Monday 29 August 2011

PROJECT SEAL: TSUNAMI BOMB DEVELOPED AS FAR BACK AS 1944

 

The American military has been playing around with weather and disasters much longer than most people are aware of. HAARP is, simply put, a highly sophisticated outgrowth of just plain blowing things up. SEAL style.

In 58-year-old documents stamped 'Top Secret', which were declassified by the New Zealand government and publicized in the New Zealand Herald on June 30, 2000, the World War II-era Pentagon is seen enthusiastically pursuing the creation of a 'tsunami-bomb' whose potential use 'could play a role in war as important' as that of the two atomic bombs detonated over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan.

The tsunami-bomb project was named Project Seal, and involved numerous New Zealander, British, Australian, and United States government and private scientists. Small-scale versions of the tsunami-bomb were tested off the coast of Auckland, New Zealand in 1944 and 1945.

Much more to come on this.

TSUNAMI BOMB DEVELOPED AS FAR BACK AS 1944

Reposted January 2005
Reposted August 29, 2011

Top secret wartime experiments were conducted off the New Zealand coast to perfect a tidal wave bomb believed to be potentially as effective as the atom bomb, a report said yesterday citing declassified files.

Auckland University professor Thomas Leech set off a series of underwater explosions triggering mini-tidal waves at Whangaparaoa, just north of Auckland, in 1944 and 1945, the New Zealand Herald reported.
His work was considered so significant that US defense chiefs said if the project had been completed before the end of the war it could have played a role as effective as that of the atom bomb.
Details of the tsunami bomb, known as Project Seal, are contained in 53-year-old documents released by the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Papers stamped "top secret" show the US and British military were eager for Seal to be developed in the post-war years too. They even considered sending Leech to Bikini Atoll to view the US nuclear tests and see if they had any application to his work.

He did not make the visit, although a member of the US board of assessors of atomic tests, Dr. Karl Compton, was sent to New Zealand.

"Dr. Compton is impressed with Professor Leech's deductions on the Seal project and is prepared to recommend to the Joint Chiefs of Staff that all technical data from the test relevant to the Seal project should be made available to the New Zealand Government for further study by Professor Leech," said a July 1946 letter from Washington to Wellington.

Leech, who died in his native Australia in 1973, was the university's dean of engineering from 1940 until 1950.

News of his being awarded a CBE in 1947 for research on a weapon led to speculation in newspapers around the world about what was being developed.

Though high-ranking New Zealand and US officers spoke out in support of the research, no details of it were released because the work was on-going.

A former colleague of Leech, Neil Kirton, told the New Zealand Herald that the experiments involved laying a pattern of explosives underwater to create a tsunami.

Small-scale explosions were carried out in the Pacific and off Whangaparaoa, which at the time was controlled by the army.

It is unclear what happened to Project Seal once the final report was forwarded to Wellington Defense Headquarters late in the 1940s.

The bomb was never tested full scale, and Kirton doubts the public would have noticed the trials.

"Whether it could ever be resurrected ... Under some circumstances I think it could be devastating," he said.

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