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ScienceDirect - Technol Rep Tohoku Univ ... - Garryck Osborne

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NICK COOK 277<br />

my mind at least, on the question of UFOs. For the time being, it must<br />

remain a loose end.<br />

Regarding the definitive fate of SS General Dr. Hans Kammler, there<br />

are rumors that he died in Virginia—some have it as Texas—but it<br />

amounts to insubstantial testimony and to date there is no hard evidence<br />

to say that he came to the States, let alone died there. The U.S. National<br />

Archives remain devoid of any meaningful files on him.<br />

In April 2001, the CIA provided confirmation of just about everything<br />

Christopher Simpson wrote in Blowback when under Congressional<br />

directive it released 20 files on Nazi war criminals recruited by U.S.<br />

intelligence at the end of the Second World War. One of these was Emil<br />

Augsburg, an S S officer instrumental in drawing up the "Final Solution<br />

to the Jewish Question" at the Wannsee conference in 1941. Another was<br />

Gestapo captain Klaus Barbie, the infamous "Butcher of Lyons."<br />

Yet to be confirmed at official levels, though likely to be just as true, is<br />

the even less salutary story of Gunter Reinemer, an SS lieutenant in<br />

charge of death squads at the Treblinka concentration camp. After the<br />

war, the CIA gave Reinemer a whole new identity—as a Jewish<br />

Holocaust survivor of all people—before dispatching him into East<br />

Germany as a spy. In 1988, a few days before he was found dead,<br />

Reinemer was unmasked by a German financial investigator named<br />

Dieter Matschke. "You have to ask yourself," Matschke was quoted in<br />

the London Times on December 15, 2000, "how many other Reinemers<br />

did America spirit to safety?"<br />

If the U.S. recruitment program did this for Augsburg, Barbie and<br />

Reinemer, it would have bent over backward to accommodate Kammler,<br />

keeper of the Third Reich's most exotic military secrets.<br />

Marckus did not place the article on my desk. I checked.<br />

Since the publication of the U.K. edition of The Hunt for Zero Point, one<br />

other significant postscript to the story is worth mentioning—in time,<br />

the word "momentous" may even be appropriate. On March 26, 2002, a<br />

U.S. patent was granted for a device called the "Motionless Magnetic<br />

Generator," or MEG, that its supporters say will be the world's first<br />

commercially available free-energy home-generator. The MEG has been<br />

developed by a team of inventors led by long-time zero point energy<br />

pioneer and proponent Dr. Thomas E. Bearden, a retired U.S. Army<br />

lieutenant colonel and former nuclear engineer. The MEG is designed to<br />

provide an indefinite output of 2.5 kilowatts—enough to run a room or<br />

two in your house—by tapping into the infinite energy of the quantum<br />

sea. Link three or four MEGs together, proponents claim, and you get

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