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DOUGLAS DIETRICH ON THE HIDDEN SIDE OF HISTORY DOUGLAS DIETRICH SIDE THE HIDDEN HISTORY A former US Department of Defense military librarian exposes secrets of World War II and beyond, including the Third Reich’s relocation to its Antarctic base and failed British and American attempts to destroy it. Part 2 The Truth about the Little Boy Bomb Douglas Dietrich (DD): When Harry S. Truman took over, his first act as President was to recall the aviator Charles Lindbergh from the Pacific immediately and send him to Europe. Charles Augustus Lindbergh spoke German, and had been awarded a very-high-level civilian medal by Adolf Hitler for his sympathy with Germany before and during World War II. lruman sent Lindbergh to Europe to deal with as many Nazi scientists and echnicians as he could, to bring back the atomic bomb from the Germans. Thomas Kirschner (TK): Oh, he sent him over as a spy, so to speak? DD: No; as what they would call a "goodwill ambassador". During the ime before Roosevelt died, his insane proclamation of unconditiona surrender said: "We declare that the Emperor Hirohito and the Nazi government are war criminals. These are people whom we will not contend with. We will not deal with them in any way, shape or form. We simply wan hem dead." That is the result of Roosevelt's saying that the war could never end. That is why Eisenhower, in the field, was so desperate that he actually brought in a musician—Glenn Miller, who spoke German and was famous in Germany—to conduct peace negotiations secretly with the Third Reich. Tha is how desperate the Americans were. Since they couldn't communicate with the Third Reich government, all they could do was to take ceasefires in the field. Even the entire end of the war was signed by General Alfred Jod and Grand Admiral Karl Dénitz as a surrender of military forces, a ceasefire. TK: A surrender of the Allied forces to the Germans? DD: Well, no. The German forces in the field surrendered to the Allies, but the government was not spoken to and was simply allowed to leave. The people who were in the dock at the Nuremberg Trials were all military men. Even Albert Speer was considered military because he was in charge of military production. TK: So, to where did the government leave? DD: The government reasserted itself in many, many places: mainly in Argentina, but also in Antarctica and eventually in Unterland. But just to inish off with Charles Lindbergh, the Little Boy bomb was never tested by he Americans. Remember Trinity: it was the test of the Fat Man-type bomb, he plutonium bomb. The Americans had plutonium, but the Germans and he Japanese had no plutonium. What they had was uranium, so all the German and Japanese bombs had a standardised Axis shell meant to fit into he fuselage of a medium-range bomber. That was a uranium bomb that the Americans called Little Boy. By producing a number of these, the Germans and Japanese could threaten the Americans with medium-range delivery—a medium-range interballistic missile delivery system, or a rocket system aunched from a U-boat or, in the Japanese case, by a kamikaze plane. Because of this, they were able to force multiple concessions from the Americans. A former US Department of Defense military librarian exposes secrets of World War II and beyond, including the Third Reich’s relocation to its Antarctic base and failed British and American attempts to destroy it. An Interview with Douglas Dietrich © 29 April 2012 by Thomas Kirschner Publisher of the German edition of NEXUS Magazine Website: http:/Awww.douglasdietrich.com An Interview with Douglas Dietrich © 29 April 2012 by Thomas Kirschner Publisher of the German edition of NEXUS Magazine Website: http:/Awww.douglasdietrich.com NEXUS ¢ 15 AUGUST - SEPTEMBER 2012 www.nexusmagazine.com