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Chapter 5: STRANGE MAPS, STRANGE FLIGHTS, AND UNKNOWN
CARGOES
"Gerlach goes on to explain that the Nazi party
seemed to think that they were
working on a bomb and relates how the Party people
in Munich were going
around from house to house on the 27th or 28th of
April last telling everyone
that the atomic bomb would be used the following day."
Jeremy Bernstein, Hitler's Uranium Club: The Secret
Recordings at Farm Hall 1
The United States was in a unique position among all
the powers involved in World War Two. For the last time in its history,
it was able to undertake military operations on a global scale relatively
free of the fear of enemy reprisal. Its cities and factories were beyond
the reach of any known enemy bomber. Moreover, much of its industrial
capacity was located in its interior, far from the northeastern Atlantic
States or the Pacific coast. According to conventional wisdom that has
been reiterated countless times in numerous standard histories of the
war, there was absolutely nothing the United States had to fear from Nazi
Germany with its "tactical mission-oriented Luftwaffe" or its
puny navy. To this day, many Americans, even ones relatively familiar
with the operational details of Word War Two, believe that Germany had
no aircraft even capable of reaching the United States and returning to
Europe, much less of carrying a heavy enough payload, or being available
in sufficient numbers, to be of any military significance.
All that changes, however, if Germany had the atomic
bomb and if she possessed aircraft capable of delivering one and of returning
successfully to Europe. In that case, only one bomber need be used to
strike a significant military and psychological blow against the United
States. Was such an operation feasible? Did Germany have such aircraft
at least capable of being modified to
1 Jeremy Bernstein, Hitler's Uranium
Club: The Secret Records at Farm Hall (Copernicus, 2001), p. 126.
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carry an atom bomb? Are there indications that such
studies and operations were contemplated by the Nazis?
A. The Oberkommando der Luftwaffe's Unusual Map
In 1943 the Supreme Command of the Luftwaffe (Oberkommando
der Luftwaffe) conducted a highly unusual study. The study consisted of
a map, a map of lower Manhattan Island. On the map are concentric circles
detailing the blast and heat damage- radii of an atomic bomb detonation
over New York City. But the most unusual aspect of this "study"
is that it shows the detonation of an atom bomb in the 15-17 kiloton range,
approximately the same yield as the Little Boy uranium bomb dropped on
Hiroshima, an odd "coincidence" in the series of "odd coincidences"
we have- already encountered.
The Luftwaffe's intentions are quite obvious and clear.
The destruction of the financial and business center of New York City
would alone have been an unparalleled military and psychological blow
against the American war effort. Beyond this, given the fact that New
York City was an important point of embarkation for American shipping
and troops, as well as a naval base, and a transportation hub for the
entire American northeast, such a blow would have been incalculable.
For the Nazi leadership, such a blow would have made
military and political sense. It would have demonstrated conclusively
to the United States that Germany was capable of mounting significant
military operations against the American mainland, and at levels of destructive
capability that were militarily, economically, and psychologically devastating.
From their point of view, such a blow would arguably been seen as weakening
American resolve and perhaps, after a succession of similar such blows
against prominent targets such as Boston, Philadelphia, Washington DC
or Norfolk, would conceivably have led to America's exit from the war,
leaving Britain to follow not far behind. The war against the Soviet Union
could then either have been prosecuted without mercy until the inevitable
Soviet capitulation, or at the minimum, a negotiated peace highly favorable
to the Reich.
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In October of 1943, then, such a study was a tempting
prospect. But is there any indication that the OKL's "study map"
was anything more than a study? From the evidence presented thus far,
the answer is clearly that the Luftwaffe was not merely conducting the
typical staff exercises that all general staffs conduct, even in wartime.
For the Luftwaffe, the study was a practical and immanent feasibility.
The OKL 's "Feasibility Study"
of an Atom Bomb Blast of Hiroshima Size over Manhattan Island in New York
City
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But what of Freier's allegations that the bomb was ready,
but the delivery systems were not? Without a delivery system the German
Wehrmacht could have possessed all the atom bombs it wished, but they
would have been utterly useless, expensive toys, without a viable means
to deliver them to its most significant militarily and economically powerful
opponent.
B. Strange Flights
Did the Germans possess any strategic bombers or aircraft
capable of reaching the North American continent with a significant payload,
and returning to Europe? Beyond the relatively well- known Messerschmitt
264, a four engine bomber that looks far too similar to the American B-29
to be coincidental, Germany possessed in small numbers a quantity of heavy-lift,
ultra-long range transport craft, including the four engine Junkers 290
and its massive six engine cousin, the Junkers 390.
The Junkers 390
Only two of these massive aircraft were ever built.
The Junkers 390 assumes an odd significance here (and later) in our story,
for in
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1994, one such Ju 390 took off from Bordeaux, France,
and flew to within 12 miles of New York City, snapped a picture of the
Manhattan skyline, and flew back, a non-stop flight of 32 hours.
Within the context of the German SS atom bomb project,
this flight was more than a mere feasibility study. Photo reconnaissance
could only be for target identification. And the
flight itself, to within 12 miles of the city, could conceivably have
been a test of American air defenses and reactions. In any case, the fact
that such a flight returned safely can only indicate that the American
Army Air Force simply was not expecting a visit from the Luftwaffe at
all, reconnaissance, feasibility study, or otherwise.
The Messerschmitt 264 Long Range "Amerikabomber
", Note the Curious Resemblance to the Boeing B-29 Superfortress
C. Unknown Cargoes and a Curious Airfield
The Ju 390 and is smaller four engine cousin the Ju 290
will play another important role in subsequent parts of this book. Hut
perhaps they had a role envisioned for them in conjunction with another
little-known, but nonetheless important, fact. In 1945 the Luftwaffe completed
construction of an enormous airfield near
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Oslo, Norway, capable of handling v e r y large aircraft
like the Me 264, the He 177, and the Ju 290 and 390. In an article for
the June 29, 1945 issue of the Washington Post, a report that originated
from 21st Army Group headquarters outlines the frightening discovery that
awaited Allied military personnel who came to occupy Norway after the
German forces there surrendered:
R.A.F. 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 Luftwaffe 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 is known that Heinkel undertook special modifications
of its He 177 four engine heavy bomber late in the war, adapting it to
carry large atom bombs, radiological bombs, and biological and chemical
bombs.2 Within the context of the SS atom bomb program
and the earlier flight of the Ju 390 from France in 1944, however, a purpose
immediately suggests itself. The loss of France to Allied forces in 1944
deprived the Luftwaffe of its large French airfields. Norway, however,
as has already been stated, remained in German hands up until their very
surrender, and thus constituted the only remaining base of operations
available to the Germans for any type of offensive operation against the
North American continent.
The presence of such an airfield and its deliberate
construction so late in the war also strongly suggests a connection to
the SS atom bomb program in an entirely different way, since its construction
would likely have fallen under the jurisdiction of the SS Building and
Works Department, which was under the direction of none other than SS
Obergruppenfuhrer Hans Kammler. It is also significant that jurisdiction
over all long range aircraft was also in Kammler's hands by war's end,
thus linking the precious long-range
Q.v. Friedrich Georg, Hitlers Siegeswaffen
band 1: Luftwaffe und Marine: Geheime Nuklearwaffen des Dritten Reiches
und ihre Tragersysteme pp. 131, 133.
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bombers on the Oslo field to Kammler as well. Moreover,
Mayer and Mehner speculate that at least two atom bombs were built and
possibly transported on the mission of the U-234. In their view, the surrender
of the U-boat to the American authorities thus not only provided the Manhattan
Project with much-needed stocks of enriched uranium, but quite possibly
also with two fully functional atom bombs as well.
Professor Friedrich Lachner was assistant for twenty
years to professor Mache at the Department for Technical Physics at the
Technical University of Vienna. Familiar with aspects of the German bomb
project, Lachner unburdened himself of his knowledge to researchers Mayer
and Mehner. Among his allegations were that at least one completed bomb
of German construction was transported from Thuringia to Salzburg by the
SS near the end of the war.3
Lachner's letter is intriguing for two reasons. First,
because it corroborates the existence of a large
atom bomb program in the Three Corners region, and corroborates Freier's
allegations of a successful test in March 1945. By mentioning the transportation
of such weapons out of the region, he gives some credence to the idea
that the U-234 might have been used to transport at least one such weapon
to Norway.4
But a more curious allegation is made in Lachner's letter
to Mayer and Mehner, and with it, we begin to approach the even more horrendous
potentialities of Nazi wartime secret weapons research. Citing the letter
of a British espionage agent who was well-aware of the multi-tiered nature
of the German atom bomb program, and who was aware of a "third team
that sought another
3 Mayer
and Mehner, das Geheimnis, p. 81. Lachner also asserts unequivocally in
his letter to Mayer and Mehner that the bomb dropped on Hiroshima was
German (p. 82). Lachner also states that there were no less than fifteen
atom bombs in German hands by the war's end. Again, on first glance, this
seems a sheer fantasy, unless they had already mastered the techniques
of boosted fission. The Salzburg bomb story may not be fantasy, as American
tank units were operating in the area late in the war (q.v. pp. 84-85)
in conjunction with Patton's drive on Pilsen and Prague.
4 Italian
officer Luigi Romersa mentions as well that the Russians captured two
such bombs (Das Geheimnis, p. 105).
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way" of making the bomb (boosted fission), 5
he then mentions a "fourth team":
Yes, and then there was also the fourth team, about
which we heard rumors during the last phase of the war. This was certainly
so shadowy and fantastic, that one could only construe it as a ploy. But
after the war it became evident that the world had avoided a colossal
catastrophe by a hair's breath.... This fourth team worked in a field
that was monstrous on a daily basis. And when I say this, I meant thereby
that they experimented with things that a well-informed public would to
thus very day think then to be unthinkable and unbelievable, and thus
imaginary. I mean to imply that these specialists worked in conceptions
that totally abandoned conventional physical laws. 6
Mayer and Mehner then point out the implications of
the agent's remarks in an age long accustomed to think in terms of the
destructive power of hydrogen bombs:
That the Germans were working on an atom bomb no one
may any longer question, but that they also possessed a team that was
working on the destruction of the world is an unbelievable concept. This
could only mean that there was a weapons system that possessed enormous
range and degree of efficiency that lay beyond that of nuclear weapons
technology. Did the Third Reich really prepare the Doomsday Weapon? And
if so, where is this technology today? Was it discovered by the Allies
or does it lurk secretly deep in the earth waiting for its rediscovery?
If such an Ultimate Weapon has already been in existence for more than
fifty years, then it is a legitimate question to ask what today's military
really, actually possesses.7
The truthfulness of these stupendous allegations appears
to be substantiated by a brief remark uttered by Adolf Hitler to a gathering
of Axis elite in April 1944. According to Italian officer
5 Mayer and Mehner, Das Geheimnis, p. 89.
It should be noted, however, that the name of this "well known"
British agent is never mentioned.6 Ibid., p. 91, my
translation and emphasis. The agent then mentions that he is not aware
of which side ended up with this technology.
7 Ibid., pp. 91-92. it is also a
legitimate question to ask whose military possesses it, or alternatively,
is it in the possession of some altogether unknown entity?
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Luigi Romersa once again, who was present when Hitler
made the remarks, the Fuhrer
strolled through the room and said, "We have invisible
aircraft, submarines, colossal tanks and cannon, unbelievably powerful
rockets, and a bomb with a working that will astonish the whole world.
The enemy knows this, and besieges and attempts to destroy us. But we
will answer this destruction with a storm and that without unleashing
a bacteriological war, for which we are also prepared.... All my words
are the purest truth. That you will see!8
Bacteriological war? Bombs with an unbelievable working? Teams
of specialists working in areas that defy conventional laws of physics
that would threaten a global catastrophe? This is not the picture of a
Germany tinkering with V-l buzz
bombs, V-2s of limited operational range and strategic value,
clumsy and belated attempts to construct a working atomic reactor, and
tottering on the brink of total collapse that we have been led to believe.
All the evidence presented thus far tends to the opposite conclusion,
that at a minimum the Third Reich possessed functioning atom bombs and
was preparing to use them against the West, if she had not already done
so against Russia. So the cargoes intended to fly out of that Norwegian
airfield
may have not only been nuclear, but something far more horrendous.
Already the path through Nazi Germany's nuclear programs have led into
very unexpected places and developments, developments only made possible
by the recent German reunification and the declassification of German,
British, and American archives that it provoked, and suggesting that behind
that nuclear program lurks something even larger and far more monstrous.
In any case, it now seems clear why, in spite of Oppenheimer's statement
in the middle of May 1945 that the earliest an atom bomb could be ready
was in November of 1945,9 that America was able to
8 Mayer and Mehner, Das Geheimnis, p.
97.
9 Ibid., p. 131. It is significant that Oppenheimer made these remarks
before the capture of the U-234.
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overcome all fusing problems and fissile material shortages
in a mere two months after the German surrender.
The June 29, 1945 Washington
post Article on the Luftwaffe Airfield in Oslo and its Forty Long Range
Bombers
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