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Originally posted by StellarX
Unless these noted historians can explain HOW Germany took the SU by surprise i am not buying ( at least not at this advanced age) and wont be convinced because many of them say it's so.
Hitler began planning an attack on the Soviet Union in mid-1940 and signed the directive for Operation Barbarossa in December. Stalin, refusing to believe the worst, disregarded copious messages from his intelligence services about an impending aggression. When Germany finally invaded, on June 22, 1941, it came as a tactical surprise and caught the Red Army, already weakened by Stalin’s purges, at a terrible disadvantage.
Originally posted by Long Lance
it does not prove anything, because my available sources are **** therefore most of what they report is either totally exaggerated or downright invented or, even more likely, a combination of both.
what gives, anti grav tech exists, whether the nazis had it or not. technology is probably the most censored and disinfo-ridden field in history.
Originally posted by bothered
But UFO's capable of maintaining suitable flight patterns. No.
The Robertson Panel cited foo fighter reports, noting that their behavior did not appear to be threatening. Interestingly, the Robertson Panel's report noted that many Foo Fighters were described as metallic and disc shaped, and suggested that "If the term "flying saucers" had been popular in 1943-1945, these objects would have been so labeled." [3]
Originally posted by crisko
The book is about the race to Nuclear Weapons during WW2, and the saucer bit is but of a foot note.
The scientists involved with this development were named Schriever Habermohl and Miethe Belluzo and Victor Schauberger. Habermohl was also involved in publishing some papers in 1938 in Germany and elsewhere on the release of energy from heavy water palladium reactors. Nowadays known as "Cold Fusion".
Some say (and I looking for evidence to support this) that Habermohl was Fleschmann's old Physics Lecturer in Vienna. Martin Fleischmann, if you recall, went public with the Cold Fusion theory in 1989.
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Originally posted by bothered
Hitler began planning an attack on the Soviet Union in mid-1940 and signed the directive for Operation Barbarossa in December. Stalin, refusing to believe the worst, disregarded copious messages from his intelligence services about an impending aggression.
When Germany finally invaded, on June 22, 1941, it came as a tactical surprise and caught the Red Army, already weakened by Stalin’s purges, at a terrible disadvantage
Encarta
Something else mentioned, that I had forgotten to include in Hitler's success ratio was the fact that Stalin was starving out the people to inflict terror.
This had a profound affect on the ability to fight. The Wermacht was facing a weakened enemy,
and had it not been for the Russian Winter, they would probably have toppled the SU.
Originally posted by anti72
neo-Nazi groups are using those myths to spread their ideology.