Operation Paperclip German Flying Saucers - Wonder Weapons
http://endrtimes.blogspot.com/2014/04/operation-paperclip.html
After WWII ended in 1945, victorious Russian and American intelligence
teams began a treasure hunt throughout occupied Germany for military and
scientific booty. They were looking for things like new rocket and
aircraft designs, medicines, and electronics. But they were also hunting
down the most precious “spoils” of all: the scientists whose work had
nearly won the war for Germany. The engineers and intelligence officers
of the Nazi War Machine.
The U.S. Military rounded up Nazi
scientists and brought them to America. It had originally intended
merely to debrief them and send them back to Germany. But when it
realized the extent of the scientists knowledge and expertise, the War
Department decided it would be a waste to send the scientists home.
Following the discovery of flying discs (foo fighters), particle/laser
beam weaponry in German military bases, the War Department decided that
NASA and the CIA must control this technology, and the Nazi engineers
that had worked on this technology.
There was only one problem:
it was illegal. U.S. law explicitly prohibited Nazi officials from
immigrating to America — and as many as three-quarters of the scientists
in question had been committed Nazis.
Convinced that German scientists could help America’s post-war efforts,
President Harry Truman agreed in September 1946 to authorize “Project
Paperclip,” a program to bring selected German scientists to work on
America’s behalf during the “Cold War”
However, Truman
expressly excluded anyone found “to have been a member of the Nazi party
and more than a nominal participant in its activities, or an active
supporter of Nazism or militarism.”
The War Department’s Joint
Intelligence Objectives Agency (JIOA) conducted background
investigations of the scientists. In February 1947, JIOA Director
Bosquet Wev submitted the first set of scientists’ dossiers to the State
and Justice Departments for review.
The Dossiers were damning.
Samuel Klaus, the State Departments representative on the JIOA board,
claimed that all the scientists in this first batch were “ardent Nazis.”
Their visa requests were denied. Wev was furious. He wrote a memo
warning that “the best interests of the United States have been
subjugated to the efforts expended in ‘beating a dead Nazi horse.’” He
also declared that the return of these scientists to Germany, where they
could be exploited by America’s enemies, presented a “far greater
security threat to this country than any former Nazi affiliations which
they may have had or even any Nazi sympathies that they may still have.”
When the JIOA formed to investigate the backgrounds and form
dossiers on the Nazis, the Nazi Intelligence leader Reinhard Gehlen met
with the CIA director Allen Dulles. Dulles and Gehlen hit it off
immediately. Gehlen was a master spy for the Nazis and had infiltrated
Russia with his vast Nazi Intelligence network. Dulles promised Gehlen
that his Intelligence unit was safe in the CIA.
Apparently, Wev
decided to sidestep the problem. Dulles had the scientists dossier’s
re-written to eliminate incriminating evidence. As promised, Allen
Dulles delivered the Nazi Intelligence unit to the CIA, which later
opened many umbrella projects stemming from Nazi research. (MK-ULTRA /
ARTICHOKE, OPERATION MIDNIGHT CLIMAX)
Military Intelligence
“cleansed” the files of Nazi references. By 1955, more than 760 German
scientists had been granted citizenship in the U.S. and given prominent
positions in the American scientific community. Many had been longtime
members of the Nazi party and the Gestapo, had conducted experiments on
humans at concentration camps, had used slave labour, and had committed
other war crimes.
In a 1985 expose in the Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists Linda Hunt wrote that she had examined more than 130 reports
on Project Paperclip subjects–and every one “had been changed to
eliminate the security threat classification.”
President Truman,
who had explicitly ordered no committed Nazis to be admitted under
Project Paperclip, was evidently never aware that his directive had been
violated. State Department archives and the memoirs of officials from
that era confirm this. In fact, according to Clare Lasby’s book
Operation Paperclip, project officials “covered their designs with such
secrecy that it bedevilled their own President; at Potsdam he denied
their activities and undoubtedly enhanced Russian suspicion and
distrust,” quite possibly fuelling the Cold War even further. A good
example of how these dossiers were changed is the case of Wernher von
Braun. A September 18, 1947, report on the German rocket scientist
stated, “Subject is regarded as a potential security threat by the
Military Governor.”
The following February, a new security
evaluation of Von Braun said, “No derogatory information is available on
the subject…It is the opinion of the Military Governor that he may not
constitute a security threat to the United States.” Here are a few of
the 700 suspicious characters who were allowed to immigrate through
Project Paperclip. ...
Here one of the Diamond tops of the Catholic scientific community in the forties/fifties, the exact opposite of Einstein/SJ LeMaitre concept of space and time,... of course there's a club and web site on him, but Wikipedia erased completely his figure. I believe because World Trade Center was not pulled down with thermite but with well other technology:
ReplyDeletehttp://control-avles-blogs.blogspot.it/2014/02/fluidodynamic-more-embarassing-than.html