http://www.wanttoknow.info/war/4610_secret_nazi_war_technology
Below is the full text of a most amazing article published in the October 1946 edition of Harper's Magazine, just over a year after the end of WWII. This highly intriguing article reveals that the US government recovered many tons worth of secret documents from the Nazis. These astonishing documents showed beyond a shadow of a doubt that in almost all areas of scientific research, the Nazis were far ahead of the allied forces – often by a factor of 10 years or more.
Note: How can the Nazi technology have been so far superior to that of the allies? For the riveting testimony of numerous military officers on the back engineering of UFO technologies, click here.
NAZI Technology
Secret NAZI War Technology Reported in Harper's Magazine
Secret NAZI War Technology Reported in Harper's Magazine
Below is the full text of a most amazing article published in the October 1946 edition of Harper's Magazine, just over a year after the end of WWII. This highly intriguing article reveals that the US government recovered many tons worth of secret documents from the Nazis. These astonishing documents showed beyond a shadow of a doubt that in almost all areas of scientific research, the Nazis were far ahead of the allied forces – often by a factor of 10 years or more.
How
was this possible? With similar financial resources and brain power to
that of the allies, how did they make such huge leaps in technology in
such a short span of time? It doesn't really make sense unless you
consider the possibility that they might have had access to technology
from some advanced civilization. Could they have recovered one or more
crashed UFOs and back engineered the technology? Sound far fetched? Can
you come up with a better explanation? For solid evidence of this
possibility, click here.
Note: For a concise two-page summary of this long article, click here. To verify this article on the Harper's website, click here.
War Secrets by the Thousands
Harper's Magazine
October, 1946 Page 329
Harper's Magazine
October, 1946 Page 329
Secrets by the Thousands
By C. Lester Walker
By C. Lester Walker
Harper's
readers are familiar with Mr. Walker's articles and the skillful
mechanics of the Allied war. He now gives us a look at some of the
disconcertingly effective tricks that were hidden up the enemy sleeve.
Someone
wrote to Wright Field recently, saying he understood this country had
got together quite a collection of enemy war secrets, that many were now
on public sale, and could he, please, be sent everything on German jet
engines. The Air Documents Division of the Army Air Forces answered:
"Sorry – but that would be fifty tons."
Moreover,
that fifty tons was just a small portion of what is today undoubtedly
the biggest collection of captured enemy war secrets ever assembled. If
you always thought of war secrets – as who hasn't? – as coming in sixes
and sevens, as a few items of information readily handed on to the
properly interested authorities, it may interest you to learn that the
war secrets in this collection run into the thousands, that the mass of
documents is mountainous, and that there was never before been anything
quite comparable to it.
The
collection is today chiefly in three places: Wright Field (Ohio), the
Library of Congress, and the Department of Commerce. Wright Field is
working from a documents "mother lode" of fifteen hundred tons. In
Washington, the Office of Technical Services (which has absorbed the
Office of the Publication Board, the government agency originally set up
to handle the collection) reports that tens of thousands of tons of
material are involved. It is estimated that over a million
separate items must be handled, and that they are, very likely,
practically all the scientific, industrial and military secrets of Nazi
Germany.
One
Washington official has called it "the greatest single source of this
type of material in the world, the first orderly exploitation of an
entire country's brain-power."
How
the collection came to be goes back, for beginnings, to one day in 1944
when the Allied Combined Chief' of Staff set in motion a colossal search
for war secrets in occupied German territory. They created a group of
military-civilian teams, termed the Joint Intelligence Objectives
Committee, which was to follow the invading armies into Germany and
uncover all her military, scientific, and industrial secrets for early
use against Japan. These teams worked against tine to get the most vital
information be: ore it was. destroyed, and in getting it performed
prodigies of ingenuity and tenacity.
At an
optical company at Wetzlav, near Frankfurt, for example, the American
colonel investigating felt positive that the high executives were
holding out on him. But nothing would shake their story: they had given
him everything. He returned next day with a legal document which he
asked them all to sign. It declared they had turned over "all scientific
and trade data; and if not, would accept the consequences." Two days
later they glumly signed the document, then led he colonel to a cache in
a warehouse will. From a safe tumbled out the secret file on optical
instruments, microscopy, aiming devices.
One
two-man search team found itself completely stymied. Records that they
had to find had completely disappeared. A rumor indicated they might
have been hidden in a mountain. The two scoured the region in a jeep.
Nothing. But keeping at it, they stumbled one day onto a small woods
road whose entrance was posted:
Achtung! Minen!
Gingerly,
slowly, they inched their jeep in. Nothing happened. But a concrete
dugout sunk in the hill revealed another sign: "Opening Will Cause
Explosion."
"We
tossed a coin," one member of this search team said later, "and the
loser hitched the jeep tow rope to the dugout door, held his breath! and
stepped on the gas."
There was no explosion. The door-ripped from its hinges. The sought-for secret files were inside.
The
German Patent Office put some of its most secret patents down a
sixteen-hundred-foot mine shaft at Heringen, then piled liquid oxygen,
in cylinders, on top of them. When the American Joint Intelligence
Objectives team found them, & was doubtful that they could be saved.
They were legible, but in such bad shape that a trip to the surface
would make them disintegrate. Photo equipment and a crew were therefore
lowered into the shaft and a complete microfilm record made of the
patents there.
PERHAPS
one of the most exciting searches was also the grimmest. This was the
hunt for hidden documents which might reveal that Nazi scientists had
frozen human beings to death and then tried to bring them back to life
again. Interviewing four Nazi doctors one day in June 1945, at a
laboratory of the Institut fur Luftfahrtmedizin, at Gut Hirschau,
Bavaria, an American medical corps major, Leo Alexander, was struck with
the dreadful conviction, despite repeated denials, that this had
occurred.
His
suspicion were aroused by three things. All the small animal laboratory
equipment was carefully preached; all large-animal equipment destroyed.
One of the doctors wanted to dissolve his research institute and dismiss
his staff. And none of the scientists could find any data on human
beings at all, not even on those rescued from North Sea waters and saved
by the new revival techniques. Did this mean that everything of the
sort was hidden away with other data which, the doctors didn't want to
show?
Wishing
to leave the four Germans in a frame of mind not to destroy their
records, the American concealed his suspicions, and, for the time being,
transferred his search elsewhere.
Chance
suddenly played into his hands. The Allied radio one night broadcast a
grim tale of the Dachau concentration camp. Researches on death, and
treatment of shock, from exposure to cold had been performed on
prisoners. The broadcast named the leading experimenter, one Dr.
Rascher, and called him a member of the medical staff of the SS.
For
Alexander this was a lead. He happened just to have learned that the
American Seventh Army had recently captured a vast mass of especially
secret SS records. He therefore headed for the Seventh Army Documents
Center to see what was there.
There
was more than he anticipated. Even to the complete and final report –
Himmler's personal copy, with his green-penciled annotations, all over
it – with the names of Rascher and all others involved, and containing
all the damning details of the almost unbelievable experiments.
Victims
had been immersed naked in ice water until they lost consciousness. All
the time elaborate testings were constantly made: rectal,
skin, and interior-of-the-stomach temperatures; pulse, blood sugar,
blood chlorides, blood count and sedimentation; urine tests; spinal
fluid. Appendix 7, Figure 5, showed that seven subjects were chilled to death beyond revival in from fifty-three to one hundred and six minutes.
"This table," Alexander commented in his own report, "is certainly the most laconic confession of seven murders in existence."
It
had been with the rest of the documents – in Himmler's private cave in
mountain at Hallein. Even though the side of the mountain had been
dynamited down over the cave mouth, the American searchers had found it.
The
earliest Joint Intelligence Objectives search teams were followed by
others, which were to dig out industrial and scientific secrets in
particular. The Technical Industrial Intelligence Committee was one
group of these, composed of three hundred and eighty civilians
representing seventeen American industries. Later came the teams of the
Office of the Publication Board itself and many mow groups direct from
private industry. Of the latter – called, in Germany, Field Intelligence
Agencies, Technical (FIAT) – there have been over five hundred; of one
to ten members each, operating by invitation and under the aegis of the
OPB.
Today
the search still goes on. The Office of Technical Services has a
European staff of four to five hundred J At Hoechst, it has one hundred
abstractors who struggle feverishly to keep ahead of the forty OTS
document-recording cameras which route to them each month over one
hundred thousand feet of microfilm.
II
What did we find? You'd like some outstanding examples from the war secrets collection?
The
head of the communications unit of Technical Industrial Intelligence
Branch opened his desk drawer and took out the tiniest vacuum tube I had
ever seen. It was about half thumb-size.
"Notice
it is heavy porcelain – not glass – and thus virtually indestructible.
It is a thousand watt – one-tenth the size of similar American tube.
Today our manufacturers know the secret of making it.... And here's something...."
He pulled some brown, papery-looking ribbon off a spool. It was a quarter-inch wide, with a dull and a shiny side.
"That's
Magnetophone tape," he said. "It's plastic, metallized on one side with
iron oxide. In Germany that supplanted phonograph recordings. A day's
Radio program can be magnetized on one reel. You can demagnetize it,
wipe it off and put a new program on at any time. No needle; so
absolutely no noise or record wear. An hour-long reel costs fifty
cents." He showed me then what had been two of the most
closely-guarded technical secrets of the war: the infra-red device which
the Germans invented for seeing at night, and the remarkable diminutive
generator which operated it. German cars could drive at any
speed in a total blackout, seeing objects clear as day two hundred
meters ahead. Tanks with this device could spot targets two miles away.
As a sniper scope it enabled German riflemen to pick off a man in total
blackness.
There
was a sighting tube, and a selenium screen out front. The screen caught
the incoming infra-red light, which drove electrons from the selenium
along the tube to another screen which was electrically charged and
fluorescent. A visible image appeared on this screen. Its clearness and
its accuracy for aiming purposes were phenomenal. Inside the tube,
distortion of the stream of electrons by the earth's magnetism was even
allowed for!
The
diminutive generator – five inches across – stepped up current from an
ordinary flashlight battery to 15,000 volts. It had a walnut-sized motor
which spun a rotor at 10,000 rpm – so fast that originally it had
destroyed all lubricants with the great amount of ozone it produced. The
Germans had developed a new grease: chlorinated paraffin oil. The
generator then ran 3,000 hours!
A
canvas bag on the sniper's back housed the device. His rifle had two
triggers. He pressed one for a few seconds to operate the generator and
the scope.. Then the other to kill his man in the dark. "That captured
secret," my guide declared, "we first used at Okinawa – to the
bewilderment of the Japs."
We
got, in addition, among these prize secrets, the technique and the
machine for making the world's most remarkable electric condenser.
Millions of condensers are essential to the radio and radar industry. Our
condensers were always made of metal foil. This one is made of paper,
coated with 1/250,000 of an inch of vaporized zinc. Forty per cent
smaller, twenty per cent cheaper than our condensers, it is also
self-healing. That is, if a breakdown occurs (like a fuse
blowing out), the zinc film evaporates, the paper immediately insulates,
and the condenser is right again. It keeps on working through multiple
breakdowns – at fifty per cent higher voltage than our condensers! To
most American radio experts this is magic, double-distilled.
Mica
was another thing. None is mined in Germany, so during the war our
Signal Corps was mystified. Where was Germany getting it?
One,
day certain piece of mica was handed to one of our experts in the U.S.
Bureau of Mines for analysis and opinion. "Natural mica," he reported,
"and no impurities."
But
the mica was synthetic. The Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Silicate
Research had discovered how to make it and – something which had always
eluded scientists – in large sheets.
We
know now, thanks to FIAT teams, that ingredients of natural mica were
melted in crucibles of carbon capable of taking 2,350 degrees of heat,
and then – this was the real secret – cooled in a special way. Complete
absence of vibration was the first essential. Then two forces directly
perpendicular to each other were applied. One, vertically, was a
controlled gradient of temperature in the cooling. At right angles to
this, horizontally, was introduced a magnetic field. This forced the
formation of the crystals in large laminated sheets on that plane.
"You
see this . . ." the head of Communications Unit, TIIB, said to me. It
was metal, and looked like a complicated doll's house with the roof off.
"It is the chassis or frame, for a radio. To make the same
thing, Americans would machine cut, hollow, shape, fit – a dozen
different processes. This is done on a press in one operation. It is
called the 'cold extrusion' process. We do it with some soft, splattery
metals. But by this process the Germans do it with cold steel! Thousands
of parts now made as castings or drop forgings or from malleable iron
can now be made this way. The production speed increase is a little
matter of one thousand per cent."
This one war secret alone, many American steel men believe, will revolutionize dozens of our metal fabrication industries.
In
textiles the war secrets collection has produced so many revelations
that American textile men are a little dizzy. There is a German
rayon-weaving machine, discovered a year ago by the American 'Knitting
Machine' Team, which increases production in relation to floor space by
one hundred and fifty percent. Their "Links-Links" loom produces a
ladderless, run-proof hosiery. New German needle-making machinery, it is
thought will revolutionize that business in both the United Kingdom and
the United States. There is a German method for pulling the wool from
sheepskins without injury to hide or fiber, by use of an enzyme.
Formerly the "puller" – a trade secret – was made from animal pancreas
from American packing houses. During the war the Nazis made it from a
mold called aspergil paraciticus, which they seeded in bran. It results
not only in better wool, but in ten per cent greater yield.
Another
discovery was a way to put a crimp in viscose rayon fibers which gives
them the appearance, warmth, wear resistance, and reaction-to-dyes of
wool. The secret here, our investigators found, was the addition to the
cellulose of twenty-five per cent fish protein.
But
of all the industrial secrets, perhaps, the biggest windfall came from
the laboratories and plants of the great German cartel, I. G.
Farbenindustrie. Never before, it is claimed, was there such a
store-house of secret information. It covers liquid and solid fuels,
metallurgy, synthetic rubber, textiles, chemicals, plastics, drugs,
dyes. One American dye authority declares:
"It
includes the production know-how and the secret formulas for over fifty
thousand dyes. Many of them are faster and better than ours. Many are
colors we were never able to make. The American dye industry will be
advanced at least ten years."
III
IN
MATTERS of food, medicine, and branches of the military art the finds
of the search teams were no less impressive. And in aeronautics and
guided missiles they proved to be downright alarming. One of
the food secrets the Nazis had discovered was a way to sterilize fruit
juices without heat. The juice was filtered, then cooled, then
carbonated and stored under eight atmospheres of carbon-dioxide
pressure. Later the carbon-dioxide was removed; the juice passed through
another filter – which, this time, germ-proofed it – and then was
bottled. Some thing, perhaps, for American canners to think about.
Milk
pasteurization by ultra-violet light has always failed in other
countries, but the Germans had found how to do it by using light tubes
of great length, and simultaneously how to enrich the milk with vitamin
D.
At a
plant in Kiel, British searchers of the Joint Intelligence Objectives
Committee found that cheese was being made – "good quality Hollander and
Tilitser" – by a new method at unheard-of speed. "Eighty minutes from
the renneting to the hooping of the curd," report the investigators. The
cheese industry around the world had never been able to equal that.
Butter
(in a creamery near Hamburg) was being produced by something long
wished for by American butter makers: a continuous butter making
machine. An invention of dairy equipment manufacturers in Stuttgart, it
took up less space than American churns and turned out fifteen hundred
pounds an hour. The machine was promptly shipped to this country to be
tested by the American Butter Institute.
Among
other food innovations was a German way of making yeast in almost
limitless quantities. The waste sulfite liquor from the beechwood used
to manufacture cellulose was treated with an organism known to
bacteriologists as candida arborea at temperatures higher than ever used
in yeast manufacture before. The finished product served as both animal
and human food. Its caloric value is four times that of lean meat, and
it contains twice as much protein.
The
Germans also had developed new methods of preserving food by plastics
and new, advanced refrigeration techniques. Refrigeration and
air-conditioning on German U-boats had become so efficient that the
submarines could travel from Germany to the Pacific, operate there for
two months, and then return to Germany without having to take on fresh
water for the crew. A secret plastics mixture (among its
ingredients were polyvinyl acetate, chalk, and talc) was used to coat
bread and cheese. A loaf fresh from the oven was dipped, dried,
redipped, then heated half an hour at 285 degrees. It would be unspoiled
and good to eat eight months later.
"As for medical secrets in this collection," one Army-surgeon has remarked,
"some of them will save American medicine years of research; some of
them are revolutionary – like, for instance, the German technique for
treatment after prolonged and usually fatal exposure to cold." This
discovery – revealed to us by Major Alexander's search already mentioned
– reversed everything medical science thought about the subject. In
every one of the dread experiments the subjects were most successfully
revived, both temporarily and permanently, by immediate immersion in hot
water. In two cases of complete standstill of heart and cessation of
respiration, a hot bath at 122 degrees brought both subjects back to
life. Before our war with Japan ended, this method was adopted
as the treatment for use by all American Air-Sea Rescue Services, and it
is generally accepted by medicine. today.
German medical researchers had discovered a way to produce synthetic blood plasma.
Called capain, it was made on a commercial scale and equaled natural
plasma in results. Another discovery was periston, a substitute for the
blood liquid. An oxidation production of adrenalin (adrenichrome) was
produced in quantity successfully only by the Nazis and was used with
good results in combating high blood pressure (of which 750,000 persons
die annually in the United States). Today we have the secret of
manufacture and considerable of the supply.
Likewise
of great importance medically were certain researches by Dr. Boris
Rojewsky of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Biophysics at Frankfurt.
These were on the ionization of air as related to health. Positively
ionized air was discovered to have deleterious effects upon human
well-being, and to account for the discomfort and depression felt at
times when the barometer is falling. In many persons, it was found, its
presence brought on asthma, hay fever, and nervous tension. It raised
high blood pressure, sometimes to the danger point. It would bring on
the symptoms common in mountain sickness – labored and rapid breathing,
dizziness, fatigue, sleepiness.
Negatively
ionized air, however, did all the opposite. It was exhilarating,
creating a feeling of high spirits and well-being. Mental depression was
wiped out by it. In pathological cases it steadied breathing,
reduced high blood pressure, was a check on allergies and asthma. The
importance of its presence wherever human beings live, work, or
recuperate from illness may some day make its production one of the
major functions of air conditioning.
IV
But of highest significance for the future were the Nazi secrets in aviation and in various types of missiles.
"The
V-2 rocket, which bombed London," an Army Air Force publication
reports, "was just a toy compared to what the Germans had up their
sleeve."
When
the war ended, we now know, they had 138 types of guided missiles in
various stages of production or development, using every known kind of
remote control and fuse: radio, radar, wire, continuous wave, acoustics,
infra-red, light beams, and magnetics, to name some; and for power, all
methods of jet propulsion for either subsonic or supersonic speeds. Jet
propulsion had even been applied to helicopter flight. The
fuel was piped to combustion chambers at the rotor blade tips, where it
exploded, whirling the blades around like a lawn sprinkler or pinwheel.
As for rocket propulsion, their A-4 rocket, which was just getting into
large scale production when the war ended, was forty-six feet long,
weighed over 24,000 pounds, and traveled 230 miles. It rose sixty miles
above the earth and had a maximum speed of 3,735 miles an hour – three
times that of the earth's rotation at the equator. The secret of its
supersonic speed, we know today, lay in its rocket motor which used
liquid oxygen and alcohol for fuel. It was either radio controlled or
self-guided to its target by gyroscopic means. Since its speed was
supersonic, it could not be heard before it struck.
Another
German rocket which was coming along was the A-9. This was bigger still
– 29,000 pounds – and had wings which gave it a flying range of 3,000
miles. It was manufactured at the famous Peenemunde army experiment
station and achieved the unbelievable speed of 5,870 miles an hour.
A
long range rocket-motored bomber which, the war documents indicate, was
never completed merely because of the war's quick ending, would have
been capable of flight from Germany to New York in forty minutes.
Pilot-guided from a pressurized cabin, it would have flown at an
altitude of 154 miles. Launching was to be by catapult at 500 miles an
hour, and the ship would rise to its maximum altitude in as short a time
as four minutes. There, fuel exhausted, it would glide through the
outer atmosphere, bearing down on its target. With one hundred bombers
of this type the Germans hoped to destroy any city on earth in a few
days' operations.
Little
wonder, then, that today Army Air Force experts declare publicly that
in rocket power and guided missiles the Nazis were ahead of us by at
least ten years.
The
Germans even had devices ready which would take care of pilots forced to
leave supersonic planes in flight. Normally a pilot who stuck his head
out at such speeds would have it shorn off. His parachute on opening
would burst in space. To prevent these calamitous happenings an ejector
seat had been invented which flung the pilot clear instantaneously. His
chute was already burst, that is, made of latticed ribbons which checked
his fall only after the down-drag of his weight began to close its
holes.
A
Nazi variation of the guided air missile was a torpedo for underwater
work which went unerringly to its mark, drawn by the propeller sound of
the victim ship from as far away as ten miles. This missile swam thirty
feet below the water, at forty miles an hour, and left no wake. When
directly under its target, it exploded.
All
such revelations naturally raise the question: was Germany so far
advanced in air, rocket, and missile research that, given a little more
time, she might have won the war? Her war secrets, as now disclosed,
would seem to indicate that possibility. And the Deputy Commanding
General of Army Air Forces Intelligence, Air Technical Service Command,
has told the Society of Aeronautical Engineers within the past few
months:
"The
Germans were preparing rocket surprises for the whole world in general
and England in particular which would have, it is believed, changed the
course of the war if the invasion had been postponed for so short a time
as half a year."
V
For
the release and dissemination of all these one-time secrets the Office
of the Publication Board was established by an order of President Truman
within ten days after Japan surrendered. The order directed that not
only enemy war secrets should be published, but also (with some
exceptions) all American secrets, scientific and technical, of all
government war boards. (The Office of Scientific Research and
Development, the National Research Council, and other such.) And thereby
was created what is being termed now the biggest publishing problem a
government agency ever had to handle.
For
the war secrets, which conventionally used to be counted in scores, will
run to three-quarters of a million separate documentary items
(two-thirds of them on aeronautics) and will require several years and
several hundreds of people to screen and prepare them for wide public
use.
Today
translators and abstracters of the Office of Technical Services,
successor to the OPB, are processing them at the rate of about a
thousand a week. Indexing and cataloguing the part of the collection
which will be permanently kept may require more than two millions cards;
and at Wright Field the task is so complicated that electric punch-card
machine are to be installed. A whole new glossary of German-English
terms has had to be compiled – something like forty thousand words on
new technical and scientific items.
With
so many documents, it has, of course, been impossible because of time
and money limitations to reprint or reproduce more than a very few. To
tell the public what is available, therefore, the OTS issues a
bibliography weekly. This contains the newest war secrets information as
released – with titles, prices of copies currently available or to be
made up, and an abstract of contents.
The
original document, or the microfilm copy, is then generally sent to the
Library of Congress, which is now the greatest depository. To make them
more easily accessible to the public, the Library sends copies, when
enough are available, to about 125 so-called "depository" libraries
throughout the United States.
And
is the public doing anything with these one-time war secrets? It is –
it is eating them up. As many as twenty thousand orders have been filled
in a month, and the order rate is now a thousand items a day.
Scientists and engineers declare that the information is "cutting years
from the time we would devote to problems already scientifically
investigated." And American business men ...! A run through the Publication Board's letters file shows the following;
The
Bendix Company in South Bend, Indiana, writes for a German patent on the
record player changer "with records stacked above the turntable."
Pillsbury Mills wants to have what is available on German flour and
bread production methods. Kendall Manufacturing Company ("Soapine")
wants insect repellent compounds. Pioneer Hi-Bred Corn Company, Iowa,
asks about "interrogation of research workers at the agricultural high
school at Hohenheim." Pacific Mills requests I. G. Farbenindustrie's
water-repellent, crease-resistant finish for spun rayon. The Polaroid
Company would like something on "the status of exploitation of
photography and optics in Germany." (There are, incidentally, ten to
twenty thousand German patents yet to be screened.)
The
most insatiable customer is Amtorg, the Soviet Union's foreign trade
organization. One of its representatives walked into the Publication
Board office with the bibliography in hand and said, "I want copies of
everything." The Russians sent one order in May for $5,594.00 worth –
two thousand separate war secrets reports. In general, they buy every
report issued. Americans, too, think there is extraordinarily good
prospecting in the war secrets lode. Company executives
practically park on the OTS's front doorstep, wanting to be first to get
hold of a particular report on publication. Some information is so
valuable that to get it a single day ahead of a competitor, may be worth
thousands of dollars. But the OTS takes elaborate precautions to be sure that no report is ever available to anyone before general public release.
After
a certain American aircraft company had ordered a particular captured
war document, it was queried as to whether the information therein had
made it or saved it any money. The cost of the report had been a few
dollars. The company answered: "Yea – at least a hundred thousand
dollars."
A
research head of another business firm took notes for three hours in
the OTS offices one day. "Thanks very much," he said, as he stood to go,
"the notes from these documents are worth at least half a million
dollars to my company."
And after seeing the complete report the German synthetic fiber industry, one American manufacturer remarked:
"This report would be worth twenty million dollars to my company if it could have it exclusively."
Of
course you, and anybody else, can now have it, and lots of other once
secret information, for a few dollars. All the war secrets, as released,
are completely in the public domain.
Note: How can the Nazi technology have been so far superior to that of the allies? For the riveting testimony of numerous military officers on the back engineering of UFO technologies, click here.
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