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HAUNEBU

(H-GERT, HAUNEBURG DEVICE)


(1939-1945)
By Rob Arndt
The SS E-IV (Entwicklungsstelle 4), a
development unit of the SS occult Order of the
Black Sun was tasked with researching
alternative energies to make the Third Reich
independent of scarce fuel oil for war production.
Their work included developing alternative
energies and fuel sources through coal
gasification, research into grain alcohol fuels, less
complicated coal burning engines for vehicles and
generators, as well as highly advanced liquid
oxygen turbines, total reaction turbines, AIP (Air
Independent Propulsion) motors and even EMG
(Electro-Magnetic-Gravitic) engines.

This group developed by 1939 a revolutionary electro-magnetic-gravitic engine which improved Hans Colers free energy machine
into an energy Konverter coupled to a Van De Graaf band generator and Marconi vortex dynamo (a spherical tank of mercury) to
create powerful rotating electromagnetic fields that affected gravity and reduced mass. It was designated the Thule Triebwerk
(Thrustwork, a.ka. Tachyonator-7 drive) and was to be installed into a Thule designed disc.
Since 1935 Thule had been scouting for a remote, inconspicuous, underdeveloped testing ground for such a craft. Thule found a
location in Northwest Germany that was known as (or possibly designated as) Hauneburg. At the establishment of this testing
ground and facilities the SS E-IV unit simply referred to the new Thule disc as a product - the "H-Gert" (Hauneburg Device).
For wartime security reasons the name was shortened to Haunebu in 1939 and briefly designated RFZ-5 along with Vrils machines.
At a much later time in the war as production of these craft was to commence the Hauneburg site was abandoned in favor of the

more suitable Vril Arado Brandenburg aircraft testing grounds. Although designated as part of the RFZ series the Haunebu disc was
actually a separate Thule product constructed with the help of the SS E-IV unit while the RFZ series were primarily built at Arado
Brandenburg under Vril direction up to the RFZ-4 disc.

The early Haunebu I craft of which two prototypes were constructed were 25 meters in diameter, had a crew of eight and could
achieve the incredible initial velocity of 4,800 km/h, but at low altitude. Further enhancement enabled the machine to reach 17,000
km/h! Flight endurance was 18 hours. To resist the incredible temperatures of these velocities a special armor called Victalen was
pioneered by SS metallurgists specifically for both the Haunebu and Vril series of disc craft. The Haunebu I had a double hull of
Victalen. The early models also attempted to test out a rather large experimental gun installation - the twin 60mm

KraftStrahlKanone (KSK) which operated off the Triebwerk for power. It has been suggested that the ray from this weapon made
it a laser, but it was not.

Donar (Thunder) KraftStrahlKanone


Contray to popular reports the KSK (Kraftstrahlkanone) was NOT a crude laser weapon able to penetrate 100mm of
armor. It was a crude phaser (PHASed Energy Rectifier) that ran off the Thule Triebwerk - as such, the Haunebu and Vril
craft had to hover and divert high voltage energy from the EMG engines to ball cascade oscillators that flowed down to
two charged barrels wrapped in precision tungsten spirals capable of absorbing a lot of heat. The power could be changed
so it was a phaser weapon.

On the Haunebu I the upside down looking tank turret is not - close ups show piping running into two elongated 60mm
guns that had shrouds over them.
The escape hatch is present because the gunner sat apart in the turret, but this matches NO German tank turret at all,
not even the Kugelblitz which wasn't around in 1939 anyway. But because the KSK guns caused both vulnerability and
instability, they were dropped in favor of MK installations in the Vril 7 Geist and Vril 8 Odin which had an operating
Oberon automated system above the control tower.

Click on Pic

The MK 108 30mm blowback autocannon was mounted in subsequent versions of Haunebu and Vril disks. It had been manufactured in Germany
during the war by Rheinmetall-Borsig for use in aircraft. The cannon measured 1057 mm length and weighted 58 kg. Its rate of fire was of 650
rounds per minute with a muzzle velocity of 540 m/s. Because of its slow muzzle velocity the cannon was difficult to aim and its range too short.
However it proved to be very effective, reliable and easy to manufacture.

Colorized photo of Donar twin 60 mm KraftStrahlKanone (KSK) mounted under the Haunebu I.

Illustration of German disc phaser weapon with Tungsten transmission coil and ball-cascade oscillators running off Triebwerk

Tungsten transmission coil of German phaser weapon

Part of ball cascade oscillator system for German phaser weapon

Microscopic analysis of tungsten transmission coil

Microscopic analysis of tungsten transmission coil tip

Another version of the Ray Gun

When a Vril 7 was downed by the Russians in 1945 a similar underbelly mounted KSK gun was destroyed with debris recovered from
the battle site. Postwar the strange metal balls and tungsten spirals that made up the weapon could not be identified. But recently it
has been speculated that the Triebwerk-connected balls formed cascade oscillators that were connected to a long barrel-shrouded
transmission rod wrapped in a precision tungsten spiral, or coil to transmit a powerful energy burst suitable to pierce up to 4 of
enemy armor! The heavy gun installation, however, badly destabilized the disc and in subsequent Haunebu models lighter MG and
MK cannon were supposedly installed (although it is not apparent from any photographic source, being an internal installation of six
MK-108s in an upper and lower triple gun pack). The Haunebu I first flew in 1939 and both prototypes made 52 test flights.

In 1942, the enlarged Haunebu II of 26 meters diameter was ready for flight testing. This disc had a crew of nine and could also
achieve supersonic flight of between 6,000-21,000 km/h with a flight endurance of 55 hours. Both it and the further developed 32
meter diameter Do-Stra had heat shielding of two hulls of Victalen. Seven of these craft were constructed and tested between 194344. The craft made 106 test flights.

By 1944, the perfected war model, the Haunebu II Do-Stra (Dornier STRAtosphren Flugzeug) was tested. Two
prototypes were built. These massive machines, several stories tall, were crewed by 20 men. They were also capable of
hypersonic speed beyond 21,000 km/h. The SS had intended to produce the machines with tenders for both Junkers and
Dornier but in late 1944/early 1945 Dornier was chosen. The close of the war, however, prevented Dornier from building
any production models.Yet larger still was the 71 meter diameter Haunebu III. A lone prototype was constructed before
the close of the war. It was crewed by 32 and could achieve speeds of between 7,000 - 40,000 km/h! It had a triple
Victalen hull. It is said to have had a flight endurance of between 7-8 weeks! The craft made 19 test flights. This craft
was to be used for evacuation work for Thule and Vril in March 1945. Named Ostara, after the old Germanic goddess of
the East, dawn, rebirth, and resurrection, the overloaded Haunebu III may have been boostered by a cluster of A-9/A-10
rockets to get it into the air with SS General Hans Kammler onboard.
1945: Flight of the Ostara-Nazi Flying Saucer?

1945: Flight of the Ostara-Nazi Flying Saucer?


On the grey morning of January 8, 1945, a flock of reporters, pencils and notepads at the ready, hovered around Admiral
Jonas Ingram, commander of the Eastern Sea Frontier, in his wardroom aboard a warship in New York harbour. The
scribes had come for what Ingram's public-relations staff had promised would be 'a historic press conference.'
Ingram, a heavyset, flat-nosed old salt who had gained national recognition as football coach at the (U.S.) Naval
Academy (in Annapolis, Maryland), was one of the Navy's colourful characters--and most outspoken. Seated behind a
long table, Ingram said:
Gentlemen, I have reason to assume that the Nazis are getting ready to launch a strategic attack on New York and
Washington by robot bombs.
There was a gasp of astonishment from the reporters.
I am here to tell you that these attacks are not only possible, but probable as well, and that the (USA's)East Coast is
likely to be buzz-bombed within the next thirty or sixty days.

Ingram eyed his listeners, then added grimly:


But we're ready for them. The thing to do is not to get excited about it.(The buzz-bombs) might knock out a high building
or two, might create a fire hazard, and most certainly would cause casualties. But (the buzz-bombs) cannot seriously
affect the progress of the war.'
The hard-nosed Ingram added that 'it may be only ten or twelve buzz-bombs, but they may come before we can stop
them.'"
'At any rate,' the admiral concluded, 'I'm springing the cat from the bag to let the Huns know that we are ready for
them!'.
Coach Ingram's announcement triggered a media sensation.
The following day, January 9, 1945, the New York Times ran the story with the headline
ROBOT BOMB ATTACKS HERE HELD POSSIBLE
But the war in Europe ended on May 8, 1945, and no Nazi rocket came plummeting out of orbit to crash in Manhattan.
Was Coach Ingram given to flights of fancy?
Not at all.
Allied intelligence knew that the Germans were working on a "New York Rocket." At least twenty of these large rockets
were built at the SS underground base at Nordhausen. What happened to them is one of the enduring mysteries of World
War II.
In his 1952 book, V2--Der Schuss ins Weltall, Major General Walter Dornberger, commander of the Peenemnde Rocket Research
Institute, described the "New York Rocket" in detail.
He wrote:
Thus the A-9 came into being...the missile was planned to reach at a height of about 20 kilometres (12 miles), a

maximum speed of 4,400 kilometres per hour (2,800 miles per hour) and then go into a shallow curving glide with a
peak of nearly 30 kilometres (18 miles).
On arrival over the target at a height of 5 kilometres (3 miles), it was planned to dive vertically, like the" V-1, a primitive
rocket-powered cruise missile, best known in World War II as "the buzz bomb."
A better plan, however, and one which greatly improved range, was to construct the A-10, weighing 87 tons and with a
total propellant capacity of 62 tons, as the first step of the combined A-9/A-10.
The A-9 was placed on top of the A-10.
The latter had a thrust of 200 tons for 50 to 60 seconds and gave the rocket a speed of 4,400 kilometres per hour.
After the exhaustion of the first step (stage or A-10), the A-9 would be ignited and lift out of the A-10.
Once we reached this stage (in the blueprints), the horses fairly bolted with us. "With our big rocket motors and step
(multi-stage) rockets, we could build space ships which would circle the earth like moons at a height of 500 kilometres
(300 miles) and at speeds of 30,000 kilometres per hour (18,000 miles per hour).
Space stations and glass spheres containing the embalmed bodies of the pioneers of rocket development and space
travel could be put into permanent orbits around the earth.
An expedition to the moon was a popular topic, too.
Then we dreamed of atomic energy, which would at last give us the necessary drive for flight into the infinity of space, to
the very stars.
Amazingly, the gang at Peenemnde drew up these blueprints during 1942 and 1943. In his book, Gen. Dornberger, a
child of the Nineteenth Century, admits to being a little "disconcerted" by these off-duty bull sessions, in which Wernher
von Braun, Willy Ley, Klaus Reidel and even Hitler's favourite aviatrix, Hannah Reitsch, "chatted with such easy familiarity
about outer space, the moon, the planets and what forms extraterrestrial life might take."
The question remains: did the A-9/A-10 combo ever make it into space?
There are a handful of clues that it did.

In 1968, Ballantine published a photo on the back cover of their paperback book on German secret weapons of World War
II.
It shows a swept-winged A-9 on top of a cluster of rocket boosters. Flames pour out of five nozzles on the array. It has
the hazy appearance of being shot with a long telephoto lens.
This photo is similar to the Soviet rockets then being launched from Baikonur. Unfortunately, with nothing in the photo's
background to offer a size comparison, there is no telling whether the "customized" Nazi rocket is full-sized or merely a
much smaller test model.

On the other hand, on November 19, 1954, Georg Klein, a former scientist at Peenemnde then living in exile in Zrich,

said he had worked on a Flugscheibe (flying disc) project at Peenemnde in 1942. The Nazi saucers were built by a team
of three scientists -- Schriever, Miethe and Bellonzo -- and the vehicle was given the code name V-7.
On October 10, 1952, the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet reported that a space rocket had been launched from an SS
facility near Prague (now the capital of the Czech Republic) in February 1945. The vehicle sounds suspiciously like an A9/A-10. And the launch came about a month after Admiral Ingram's press conference in New York City.
During the summer of 1943, the Peenemnde research centre was seized by Reichsfhrer-SS Heinrich Himmler. German
rocketry became a wholly-owned subsidiary of the SS. During a trip to Berlin on September 6, 1943, Gen. Dornberger
met his new boss, 42-year-old SS-Brigadefhrer Hans Kammler.
Dornberger wrote:
He had the slim figure of a cavalryman, neither tall nor short. In his early forties, broad-shouldered and narrow in the
hips, with bronzed, clear-cut features, and a high forehead under dark hair slightly streaked with grey and brushed
straight back. Dr. Kammler had piercing and restless brown eyes, a lean curved beak of a nose, and a strong mouth, the
underlip thrust forward as though in defiance. That mouth indicated brutality, derision, disdain and overweening pride.
The chin was well-moulded and prominent.
One's first impression was of a virile, handsome and captivating personality. He looked like some hero of the
Renaissance, a condotierre of the period of the civil wars in northern Italy.
Kammler was Himmler's most trusted aide. He had a reputation of being the man who could get things done. In 1942, for
example, Kammler, an architect by trade, had personally designed and supervised the construction of the giant
Vernichtungslager (destruction camp) called Auschwitz II, with its capacity for 200,000 prisoners, at Birkenau in southern
Poland.
Now Himmler had new work for him. The Reichsfhrer-SS wanted an underground factory "completely impervious to
Allied bombs" that would build all of the contraptions in the Peenemnde gang's "blue sky" blueprints. It is not known if
Hitler approved of this or not--it's part of what Colonel-General Erich von Manstein once called "the hermetically-sealed
SS-Reich--but Himmler was determined to build a workable spacecraft.
Himmler "urged Pohl to build factories for the production of war materials in natural caves and underground tunnels
immune to enemy bombing and instructed him to hollow out workshop and factory space in all SS stone quarries,
suggesting that by the summer of 1944 they should have the 'new cavemen' installed in the greatest number of 'uniquely

bomb-proof work sites'...


Brigadefhrer Hans Kammler succeeded in creating underground workshops and living quarters from a cave system in
the Hartz mountains in central Germany in what (Albert) Speer, writing to congratulate him, called 'an almost impossibly
short period of two months' a feat, he continued, 'unsurpassable even by American standards.'"
With Kammler at the helm, production of V-1 and V-2 weapons went into high gear. In his book V-1, V-2: Hitler's
Vengeance on London, David Johnson noted that
During the (V-1) Flying Bomb assault, from mid-June to early September 1944, 2,419 of the pilotless aircraft crash-dived
into London. Rail and transportation networks were seriously disrupted. War production fell off.
Between 8th September 1944 and 27th March 1945, 517 V-2 rockets struck London, with another 378 falling short of
their target and impacting in Essex. Throughout southern England, a grand total of 1,054 came down. In London alone
over 2,700 civilians were dead from the rockets.
On March 27, 1945, the last V-2 to hit Britain came down on Orpington, Kent, about 20 miles (32 kilometres) south-east
of London."
On the night of 17 December (1944) a V-2 crashed into the Rex cinema in Antwerp (Belgium) during a crowded show.
When Hitler was informed that 1,100 people, including 700 (Allied) soldiers had been killed, by a characteristic irony he
was reluctant to credit the report. 'That would finally be the first successful launch,' he observed sarcastically, 'But it is so
fairytale that my scepticism keeps me from believing it. Who is the informer? Is he paid by the launch crew?'
But if Hitler had little faith in the V-2, the same cannot be said of Himmler and Kammler. Himmler gave his aide
everything he needed to keep the rocket program going.
Kammler still believed that he alone, with his Army Corps and the weapons over which he had absolute authority, could
prevent the imminent collapse, postpone a decision and even turn the scales. The (V-2) transports still moved without
respite to the operational area" in the Netherlands, Dornberger wrote. "Convoys of motor vehicles bridged the gaps in the
railways. Kammler's supply columns, equipped with infrared devices that enabled them to see in the dark, rumbled along
the Dutch highways.
Himmler's interest in space flight grew out of his personal commitment to the occult. When he had been appointed leader
of the Schutzstaffel (Protection Squad) in 1929, the group had been a small unit within the larger Sturmabteilung or
Brownshirt militia, a kind of Secret Service devoted to the protection of Hitler and the Nazi leadership. By 1945, however,

Himmler had transformed the SS into "a state within a state." Under his direction, the SS had become the Schwarze
Sonne (Black Sun) , an order of mystics that numbered in the low millions.
In his book Hitler's Flying Saucers, author Henry Stevens pointed out:
The Black Sun to these initiated individuals was a physical body like our visible sun except that the Black Sun was not
visible to the naked eye...The Black Sun is sometimes represented symbolically as a black sphere out of which eight arms
extend. Such is its most famous rendition on the mosaic floor at Wewelsburg Castle which served as the spiritual home of
the SS.
Himmler's scientists were influenced by some ideas originating in Asia. Tibet and India are the suspects in question. UFOs
have been reported over Mongolia, Tibet and India for centuries. The ancient Indians even claimed to have constructed
aircraft which resembled flying saucers. These saucers are called Vimanas.

Since his days in the mystical group Artamen in the early 1920s, Himmler had been fascinated with the scriptures of
ancient India. As a reader of the Rig-Veda and the Mahabharata, he would have been familiar with the tales of rishis
(Hindu wizards) visiting other worlds in outer space. So perhaps it's no surprise that he sent the German SS-Ahnenerbe,
an organization whose purpose was associated with researching German ancestry, out (on) expeditions to the East with
the express purpose of acquiring ancient, hidden knowledge.
Kammler transferred Gen. Dornberger and Wernher von Braun into the Wasserfall anti-aircraft rocket program in late
1944. Meanwhile, work continued on the Schriever-Miethe V-7 flying disc. With help from another mystical group, the
Thule Gesellschaft, the project developed a craft called the Haunebu-1. This saucer "had a 25-meter diameter, a speed of
4,800 kilometers per hour (3,000 miles per hour) and carried a crew of nine men."
In November 1943, a second saucer, the Haunebu-2, was built, slightly larger and could travel 6,000 kilometres per hour
(3,600 miles per hour) for fifty-five hours.
A year later, in early December 1944, Gruppe Kammler unveiled its showpiece, the Haunebu-3, which "had a diameter of
71 meters (234 feet), and could reach a speed of 40,000 kilometers per hour (25,000 miles per hour)" and remain in
space "for up to eight weeks, carrying a crew of 32 men.
Unaware of the progress of the Schriever-Miethe team, Gen. Dornberger proposed to suspend work on the A-9/A-10
"New York Rocket." The order was immediately countermanded. "But now, at the end of 1944, Kammler demanded its
resumption," the general wrote, "I had no idea why.
In retrospect, it appears that either Himmler or Kammler--it is not at all clear who--planned to use the A-9/A-10 as a
booster to get the Haunebu-3, now referred to as the Ostara (ancient German goddess of the dawn), into orbit rather
than have the big saucer make the trip under its own power.
On January 8, 1945, the first version of the A-9...took off. The control failed about 30 meters (100 feet) above the firing
table (launch pad), Dornberger wrote, "A few days later, we were unable to launch another missile because the alcohol
tank had developed a leak. At last, on January 24 (1945), we had our first success. The rocket, climbing vertically,
reached a peak height of nearly 80 kilometres (50 miles) at a maximum speed of 4,300 kilometres per hour (2,700 miles
per hour)." (This may have been the rocket in the wartime photo that appeared on the back cover of Ballantine's book.)
All that needed to be done now was to strap two or three A-9/A-10 boosters together, with the Ostara as payload, and
launch from Himmler's new SS base near Prague.

The same day the A-9/A-10 had its successful launch, January 24, 1945, Soviet troops of Marshal Ivan Konev's First
Ukrainian Front (army group) entered Auschwitz. Russian soldiers saw for themselves the results of Kammler's earlier
"big project."
"On April 3, 1945, I had orders from Kammler to evacuate my staff of four hundred and fifty old Peenemnde hands to
the Lower Alps near Oberammergau. We moved on April 6, as the American tanks advanced through Bleicherode toward
Bad Sachsa," Dornberger wrote, "I parted from Kammler and spent the last month of the war at Oberjoch near Hindelang
with my staff and Professor von Braun, who had been injured in an automobile accident."
So, on April 7, 1945, Hans Kammler, the architect of Auschwitz-Birkenau, pulled a disappearing act worthy of Houdini.
"There are five different versions of his death," Henry Stevens wrote, "And they all read like pulp fiction."
Did Kammler head for outer space aboard the Ostara? Or did he leave on an even larger spacecraft, the Andromeda?
Only one person knows the answer to that question, and he committed suicide with a cyanide pill on May 23, 1945 -Heinrich Himmler.
But if anybody had a really, really pressing need to leave Earth in April 1945 it was SS-Brigadefhrer Hans Kammler.

See the books:


V2--Der Schuss ins Weltall by Walter Dornberger, Bechtle Vertag, Esslingen, Germany, 1952
Hitler's Undercover War by William Breuer, St. Martin's Press, New York, N.Y., 1989
V-1,V-2, Hitler's Vengeance on London by David Johnson, Stein & Day Publishers, Briarcliff Manor, N.Y.,1981
Flying Saucers Uncensored by Harold T. Wilkins, The Citadel Press, New York, N.Y., 1955
Himmler by Peter Padfield, MJF Books, New York, N.Y., 1990
Armageddon: The Battle for Germany 1944-1945 by Max Hastings, Alfred A. Knopf, 2004

Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, New York University
Press, New York, N.Y.
Hitler's Flying Saucers by Henry Stevens, Adventures Unlimited Press, Kempton, Illinois, 2003

Subsequent postwar claims that this craft was ultimately used for a suicide mission to Mars is completely unfounded;
even with onboard SS oxygen generators and modified Draeger Werke pressure suits there is no way this machine could
withstand an eight month journey to Mars. What would be the purpose anyway? The Gesellschaften were aiming at
channeled flight not conventional space flight.

Illustrations of Haunebu III on the ground and in the air in 1945

Further plans for a 120 meter diameter Haunebu IV were in the works but no such craft is known to have been constructed before
the end of the war. However, many Haunebu craft were spotted over occupied Germany in the years to follow - among them, a craft
strongly resembling the Haunebu IV by the Bundeswehr in the 1970s. It is believed that all of the mysterious Haunebu craft were
evacuated to a sanctuary outside of Third Reich borders; to Neu Schwabenland, Antarctica - Base 211, constructed during the war.
In the years following the close of WW2, many Haunebu-shaped disc craft have been spotted all over the world leading to
speculation that either the Third Reich survived in another part of the world (primarily in Argentina) or that the victorious Allies had
captured the Thule and Vril technology and constructed similar craft.
The BRD (Federal Republic of Germany) is also suspected of retaining Thule and Vril technology with official designations of FU-1 and
FU-2 (Fliegende Untertassen 1 & 2). The U.S.S.R. research with the German occult technologies is unknown due to Cold War
secrecy; however, the Soviets are believed to have captured several of Schauberger's Repulsin models, Flugkreisel engineer Otto
Habermohl, and Feuersturm engineer Gerhard Falker in 1945. Although the Soviets had their own disc designs based on the
Suchanov series of "Discoplans" from 1958-62 and a rumored experimental circular-wing MiG prototype, the SS Haunebu type might
have been experimented with as well since the Soviets got a good share of Dr. Franz Philipp's beam weaponry in Berlin which was
part of the SS E-IV Technical Branch. Who knows what other E-IV secrets they got in Berlin as well.

Claimed Flying Disc of the Bundeswehr FU 1 (Fliegende Untertasse 1)

Postwar 1970s shot of BRD disc based on Haunebu technology

Senator Richard Russell served 38 years in the Senate, and was its senior, and one of the most influential, senators at the time of his
death in 1971. He was chairman of the Armed Services Committee from 1951 to 1969, and unsuccessfully sought the Democratic
Presidential nomination in 1952.
A report, classified Top Secret until 1959, when it was downgraded to Secret. and not released until 1985. detailing his UFO
encounter was made available by the Fund for UFO Research and its chairman, Dr. Bruce Maccabee. Several key documents were
obtained by the group through the Freedom of Information Act..
"The three observers were firmly convinced that they saw a genuine flying disc," says the Air Force Intelligence report, dated
October 14, 1955.
It goes on to say Russell and his two traveling companions spotted the UFOs on October 4, 1955, while traveling by rail across
Russia's Transcaucasus region.

"One disc ascended almost vertically, at a relatively slow speed, with its outer surface revolving slowly to the right, to an altitude of
about 6000 feet, where its speed then increased sharply as it headed north."
The second flying disc was seen performing the same actions about one minute later. The take-off area was about 1-2 miles south of
the rail line.
Russell "saw the first flying disc ascend and pass over the train," and went "rushing in to get Mr Efron (Ruben Efron, his interpreter)
and Col. Hathaway (Col. E. U. Hathaway, his aide) to see it," the report says. "Col. Hathaway stated that he got to the window with
the Senator in time to see the first (UFO), while Mr. Efron said that he got only a short glimpse of the first. However, all three saw
the second disc and all agreed that they saw the same round, disc-shaped craft as the first."
The Air Force report was written by Lieut. Col. Thomas Ryan, who interviewed Senator Russell's companions in Prague,
Czechoslovakia, on October 13, after they arrived there from Russia shortly after the sighting.
In his report, Col. Ryan called the sightings "an eyewitness account of the ascent and flight of an unconventional craft by three
highly reliable United States observers. He added that Col. Hathaway led off his account of the sightings by saying: "I doubt if youre
going to believe this, but we all saw it. Senator Russell was the first to see this flying disc. We've been told for years that there isn't
such a thing, but all of us saw it."
CIA documents show that the agency later interviewed the three eyewitnesses in the Russell party-and also a fourth person, who
had seen the UFOs -whose name was blacked out on the CIA report prior to its declassification.
Interpreter Ruben Efron told the CIA that visibility was excellent. As one UFO approached the train, he said, "the object gave the
impression of gliding. No noise was heard and no exhaust was heard, and no exhaust glow or trail was seen by me." After the
encounter, Senator Russell told the men with him: "We saw a flying disc. I wanted you boys to see it so that I would have
witnesses," according to the CIA documents. And an FBI memo, dated November 4, 1955, also discusses the sighting-and admitted
Col. Hathaway's testimony "would support existence of a flying disc"
Klaus Habermohl, a BMW engineer who worked as part of the Flugzeug Special Projects Group in Prague, was captured by the
Russians in Prague on or about 11th May 1945. He undoubtedly helped the construction of a Soviet disc and I recently came across
plans for another Soviet low aspect aircraft that would have used Nuclear propulsion. I do not know whether this worrying
development ever got off the drawing board.
What I do know is that Senator Russell and his party saw a flying disc during a trip to the USSR in 1955 and that his most credible
sighting was swept under the carpet by the same military intelligence personnel with knowledge both of unconventional US and
Soviet aircraft. I very much doubt whether Russell and his party saw the disc by accident. There were many elements to the ongoing
struggle between the Soviet and US military and their intelligence machines and this is reflected in several texts including John

Ranelagh's definitive book The Agency (Sceptre 1988). Check out the few CIA documents in its Popular UFO Documents collection
and note the near hysteria about advanced Soviet aircraft and intentions.
Perhaps the most important and hidden aspect of this was the increasing threat of Soviet penetration of US airspace via Alaska. In
any case the CIA was most concerned about 'non-conventional air vehicles' under development by the Soviets as the 14th June 1954
memorandum entitled "Intelligence Responsibilities for Non-Conventional Types of Air Vehicles" makes very clear.
~Tim Matthews

Haunebu Disc technical information

HAUNEBU I
Moderately Armed Flight Gyro
Diameter: 24.95 m
Drive: Thule Tachyonator
(Triebwerk) 7b
Control: Mag Field Impulser 4
Speed: 4,800 km/h
(theoretically up to 17,000 km/h)
Range: Flight time of 18 h
Armament: 2 x 80 mm KSK in
rotating turret
4 x MK-108 in body
Armor: Double Victalen
Crew: 8
Hovering capability: 8 minutes
All weather, day and night,
capability
Employment fitness: 60%
First flight: 1939
Available for service: 1944

HAUNEBU II
Heavily Armed Flight Gyro
Diameter: 26.3m/ 32.0 m Do-Stra
Drive: Thule Tachyonator (Thule Triebwerk)
7c
Control: Mag Field Impulser 4a
Speed: 6,000 km/h (theoretically up to
21,000 km/h)
Armament: 6 x 80 mm KSK in 3 rotating
turrets
1 x 110 mm KSK in 1 rotating turret
Armor: Triple Victalen
Crew: 9 (with room for up to 20 people)
Quiet flight: 19 minutes
All weather, day and night, capable
Employment fitness: 100%
First flight: 1942
Available for service: 1944

HAUNEBU III
Heavily Armed Flight Gyro
Diameter: 71 m
Drive: Thule Tachyonator (Thule
Triebwerk) 7c plus SMLevitators
Control: Mag Field Impulser 4a
Speed: 7,000 km/h
(theoretically up to 40,000 km/h)
Range: Flight time 7 to 8 weeks
Armament: 4 x 110 mm KSK in
4 rotating turrets (3 lower/1
upper)
10 x 80 mm KSK in rotating
turrets plus 6 x MK 108
8 x 50 mm KSK
Armor: Triple Victalen
Crew: 32 (with room for up to 70
people)
Quiet flight: 25 minutes
All weather, day and night,

HAUNEBU IV
Heavily Armed Flight Gyro
Diameter: 120 m
Construction only projected for 1946

Thule, SS Military Technical Branch E-IV


Thule H-Gert Hauneburg Device Haunebu I disc aircraft, 1939, 2 produced
Thule Haunebu II disc aircraft 1942, 5 produced
Thule Haunebu II Do-Stra disc aircraft co-produced by Dornier.
Do-Stra = DOrnier STRatosphren Flugzeug, 1944, 2 produced
Thule Haunebu III disc aircraft, 1945, 1 produced
Thule Haunebu IV disc aircraft project
(all discs powered by Thule Triebwerk EMG engines)

Haunebu I

The car is a 1938 Opel Admiral Cabriolet and the woman sitting in back with a horsetail hairstyle is Sigrun.
All Vril circle members had horsetail hairstyles as psychic mediums which was not a popular Nazi hairstyle.
Photo taken at Arado-Brandenburg

The MK 108 30mm cannon. manufactured by Rheinmetall-Borsig for use in aircraft, was also mounted in subsequent versions of
Haunebu and Vril disks. It measured 1057 mm in length and weighted 58 kg. Its rate of fire was 650 rounds per minute with a
muzzle velocity of 540 m/s. Because of its slow muzzle velocity the cannon was difficult to aim and its range too short. However it
proved to be very effective, reliable and easy to manufacture.

Haunebu II, II-Do-Strata


[Do-Stra = DOrnier-STRAtosphrenflugzeug]

This picture shows a Haunebu-II next to a house, demonstrating the dimensions of the flight disc.

An enlargement of the red bordered area shows clearly that the lower edge of the right lower cupola (arrows) does not match the
remainder of the picture.
Even without enlargement, this dividing line is easily recognizable. Even the most untrained layman without special phototechnical knowledge can see an unambiguous photo-shop montage!

The same applies also to this picture. While the flight disc is a relatively sharp image, the whole background is a blur. However,
the area at the same distance of the claimed flying object would have to be also sharp!
The complete contrast of the disc with the remainder of the picture is recognizable without difficulty!

The truck in this photo is usually misidentified as a HANOMAG, but Hanomags did not have such long hoods; it is a 5 ton MAGIRUS

Haunebu III

Haunebu III aerial shot, probably 1945 - Jagdtiger with Haunebu III in background

Haunebu IV

The Do-Stra Haunebu flying disc was the German huge heavy flight gyro developed in the second World War. Contrary to many
opinions, it was not armed.
It was intended to produce the Haunebu II with tenders for Dornier in early 1945 but the end of the war prevented Dornier from
building any Haunebu production.

A short flight test of the mysterious German made Haunebu flying saucer.
The Germans supposedly built several but there is no evidence they ever flew. Some have speculated that one of these crashed in
1947 in Roswell and not E.T.
This was all done with C4D. The model was built from old blueprints and photos with some added designs of my own. Total time
spent on it was around 75 hours including rendering.

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