By Allan Hall Documents unearthed in an American archive suggest that Nazi Germany may have tested an operational nuclear bomb before the end of the Second World War. Recently declassified file APO 696 from the National Archives in Washington is a detailed survey of how far Third Reich scientists got in the development of an [...]

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Declassified US documents suggest the Nazis tested a nuke before the end of WWII

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By Allan Hall
Documents unearthed in an American archive suggest that Nazi Germany may have tested an operational nuclear bomb before the end of the Second World War. Recently declassified file APO 696 from the National Archives in Washington is a detailed survey of how far Third Reich scientists got in the development of an atomic bomb – something Hitler craved.

In the file, obtained by the popular daily newspaper Bild, the task of the academics who prepared the paper between 1944 and 1947 was the ‘investigations, research, developments and practical use of the German atomic bomb.’
The report was prepared by countless American and British intelligence officers and also includes the testimony of four German experts – two chemical physicists, a chemist and a missile expert.

Documents unearthed in an American archive suggest that Nazi Germany may have tested an operational nuclear bomb before the end of the Second World War. Hitler is pictured above

It concurs that Hitler’s scientists failed in the quest to achieve a breakthrough in nuclear technology – but that a documented test may have taken place of a rudimentary warhead in 1944.The statement of the German test pilot Hans Zinsser in the file is considered evidence: the missile expert says he observed in 1944 a mushroom cloud in the sky during a test flight near Ludwigslust.

His log submitted to the Allied investigators reads; ‘In early October 1944 I flew away 12-15 km from a nuclear test station near Ludwigslust (south of Lübeck).’A cloud shaped like a mushroom with turbulent, billowing sections (at about 7000 metres) stood, without any seeming connections over the spot where the explosion took place. Strong electrical disturbances and the impossibility to continue radio communication as by lighting turned up.’

He estimated the cloud stretching for 6.5miles and described further ‘strange colourings’ followed by a blast wave which translated into a ‘strong pull on the stick’ – meaning his cockpit controls.An hour later a pilot in a different machine took off from Ludwigslust and observed the same phenomenon.

According to other archival documents, the Italian correspondent Luigi Romersa observed on the ground the same explosion. He had been sent by dictator Benito Mussolini to watch the test of a ‘new weapon’ of the Germans. He was ordered to report his impressions back to Mussolini.
It is known that Hitler pursued the goal of nuclear technology and wanted his V-2 rockets to be able to carry them to destroy the UK.
The testimony of the four German scientists in the declassified American report mentions a top secret meeting held in Berlin in 1943 at which armaments minister and Hitler favourite Albert Speer was present for the discussion called a ‘nuclear summit.’

In the end the report states that the Allies believe the Germans fell short of triggering the nuclear chain reaction necessary to trigger a nuclear blast – but none could come up with an explanation for what occurred in the skies over Ludwigslust in 1944.

© Daily Mail, London

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