was left 
	undamaged.
 
	
	Brian Ford described the results:  
	
		
		“Even so, over 800 of the 
	people on the island were killed.... After this, it was realized that 
	some of the facility had better be dispersed throughout Germany; thus the 
	theoretical development facility was moved to Garmisch-Partenkirchen, 
	development went to Nordhausen and Bleicherode, and the main wind-tunnel and 
	ancillary equipment went down to Kochel, some 24 miles south of Munich. 
		   
		This 
	was christened Wasserbau Versuchsanstalt Kochelsee - experimental waterworks 
	project - and gave rise to the most thorough research center for long-range 
	rocket development that, at the time, could have been envisioned.” 
	
	Mary Bennett and David S. Percy, authors of 
	
	
	Dark Moon: Apollo and the 
	Whistleblowers, speculated that the British air raid on Peenemunde was 
	designed not to knock out the V-rocket site but to force it to move to safer 
	environs, to ensure the safety of the rocket program.  
	
	They showed how the 
	raid bombed the site’s northern peninsula rather than the main facility, due 
	to misplaced target indicators. These authors noted that of the eight 
	hundred personnel who died in the air raid, about half were mostly Russians 
	from the prisoner labor force and the other half were technicians and their 
	families.  
	
	After this raid, the irreplaceable Hermann Oberth was transferred 
	to the safety of the Reinsdorf works near Wittenberg, to continue his work. 
	
		
		“Instructions from the highest level, it seems, had been to target personnel 
	and certainly not the V-2 rocket production facilities. It was clearly 
	CRUCIAL that these rockets, plans and parts were spared,” they stated.
		 
	
	Someone with high authority wanted this Nazi 
	technology available to them after the war.
 Nick Cook also saw the connection between such exotic technology and the 
	mysterious Hans Kammler.
 
	
		
		“There was, via the Kammler trail, a mounting body 
	of evidence that the Nazis, in their desperation to win the war, had been 
	experimenting with a form of science the rest of the world have never 
	remotely considered,” he wrote.    
		“And that somewhere in this cauldron of 
	ideas, a new technology had been born; one that was so far ahead of its time 
	it had been suppressed for more than half a century.” 
	
	One clue to what this revolutionary technology might involve was found in 
	the capture of physicist Walter Gerlach, one of the Nazi scientists brought 
	to the United States after the war. Gerlach has been connected with the 
	German attempts to build an atomic bomb, yet his background indicated even 
	more esoteric knowledge.
 In 1921, Gerlach received a Nobel Prize, not for nuclear research but for 
	magnetic spin polarization, dealing with the momentum of electrons of atoms 
	situated in a magnetic field. Such work had little to do with the atomic 
	bomb but much to do with energy manipulation to include antigravity.
 
 In 1931, a paper titled “About Gravitation, Vortices and Waves in Rotating 
	Media” was published by O.C. Hilgenberg, a student of Gerlach, which 
	indicated the focus of Gerlach’s work.
 
	
		
		“And yet, after the war, Gerlach, who 
	died in 1979, apparently never returned to these subject matters, nor did he 
	make any references to them; almost as if he had been forbidden to do so,” 
	noted Cook.  
	
	Interestingly, Gerlach’s wartime work diaries were confiscated 
	by U.S. authorities and remain classified today.
 At the turn of the current century, both Cook and the Polish military 
	journalist Witkowski tracked Kammler and his top-secret Nazi energy work to 
	the Wenzeslaus Mine, located about 215 miles west of Warsaw in Lower 
	Silesia, near the border with Czechoslovakia. This mine is in Ludwikowice 
	Klodzkie, formerly Ludwigsdorf. The location was perfect for security 
	purposes as it was outside Germany yet within the Greater Third Reich. 
	Additionally, Kammler spoke fl uent Czech.
 
 During their journey, Witkowski revealed his access to a formerly classified 
	Soviet document detailing the interrogation at the end of the war of a 
	Rudolf Schuster, who had been a member of the Reichssicherheitshauptamt, or 
	Reich Central Security Office, Nazi Germany’s version of the Department of 
	Homeland Security.
 
	
	Schuster revealed that in June of 1944, he was 
	transferred to a special evacuation Kommando called General Plan 1945, 
	formed by Martin Bormann to evacuate valuable science and technology from 
	the Reich. Schuster, who was not privy to the plan’s overall agenda, 
	nevertheless located much of these evacuation activities in the area of the Wenzeslaus Mine.
 Schuster’s testimony, coupled with other information, convinced Cook that 
	the Bormann evacuation plan had been one of the Nazis’ greatest secrets.
 
	
		
		“There has never been any official acknowledgment of the existence of the 
	special evacuation Kommando,” he wrote.  
	
	It was this unacknowledged 
	evacuation operation that saved the Reich’s most precious technology. Once 
	at the mine site, Cook and Witkowski found remnants of what once had been a 
	secret SS testing and production facility that may have even included a 
	giant early superconductor.
 In 1931, the Wenzeslaus Mine suffered an accident that caused bankruptcy and 
	a takeover by the Polish government.
 
	
	With the occupation of Poland, the mine 
	was reconditioned by the Nazis as a gigantic science center.  
	
		
		“The whole 
	area, in the center of which was located the main left shaft, proved to be 
	the interior of a deep valley, which was accessible only through two 
	‘mountain passes,’ ” noted Witkowski.    
		“Since the remnants of watchtowers 
	could be seen in them, it was obvious that the whole area had been closely 
	guarded, and its configuration caused that in this way the whole valley was 
	physically cut off [from] the outside world.”  
	
	This valley, about three 
	hundred yards across, was bisected by rail lines, and lined with a variety 
	of structures, concrete bunkers, and guard stations, many covered with dirt 
	and trees to act as camouflage. Today the site is virtually ruins and 
	overgrown with trees and vegetation.
 Cook saw that,
 
	
		
		“the Germans had gone to a great deal of trouble to ensure 
	that the place looked pretty much as it had always looked since mining 
	operations began here at the turn of the last century, a clear indication 
	that whatever had happened here during the war had been deeply secret.... 
		 
		  
		Almost everything that was known about the Wenzeslaus Mine had been handed 
	down from [SS General Jakob] Sporrenberg [the officer appointed to command 
	the ‘northern route’ of General Plan 1945’s evacuation Kommando].  
		 
		  
		It had 
	been run by the SS, had employed slave-labor and had been sealed from the 
	outside world by a triple ring of check points and heavily armed guards.” 
		 
	
	Sporrenberg’s testimony and affidavits, the only known description of the 
	strange experiments at the mine, were given during a postwar trial in 
	Poland. He was found guilty of war crimes and executed.
 In the closing days of the war, most of the local population was evacuated 
	westward. In fleeing the Russians, many of these refugees died during the 
	fighting or froze in one of the coldest winters on record. Today, most of 
	the local residents are newcomers with no recollection of what transpired at 
	the mine during the war.
 
 A central shaft led downward to the original mine as well as a labyrinth of 
	additional underground facilities dug by Germans. But what most intrigued 
	Cook and Witkowski was a huge circular concrete structure. Green camouflage 
	paint was still visible on the edges. The circular structure was formed by 
	twelve thick columns supporting a dodecagon-shaped reinforcing concrete ring 
	about ninety feet in diameter.
 
 Initially, Witkowski thought this might be the remains of a cooling tower. 
	He abandoned this idea once he saw cooling towers at a different location 
	on photographs of the area, taken in 1934. Next he thought of the structure 
	as a “fly trap,” similar to those used to test helicopters and other 
	hovering aircraft . Yet, this answer was not satisfactory either in that the 
	researchers found a concrete duct containing thick electric cables leading 
	to a power-generating station.
 
	
	Learning that high-voltage current cannot be 
	used in mines with the potential for flammable gas - such as the Wenzeslaus 
	Mine - Cook and Witkowski determined that the structure had nothing to do with 
	mining but was used in connection with the strange experiments described to 
	his captors by the SS officer Sporrenberg.
 These experiments centered around a bell-shaped object - appropriately enough 
	codenamed Die Glocke, or the Bell - which was housed in a concrete chamber 
	hundreds of feet underground. According to the research of Witkowski and 
	Cook, the Bell was made from hard, heavy metal and cylindrical in shape with 
	a semicircular cap and hook or clamping device on top.
 
	
	Huge quantities of 
	electricity were fed into it through thick cables dropping into the housing 
	chamber from the outside. Inside the Bell was a thermos-like tube encased in 
	lead and filled with a metallic liquid.
 During operation, the Bell was covered by a ceramic material, apparently to 
	act as insulation. Inside, two contra-rotating cylinders filled with a 
	mercury-like and violet-colored substance spun a vortex of energy, which 
	emitted a strange phosphorescent blue light and made such a buzzing sound 
	that operators nicknamed it the Bienenstock, or beehive.
 
 Due to the phosphorescent light and reports that operators suffered from 
	nervous-system disruption, headaches, and a metallic taste, Witkowski 
	concluded the Bell’s operation involved iodizing radiation as well as a very 
	strong magnetic field of energy.
 
	
	The scientists experimenting with the Bell 
	would place various plants, animals, and animal tissue within its energy 
	field.  
	
		
		“In the initial test period from November to December 1944, almost 
	all the samples were destroyed,” noted Cook.    
		“A crystalline substance formed 
	within the tissues, destroying them from the inside; liquids, including 
	blood, gelled and separated into clearly distilled fractions.” 
	
	Very little is known for certain about the Bell. However, it was given the 
	highest - and perhaps most unique - classification possible in the Third Reich. 
	In a few captured documents, experimenters with the Bell were said to be 
	working on something Kriegsentscheidend, or decisive for the war. Most 
	top-secret German weapons, including the V rockets, were classified 
	Kriegswichtig, or important to the war.
 One major reason that so little is known about the Bell was the loss of the 
	scientists involved in the project.
 
	
		
		“They were taken out and shot by the SS 
	between the 28th of April and the 4th of May, 1945,” explained Witkowski. 
		   
		“Records show that there were 62 of them, many of them Germans. There were 
	no survivors, but then that’s hardly surprising.... It’s quite clear that 
	someone had gone to great lengths to clean up.” 
	
	The whole concept is a nightmare - Nazis tinkering with the building blocks of 
	the universe. And it gets even worse.
 TO TRY AND understand the purpose of the Bell requires a brief side trip 
	into the amazing world of cutting-edge science and quantum physics. While 
	discussions and articles about energy manipulation - whether termed cold 
	fusion, antigravity, or free energy - have been generally discouraged as 
	science fiction in mainstream America, many credible writers have dealt with 
	the subject.
 
 In his 2003 book Winning the War: Advanced Weapons, Strategies, and Concepts 
	for the Post-9/11 World, Colonel John B. Alexander noted,
 
	
		
		“A potential link 
	between superconductor quantum mechanics and gravity has been inferred from 
	recent quantum gravity research. Another approach to modifying gravity 
	involved the manipulation of the quantum vacuum ZPE [Zero Point Energy found 
	in the vacuum of space] field. One proposed experiment to manipulate the 
	ZPE involves the use of ultrahigh-intensity lasers to irradiate a magnetized 
	vacuum. If any of these are successful it will change energy issues on Earth 
	and our relationship with the universe by allowing deep space travel.” 
	
	The idea of gaining mastery - and power - from the environment around us is 
	nothing new.  
	
	Such ideas were advanced by American physicist 
	Thomas Townsend 
	Brown, who, in the early 1920s, experimented with antigravity based on his 
	understanding that a charged capacitor tended to move toward a positive 
	plate when sufficiently energized in the hundred kilovolt and upward range. 
	 
	
	Brown contended that all matter is essentially an “electrical condition.” 
	 
	
		
		“It fact, it might be said that the concrete body of the universe is nothing 
	more than an assemblage of energy which, in itself, is quite intangible.” 
	
	Brown’s theories echoed those of U.S. electrical engineer 
	Nikola Tesla, 
	whose discovery in 1888 of the rotating magnetic field led to alternating-current (AC) electricity transmission. Tesla foresaw limitless free energy 
	by simply tapping into the Earth’s natural magnetic energy field.
 In 1908, long before the idea of rotating magnetic fields was commonplace in 
	science, Tesla stated:
 
 Every ponderable atom is differentiated from a tenuous fluid, filling all 
	space merely by spinning motion, as a whirl of water in a calm lake. By 
	being set in motion this fluid, the ether, becomes gross matter. Its 
	movement arrested, the primary substance reverts to its normal state 
	[stillness].
 
 It appears, then, possible for man through harnessed energy of the medium 
	and suitable agencies for starting and stopping ether whirls to cause matter 
	to form and disappear. At his command, almost without effort on his part, 
	old worlds would vanish and new ones spring into being.
 
	
	He could alter the 
	size of this planet, control its seasons, adjust its distance from the sun, 
	guide it on its eternal journey along any path he might choose, through the 
	depths of the universe. He could make planets collide and produce his [own] 
	suns and stars, his heat and light, he could originate life in all its 
	infinite forms. To cause at will the birth and death of matter would be 
	man’s grandest deed, which would make him the master of physical creation, 
	make him fulfill his ultimate destiny.
 The belief that antigravity or other exotic technologies were passed from 
	the Nazis to the Allies has been further supported by sporadic periodical 
	coverage of antigravity in the late 1940s and early 1950s. This was at a 
	time before the total blackout of news concerning energy-manipulation 
	experimentation was enforced as a “matter of national security.”
 
 In 1956, the Swiss aviation journal Interavia Aerospace Review published an 
	article titled “Towards Flight Without Stress or Strain... or Weight.”
 
	
	The article carried the dateline of Washington, D.C., and stated, 
	 
	
		
		“Electro-gravitics research, seeking the source of gravity and its control, 
	has reached a stage where profound implications for the entire human race 
	begin to emerge. Perhaps the most startling and immediate implications of 
	all involve aircraft, guided missiles and free space flight of all kinds.” 
		 
	The article added,  
		
		“There are gravity research projects in every major 
	country of the world. A few are over 30 years old [emphasis added].” 
		 
	
	It also 
	mentioned that, over and above theoretical research, there was empirical 
	research into the, 
	
		
		“study of matter in its super-cooled, super-conductive 
	state, of jet electron streams, peculiar magnetic effects [and] the 
	electrical mechanics of the atom’s shell.”  
	
	The article stated that the 
	weight of some materials utilized in this research had been reduced by as 
	much as 30 percent by “energizing” them. But in a premonition of what was to 
	come, it added, “Security prevents disclosure of what precisely is meant by 
	‘energizing’ or in which country this work is underway.”
 Proving the ability of superconductors to produce antigravity effects, 
	researchers at Pacific National Laboratory, in the late 1980s, cooled a 
	ceramic superconductor with liquid nitrogen and levitated a round magnet in 
	midair.
 
 Some of the companies involved in this cutting- edge research, according to 
	the Interavia Aerospace Review article, included
 
				
					
					
					
					
					
					
					
						
						Clarke Electronics 
	Laboratories
					
						
						the U.S. General Electric 
						Company 
	
	The names of these firms are especially noteworthy, because in his 2001 book 
	on Zero Point energy, author Cook cited another 1956 magazine article naming 
	aviation experts Lawrence D. Bell, George S. Trimble, and William P. Lear as 
	stating that work was then under way with “nuclear fuels and equipment to 
	cancel out gravity.”  
	
	This article, from an unnamed publication and titled 
	“The G-Engines Are Coming!” may have let slip mention of an incredible new 
	technology. 
	
		
		“All matter within the ship would be influenced by the ship’s gravitation 
	only,” Lear was quoted as saying. “This way, no matter how fast you 
	accelerated or changed course, your body would not feel it any more than it 
	now feels the tremendous speed and acceleration of the earth.” 
	
	During the 1960s and 1970s, public discussion of energy manipulation such as 
	antigravity was virtually closed off, scorned as fantasy or conspiracy 
	theory. Yet, it is clear that within government and military circles, work 
	continued secretly in this area. Could it have been based on transferred 
	Nazi super-science?
 Bruce L. Cathie, a former New Zealand commercial pilot, theoretician, and an 
	advocate of the existence of a 
	
	worldwide energy grid, wrote in 1971,
 
	
		
		“Somewhere, I knew, [my proposed energy grid] system contained a clue to the 
	truth of [Einstein’s] Unified Field which, he had postulated, permeates all 
	of existence. I didn’t know at the time that this clue had already been 
	found by scientists who were well ahead of me in the play.... for many 
	years they have been carrying out full-scale research into the practical 
	applications of the mathematical concept contained in that theory.” 
		 
	
		
		The only way to traverse the vast distances of space is to possess the means 
	of manipulating, or altering, the very structure of space itself; altering 
	the space-time geometric matrix, which to us provides the illusion of form 
	and distance.
 ...for distance is an illusion.
 
		  
		The only thing keeping places apart in 
	space is time. If it were possible to move from one position to another in 
	space in an infinitely small amount of time, or “zero time,” then both the 
	positions would co- exist, according to our awareness. By speeding up the 
	geometric of time we will be able to bring distant places within close 
	proximity.  
		  
		This is the secret of UFOs - they travel by means of altering the 
	spatial dimensions around them and repositioning in space-time. 
	
	One hint that the U.S. government experimented with such technology came in 
	December 1980, when Betty Cash, Vickie Landrum, and Landrum’s seven-year-old 
	grandson Colby encountered a large, glowing, diamond-shaped object hovering 
	in the air near the small town of Huff man, Texas.  
	
	The trio, supported by 
	other witnesses in the area, said the object was surrounded by military 
	CH-47 helicopters. Days later, the trio experienced painful swellings and 
	skin blisters, along with headaches, nausea, and hair loss, all symptoms of 
	intense electromagnetic radiation. In 1985, the three victims sought $20 
	million in damages from the U.S. government, but the following year, their 
	suit was dismissed, based on denials by the government that any such craft 
	existed in its inventory.
 Yet another small public exposure to exotic energy manipulation may have 
	come with the accidental discovery of single-atom (monatomic) elements in 
	the 1970s by Phoenix-area cotton farmer David Hudson. His discovery was 
	followed by several scientific papers exploring the mysteries of the atomic 
	structure, nucleus deformation, and electromagnetism. Hudson himself 
	obtained eleven worldwide patents on his “Orbitally Rearranged Monatomic 
	Elements (ORME).”
 
 Hudson found that the nuclei of such monatomic matter acted in an unusual 
	manner. Under certain circumstances, they began spinning and creating 
	strangely deformed shapes. Oddly, as these nuclei spun, they began to come 
	apart on their own.
 
 It was found, for example, that in the element rhodium 103, the nucleus 
	became deformed in a ratio of two to one, which made it twice as long as it 
	is wide, and entered a high- spin state. When all electrons are brought 
	under the control of the nucleus of an atom, the nucleus attains a “highward,” 
	or high-spin, state. When reaching a state of reciprocal relationship, the 
	electrons turn to pure white light and the individual atoms fall apart, 
	producing a white monatomic powder.
 
 Using thermo-gravimetric analysis, it was found that a sample of Hudson’s 
	monatomic matter lost 44 percent of its original weight when reduced to this 
	white-powder state. By being either heated or cooled, it would gain or lose 
	weight.
 
	
		
		“By repeated annealing we could make the material weigh less than 
	the pan weighed it was sitting in,” said Hudson, “. . . or we could make it 
	weigh 300–400 times what its beginning weight was, depending on whether we 
	were heating or cooling it.... [I]f you take this white powder and put it 
	on a quartz boat and heat it up to the point where it fuses with the quartz, 
	it becomes black and it regains all its weight again. This makes no sense, 
	it’s impossible, it can’t happen. But there it is.” 
	
		
		“Hudson was then asked to reverse the 
	process fully by turning the powder back into a piece of metallic gold. It 
	was like asking someone to remake an apple from a pan of apple 
	sauce - seemingly impossible! Early trial led to some disastrous results.... By late 1995, the difficulties had been overcome and the figurative apple 
	had indeed been rebuilt from the apple sauce.    
		From this, there was no doubt 
	that it was possible ( just as in ancient metallurgical lore) to manufacture 
	gold from a seemingly non-gold base product. From a commencing sample which 
	registered as iron, silica, and aluminum, emerged an ingot which analyzed as 
	pure gold. After centuries of trial, error, frustration, and failure, the Philosopher’s Stone of ancient times had at last been rediscovered.” 
	
	Gardner amassed a wealth of material linking the white powder of gold to 
	alchemists, the legendary Knights Templar, Solomon’s treasure, the manna of 
	the Israelites, Moses, and ancient Egypt. The significance of these 
	connections will become apparent in the next section.
 By the early 1990s, scientific papers were being published by the Niels Bohr 
	Institute and Argonne National and Oak Ridge National Laboratories, 
	substantiating the existence of these high-spin, monatomic elements and 
	their power as superconductors.
 
 Hudson also met with Dr. 
	
	Hal Puthoff, director of the Institute for Advanced 
	Studies in Austin, Texas. Puthoff performs cutting- edge research into 
	zero-point energy and gravity as a zero-point fluctuation force. He and 
	other scientists have theorized that enough energy exists in the space found 
	in the atoms inside an empty coffee cup to boil all the oceans of the Earth 
	if fully utilized.
 
 Puthoff had also theorized that matter reacting in two dimensions should 
	lose about 44 percent of its gravitational weight, exactly the weight loss 
	found by Hudson. When it was found that Hudson’s elements, when heated, 
	could achieve a gravitational attraction of less than zero, Puthoff 
	concluded the powder was “exotic matter” capable of bending time and space.
 
	
	The material’s antigravitational properties were confirmed when it was shown 
	that a weighing pan weighed less when the powder was placed in it than it 
	did empty. The matter had passed its antigravitational properties to the 
	pan.
 Adding to their amazement, it was found that when the white powder was 
	heated to a certain degree, not only did its weight disappear but the powder 
	itself vanished from sight. When a spatula was used to stir around in the 
	pan, there apparently was nothing there. Yet, as the material cooled, it 
	reappeared in its original configuration. The material had not simply 
	disappeared; it apparently had moved into another dimension.
 
 Hudson also saw evidence of perpetual energy through the use of a 
	superconductor.
 
	
		
		“You literally start the superconductor flowing by applying 
	a magnetic field,” he said. “It responds to this by flowing light inside and 
	building a bigger Meissner Field [Walter Meissner in 1933 discovered that 
	light flowing within a superconductor produces an electromagnetic energy 
	field that excludes external magnetic fields] around it.  
		  
		You can put your 
	magnet down and walk away. Come back a hundred years later and it is still 
	flowing exactly as when you left. It will never slow down. There is 
	absolutely no resistance; it is perpetual motion and will run forever.” 
	
	This new technology dealt with the manipulation and control of basic energy. 
	 
	
	Some scientists believed that such control at the atomic and subatomic level 
	might do much more than offer new propulsion technology. It might open the 
	door to antigravity, limitless free energy, a cure for diseases such as AIDS 
	and cancer, an end to the aging process, faster-than-light speeds, and much 
	more, perhaps even inter-dimensional and time travel.
 Since science is coming to the conclusion that gravity and time are 
	interconnected aspects of energy, it is possible that the Bell was used for 
	experimenting with time travel. This possibility is not as outrageous as it 
	sounds, as many notable scientists and authors have written seriously about 
	the possibility of time travel.
 
 Astronomer and Pulitzer Prize winner 
	Carl Sagan, director of the 
	Laboratory 
	for Planetary Studies at Cornell University at the time of his death in 
	1996, when asked about time travel, stated:
 
	
		
		Right now we’re in one of those classic, wonderfully evocative moments in 
	science when we don’t know, when there are those on both sides of the 
	debate, and when what is at stake is very mystifying and very profound.
 If we could travel into the past, it’s mind-boggling what would be possible. 
	For one thing, history would become an experimental science, which it 
	certainly isn’t today. The possible insights into our own past and nature 
	and origins would be dazzling. For another, we would be facing the deep 
	paradoxes of interfering with the scheme of causality that has led to our 
	own time and ourselves. I have no idea whether it’s possible, but it’s 
	certainly worth exploring.
 
	
	Jenny Randles, a science-oriented British author, presented compelling 
	examples of recent discoveries in her 2005 book Breaking the Time Barrier, 
	which indicate the very real possibility of 
	
	time travel. She noted that “a 
	race to build a time machine has been going on since at least the Second 
	World War.”  
	
	After discussing “worm holes” in time and space, and other 
	possible means of time travel, she pointed out,  
	
		
		“... [F]rom our 
	understanding of physics - if you travel faster than light, then you can 
	overtake the flow of events that light happens to transmit. Since the 
	passage of these events forms what we interpret as time, then by traveling 
	faster than light you ought to travel through time. Spaceships that outstrip 
	light speed are always going to moonlight as time machines.”  
	
	Today, more 
	than one scientist has claimed to have broken the light barrier, though official acceptance has been lacking.
 
	
	This horrendous idea sounds preposterous, but 
	the science is there and the Bell did exist.
 No wonder certain powerful persons would go to any lengths to obtain or 
	conceal such knowledge. Just such attempts began in the closing days of 
	World War II, as the victors sought to learn the secrets of Nazi super- 
	science.
 
 It is clear that certain members of the American military were keen to learn 
	Nazi secrets, as shown by this portion of a 1945 letter from Major General 
	Hugh J. Knerr to Lieutenant General Carl Spaatz, the commander of U.S. 
	Strategic Air Forces in Europe:
 
	
		
		“Occupation of German scientific and 
	industrial establishments has revealed the fact that we have been alarmingly 
	backward in many fields of research. If we do not take this opportunity to 
	seize the apparatus and the brains that developed it and put the combination 
	back to work promptly, we will remain several years behind while we attempt 
	to cover a field already exploited.” 
	
	Consider the rush into Czechoslovaki a by General George S. Patton’s Third 
	Army even as the Europe an war wound to a close.  
	
		
		“The madcap, and some would 
	say, militarily and politically indefensible, Allied dash away from Berlin 
	and to south-central Germany and Prague are consistent with American 
	knowledge, at some very high level, of Kammler’s SS Sonderkommando black 
	projects and secret weapons empire,” wrote Farrell. 
	
	Vernon Bowen, whose 1950s-era book on UFOs was classified by the U.S. 
	government, relates how one of Patton’s officers, Colonel Charles H. Reed, 
	organized the escape of the Lippizan horses from the Spanish Riding School 
	at the end of the war, an event memorialized in the 1963 Disney film Miracle 
	of the White Stallions.  
	
	Bowen noted that Reed saved the horses,  
	
		
		“while on his 
	mission of persuading the head of German intelligence to turn over to the 
	U.S. the many truckloads of documents buried on the Czech-Austrian 
	border - documents which are still secret today.”  
	
	Could these documents have 
	been Kammler’s technology files?
 The Allies’ rejection of SS chief Himmler’s last-minute offer to surrender 
	may not have been due to the “frantic attempts of a desperate mass murderer 
	to avoid his inevitable fate,” as described by mainstream historians, but 
	instead because Himmler had lost real control over the exotic technology. 
	After all, Himmler was too high-profile a person to be allowed to live on 
	after the war. He reportedly committed suicide by taking a poison capsule on 
	May 23, 1945, after being caught trying to sneak through British lines 
	disguised as a German Army private.
 
 Hans Kammler, on the other hand, was largely unknown to the public, though 
	he undoubtedly was high on the list of wanted Nazi war criminals, 
	considering his involvement in the construction of concentration camps and 
	their gas chambers as well as his participation in the leveling of the 
	Warsaw ghetto.
 
	
		
		“Unlike Himmler,” noted Cook, “Kammler had something of value 
	to deal - something tangible. By early April [1945], Hitler and Himmler had 
	placed under his direct control every secret weapon system of any 
	consequence within the Third Reich - weapons that had no counterpart in the 
	inventories of the three powers that were now bearing down on central 
	Germany from the east and the west.”
 “The deal had already probably been cut between Kammler’s representatives 
	and OSS [the U.S. Office of Strategic Services] station chief in Zurich, 
	Allen Dulles, or via General Patton himself,” Farrell surmised.
 
	
	If such a deal was made with Patton, he did not live to see the results.  
	
	On 
	December 9, 1945, while riding in his 1939 Cadillac staff car, Patton 
	suffered a head injury when his car was struck by a 21/2-ton military truck 
	that turned in front of them. Patton’s driver and a passenger, his chief of 
	staff Major General Hobart “Hap” Gay, were uninjured. Paralyzed from the 
	neck down, Patton was taken to a military hospital in Heidelberg, Germany, 
	where he died on December 21.
 Since the war, there have been several conspiracy theories regarding 
	Patton’s death - one being that he was killed by his own government. Most have 
	concentrated on his vocal assertions that the United States should have 
	carried the war on into Russia and put an end to communism, plus his public 
	advocacy of reinstating ranking Nazis to help rebuild Germany.
 
 Noting that Patton, whose forces drove straight to the heart of Nazi 
	research in Czechoslovakia, may well have been aware of Kammler and his 
	Nazi superweapons, Farrell stated that if Patton was deliberately silenced,
 
	
		
		“then surely this [knowledge of Nazi super-science] is the most plausible 
	motivation for the deed.” 
	
	Did knowledge of the incredible ability to manipulate energy die with top 
	Nazis at the end of the war? Consider the fate of Hans Kammler.
 As the war drew to a close, Kammler made no secret that he intended to use 
	both the V-2 scientists and rockets under his control as leverage for a deal 
	with the Allies. On April 2, 1945, on Kammler’s orders, a special train 
	carried rockets and five hundred technicians and engineers escorted by a 
	hundred SS troopers to an Alpine redoubt in Bavaria.
 
	
	According to von Braun 
	and Dornberger, Kammler planned to “bargain with the Americans or one of the 
	other Allies for his own life in exchange for the leading German rocket 
	specialists.” 
	
		
		“[Kammler] came to me in early April in order to say good-bye,” recalled 
	Nazi armaments minister Speer.    
		“For the first time in our four-year 
	association, Kammler did not display his usual dash. On the contrary, he 
	seemed insecure and slippery with his vague, obscure hints about why I 
	should transfer to Munich with him. He said efforts were being made in the 
	SS to get rid of the fuehrer. He himself, however, was planning to contact 
	the Americans. In exchange for their guaranty of freedom, he would offer 
	them the entire technology of our jet planes, as well as the A-4 rocket and 
	other important developments....” 
	
	On April 4, 1945, when von Braun pressed Kammler for permission to resume 
	rocket research, the SS officer quietly announced that he was about to 
	disappear for “an indefinite length of time.”  
	
	He was true to his word: no 
	one saw Kammler again. As everyone knows, von Braun and Dornberger, along 
	with other scientists and many of the V-2 rockets, eventually made their way 
	to the United States, becoming founding members of its modern space program 
	with no help from Kammler.
 Jean Michel, himself an inmate of concentration camp Dora, which provided 
	slave labor for Kammler’s rocket program, wrote of Kammler:
 
	
		
		“The chief of 
	the SS secret weapon empire, the man in Himmler’s confidence, disappeared 
	without a trace. Even more disturbing is the fact that the architect of the 
	concentration camps, builder of the gas chambers, executioner of Dora, 
	overall chief of all the SS missiles has sunk into oblivion. There is the 
	Bormann mystery, the Mengele enigma; as far as I know, no one, to this day, 
	has taken much interest in the fate of SS Obergruppenfuehrer Hans Kammler.” 
		 
	Michel, along with others, wondered,  
		
		“Why had the ‘cold and brutal 
	calculator’ described by Speer so abruptly discarded the trump cards he had 
	so patiently accumulated?” 
	
	As the war drew to a close, Kammler,  
	
		
		“had the good fortune to inspect the 
	Czechoslovakian stretch of the front,” wrote Witkowski. “After this 
	event, nobody knew what became of him. Perhaps he died, though it is 
	unlikely that this would never have been recorded.” 
	
	The reports of Kammler’s death are varied and mutually exclusive.  
	
	One 
	version has him committing suicide in a forest between Prague and Pilsen two 
	days after Germany surrendered, while another said he was shot by his own SS 
	aide in Prague. Another version was that he died in a shootout with Czech 
	partisans. The Red Cross initially reported Kammler as “missing,” but this 
	was later changed to “dead” upon the testimony of a relative. The one common 
	denominator regarding Kammler’s various death reports was that he was last 
	seen in north central Czechoslovakia, in close proximity to the Wenzeslaus 
	Mine - and the Bell.
 Despite the lack of a body, no effort appeared to have been taken to 
	establish the truth of Kammler’s death and, unlike his superior Bormann, 
	Kammler was not tried in absentia at Nuremberg.
 
 Kammler was not alone in his escape. Dozens of high-ranking former SS or 
	party members simply disappeared. Many of them were associated with advanced 
	technology programs.
 
 Did Kammler and his cohorts escape with weapons plans for the amazing Bell 
	project? Whoever controlled such secret technology was certainly in a strong 
	position to strike a deal with one of the Allied nations.
 
 With secret projects in the hands of the fanatical SS and with factories and 
	research facilities scattered over - and under - the countryside, it is entirely 
	conceivable that saucers, uranium weapons, the Bell, and other exotic 
	technologies could have been developed without the knowledge of anyone 
	except Himmler, Bormann, and Kammler. The high- profile Himmler had been 
	taken out of the loop as far back as 1943.
 
	
	The fates of Bormann and Kammler 
	remain unproven.  
	
		
		“[T]he evidence is strong enough to suggest collusion at 
	the highest levels between the United States and Nazi Germany 
	governments - and that collusion extends down to those within U-234, its 
	officers, crew and passengers - and has been maintained by powerful parties 
	with vested interests on both sides of the Atlantic ever since,” stated Hydrick. 
	
	If the highest circle of America’s ruling elite indeed obtained Nazi 
	super-science in the wake of World War II, it came with a price - one these 
	prewar, pro-Nazi sympathizers were willing to accept.  
	
	When American 
	authorities realized the alternative and nonlinear physics within Nazi 
	science, they knew it was beyond the frame of reference of most U.S. 
	scientists, which is why they recruited so many Germans and brought them to 
	America. 
	
		
		“The trouble was,” recounted one government insider, “when the Americans 
	took it all home with them, they found, too late, that it came infected with 
	a virus - you take the science on, you take on aspects of the ideology as well.” 
	
	The intense interest of the Nazi leadership in 
	occult or hidden 
	subjects - from ancient artifacts to legends of prehistorical high-tech 
	super-races - is well documented.  
	
	Toward the end of the war, their acquisition 
	of super-science may have been matched by the recovery of an amazing and 
	precious treasure. |