Re: Donald R. Burleson’s September “Vision” article on Nazi UFOs.
Burleson basically argues that the Nazis – and humans – were too stupid to invent the UFO.
History argues otherwise. What did Dr. Burleson base his knowledge of this topic on? He says in the article
he had “recently seen excerpts” from one book! (But not even any of the below.)
Amazing that local “damage control” has already begun on this website before it was even finished!
Notable quotes from RoswellUFOcrash.com “As Sir Roy Feddon, Chief of the Technical Mission to Germany for the Ministry of Aircraft Production stated in 1945… “I have seen enough of their designs and production plans to realize that if they (the Germans) had managed to prolong the war some months longer, we would have been confronted with a set of entirely new and deadly developments in air warfare.” … That these events occurred is also supported by former CIA agent Virgil Armstrong who commented “We know that in the early parts of the war there were certain factions of the Allied forces that did not believe he (Hitler) had a secret weapon and it wasn’t until the Americans made much emphasis of this that they began to look at it seriously and indeed did discover that Hitler not only had a secret weapon, he had what we would call today a UFO or spacecraft.” “In retrospect, Americans should have correlated the WW II and post-war sightings of flying spheres, saucers, and cylinders to the wondrous technology of National Socialist Germany. It is an understatement to say that our government has deliberately misled us on the UFO question.” So cutting to the chase, Operation Paperclip was a formerly classified 1) In 1940-45 Nazi scientists were aggressively developing amazing flying machines… 2) In 1946-47 The U.S. moved them to Texas and White Sands Proving Grounds, New Mexico… 3) In 1947 an unidentified flying object crashes in the New Mexico desert, and the military enforces the greatest cover-up of any event ever discovered by the general public… |
Burleson also proposes in his article that a “sighting of a fast, high-flying silver disk over the Himalayas in 1926 (was) far too early to be carried out by humans anywhere on this planet.” But consider this, written by a former Air Force intelligence officer:
“Nikola Tesla’s Invention of an “electric flying machine” which was later called the “flying saucer” or “UFO,” is documentable back to the early part of this century, while his conception of it goes back to the 1870’s during his student days… |