2013/01/04
Jim W. Dean: Organic WMD Tested in 1945 off New Zealand!
The United States and New Zealand conducted secret tests of a tsunami bomb, designed to destroy coastal cities by using underwater blasts to trigger massive tidal waves. As many of you know, I love to say: "You just can't make this stuff up." Even now, we are still discovering that more way of killing masses of civilians were being experimented on all the time. That this happened in New Zealand, with their long anti nuclear history, is even more bizarre. But that is what a World War does to people: Stimulate their killing instincts. We are re-posting this Telegraph piece, God Bless them for printing it, not only as a dusty musty old archived find, but for one much more important. If they were discovering little goodies like this during WWII, for creating 'natural' disaster, how far do you think the science has come since then: Light years maybe? And if you were wondering why something like this has not seen the light of day after all these years, you are correct, if you are thinking that 'they' would not want us asking nerdy little questions about whether such kinds of organic weapons design was still being done. We already know, that the best cover for domestically produced UFO's is to have them viewed as extra-terrestial only because then no one will be asking about how the development money was approved without public oversight, in, God Forbid, a Democracy! The tests were carried out in waters, around New Caledonia and Auckland, during the Second World War, and showed that the weapon was feasible, and a series of ten large offshore blasts could potentially create a 33 foot tsunami capable of inundating a small city. The top secret operation, code named "Project Seal", tested the doomsday device as a possible rival to the nuclear bomb. About 3,700 bombs were exploded during the tests, first in New Caledonia, and later at Whangaparaoe Peninsula, near Auckland. The plans came to light during research, by a New Zealand author andfilm maker, Ray Waru,who examined military files buried in the national archives. "Presumably, if the atomic bomb had not worked as well as it did, we might have been tsunamiing people,"said Mr Waru. "It was absolutely astonishing. First, that anyone would come up with the idea of developing a weapon of mass destruction based on a tsunami, and also that New Zealand seems to have successfully developed it to a degree that it might have worked."
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