Did the US Air Force attempt to nuke the moon?
It’s official – the US Air Force had a plan to nuke the moon. According
to a declassified report obtained by CNN in a story that aired on
November 28, the Air Force plan involved sending a nuclear missile that
would detonate on impact with the lunar surface. The aim was apparently
to respond to Soviet success in launching Sputnik I, and showing that
the US had a capacity to send rockets to, and eventually from the moon.
The project was titled "A Study of Lunar Research Flights” (aka "Project
A-119”) and was planned in 1958. According to the declassified report,
the plan was never implemented, and was abandoned one year later due to
concerns over the effect of nuclear radiation on the moon, and a public
backlash. According to one senior US Air Force officer, however, not
only was an attempt made to detonate a nuclear bomb on the moon decades
later, but there was an external intervention to destroy the missile.
CNN was able to track down and interview the physicist who led Project A-119. Leonard Reiffel told CNN:
People were worried very much by (first human in space Soviet cosmonaut
Yuri) Gagarin and Sputnik and the very great accomplishments of the
Soviet Union in those days, and in comparison, the United States was
feared to be looking puny. So this was a concept to sort of reassure
people that the United States could maintain a mutually-assured
deterrence, and therefore avoid any huge conflagration on the Earth,"
“The basic plan,” according to Reiffel, “was for an intercontinental
ballistic missile to be launched from an undisclosed location, travel
some 240,000 miles to the moon, and detonate on impact.” Information
from the impact, according to Report, would yield information
“concerning the capability of nuclear weapons for space warfare.” Reiffel explained:
The thinking … was that if the Soviets hit the United States with
nuclear weapons first and wiped out the U.S. ability to strike back, the
U.S. could launch warheads from the moon.
Reiffel claims that Project A-119 was quickly abandoned because:
We didn't want to clutter up the natural radioactivities of the moon
with additional bits of radioactivity from the Earth,.. Project planners
also weren't sure of the reliability of the weapons, and feared the
public backlash in the U.S. would be significant.
Colonel Ross Dedrickson explained his background in nuclear weapons security in an interview with Dr Steven Greer of the Disclosure Project:
I was a staff officer for the military liaison committee between the
chairman of the AEC [Atomic Energy Commission] and the Secretary of
Defense…. During that period of time [early 1950s] one of my functions
was to accompany a security team which visited all of the nuclear
facilities to check on the security of weapons…. I was assigned to the
Unified Command under Admiral Felt during the ‘60s. I was the officer in
charge of the Alternate command post involved with nuclear weapons
operation planning. During that period of time, I maintained contacts
with NORAD, with the SAC operations, and was involved with operational
plans for the use of nuclear weapons.
Colonel Dedrickson then explained:
I finally retired from the Air Force and joined the Boeing Company
where I was assigned to the Minute Man program where I was responsible
for the accounting of all the nuclear fleet, the Minute Man One, Two,
and Three. And during that period of time, I also learned about
incidents involving nuclear weapons. And among these incidents were
those where a couple of nuclear weapons that were sent into space were
destroyed …
Dedrickson claims that one of these nuclear weapons fired into space was aimed at the moon:
It was my understanding that in either the very end of the ‘70s or the
early ‘80s that we attempted to put a nuclear weapon on the Moon and
explode it for scientific measurements and other things…
Who was it that destroyed the nuclear missile aimed at the moon, and
interfered with other nuclear weapons tests by the USA? According to
Dedrickson, the missiles were destroyed by UFOs that he believed were
manned by an extraterrestrial intelligence. Dedrickson’s remarkable
claims are backed by other retired USAF officials that state that US and Soviet nuclear missiles were regularly interfered with by UFOs since the dawn of the nuclear era.
In conclusion, we know that the USAF did officially conceive a plan in
1958 to launch and detonate a nuclear missile on the moon. Apparently,
"Project A-119” was abandoned one year later. If Colonel Dedrickson is
accurate, however, then Project A-119 was either resurrected decades
later or a new project was conceived with a similar goal. The timing of
the later project, in the late 1970s/early 1980s, suggests the nuclear
missile attempt may have been related to circumstances surrounding the
end of the Apollo lunar missions. According to some whistleblowers the
USA was not “allowed” to return to the moon by an extraterrestrial
intelligence based on the moon. It appears that there was indeed an
attempt to send a nuclear missile to the moon by the USAF, and that it
was destroyed by some external agency – UFOs and/or extraterrestrial
intelligence – closely monitoring nuclear weapons testing on Earth,
outer space and the moon.

0 comments:
Post a Comment
Leave a comment!