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zaterdag 3 november 2007

De vermiste nukes: hoogverraad op het hoogste niveau

Volgens verschillende media zijn een aantal "nukes" 36 uur verdwenen geweest na opstijgen vanaf U.S.A.F Base Minot in North Dakota naar U.S.A.F. Base Barksdale in Louisiana. Het zou om W80-1 nuclear warheads scherp op AGM-129 Advanced Cruise Missiles (ACMs) gaan. Het verhaal werd gelekt in de Military Times door militair personeel.

Dit verslag is het meest complete over de zaak geschreven. Inclusief een kijk naar de militaire procedures en de vreemde serie ongevallen van personeel na het overbrengen van de wapens van de ene basis naar de andere.


Donkerdoorn op Zaplog


If a soldier, marine, airman, or sailor were even to be issued a rifle and rifle magazine — weaponry of a far lesser significance, danger, and cost — there is a strict signing and accountability process that involves a chain of command and paperwork. This is part of the set of military checks and balances used by all the services within the U.S. Armed Forces.

Military servicemen qualified to speak on the subject will confirm that there is a stringent nuclear weapons handling procedure. There is a rigorous, almost inflexible, chain of command in regards to the handling of nuclear weapons and not just any soldier, sailor, airman, or marine is allowed to handle nuclear weapons. Only servicemen specialized in specific handling and loading procedures, are perm certified to handle, access and load nuclear warheads.

Every service personnel that moves or even touches these weapons must sign a tracking paper and has total accountability for their movement. There is good reason for the paperwork behind moving these weapons. The military officers that order the movement of nuclear weapons, including base commanders, must also fill out paper forms.

In other words, unauthorized removal of nuclear weapons would be virtually impossible to accomplish unless the chain of command were bypassed, involving, in this case, the deliberate tampering of the paperwork and tracking procedures.

The strategic bombers that carried the nuclear weapons also could not fly with their loaded nuclear weaponry without the authorization of senior military officials and the base commander. The go-ahead authorization of senior military officials must be transmitted to the servicemen that upload the nuclear weapons. Without this authorization no flights can take place.


Full story: Global Research


See also

"Kernbommen boven de VS: false flag voorkomen?"

"The Air Force Cover Up of that Minot-Barksdale Nuclear Missile Flight"




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