Well.... things sure are gettin' innerestin!
We're still on that (runaway) train of thought about the nuclear
"accident" involving one B-52 bomber, two USAF bases and six armed
cruise missiles. You must remember the one (scroll down, if you
don't). A B-52 bomber carrying six cruise missiles took a rather
uneventful flight from Minot AFB in North Dakota to Barksdale AFB in
Louisiana.
Apparently, somebody - oops! - slipped up and those missiles were
carrying live nuclear warheads (five or six of them, depending on what
you read and who you believe). The official explanation is that it was
a screw up and people are being punished, as well as investigations
being carried out.
I'll bet. Even in the military, where SNAFU is an old acronym and
where huge, deadly bungles are written off as almost routine, someone
would have to try very hard to screw this up.
Most of the existing stock of these weapons is kept in storage in
Nevada and New Mexico. Barksdale AFB is the step-off point for
operations in the Middle East. There are some very basic questions
that need to be asked.
1. If you wanted to decommission some of them, wouldn't you
decommission units you already have in storage, not those stockpiled
on a base?
2. Why would you mount missiles with dummy warheads on a B-52 for
transport? Why not instead use, um, a transport?
3. Why fly them from North Dakota to Lousiana, AWAY from Nevada and
New Mexico?
I know, I know. I have no idea how these things operate and there are
perfectly reasonable explanations for all of this.
What about this stuff?
Minot Air Force Base Airman Died While on Leave briefly discusses the
death of Airman 1st Class Todd Blue. According to the Minot Air Force
Base website, "Airman 1st Class Todd Blue, 20, was a response force
member assigned to the 5th Security Forces Squadron." Reports indicate
he was assigned to the unit providing security for the bomber wing.
Minot Airman dies in motorcycle accident is the offical news report
about the death July 17th of B-52 pilot, First Lt. Weston Kissel.
Authorities identify Minot airman killed in crash provides details
about the accident that resulted in the death of Adam Barrs. In a
spooky example of something I like to call "ghosts of the internet",
his MySpace profile plays the song Beautiful Girls in which Sean
Kingston sings, "...You'll have me suicidal, suicidal...."
Now, I wouldn't ordinarily be interested in something as mundane or
dare I say it, "normal" (which, let's face it, in the USA, it rather
unfortunately is), as "Langley airman charged in hotel balcony toss"
except for the fact that 21 year-old Airman 1st Class William Donahue
is assigned to the 1st Communications Squadron, Langley Air Force
Base, where, it just so happens, another William Donahue, Lt. Gen.
USAF (retired), was based while he was one of the heads and architects
of USAF communications and information management.He now sites on the
boards of companies like Robbins-Goia
Now I wouldn't normally even be so interesting in THAT were it not for
the fact that while Googling Lt. Gen. William J. Donahue, USAF
(retired) and 1st Class William Donahue of the 1st Communications
Squadron, Langley AFB, I kept coming across stories about cyberattacks
on US military systems.
So my furry little ears definitely pricked up when I tripped over this
piece at RumorMillNews that attempts to link together the whole
Barksdale nukes fiasco and cyberwar.
Where it REALLY gets interesting is this theory about how the reported
disappearance of Steve Fossett is connected.
Now where was I? Oh yeah, that flurry of deaths involving US military
personnel based at Minot.
Another to fall prey to the "Minot jinx", John Frueh died in July. Was
he a B-52 pilot? Was he a Captain? Was he a "combat weatherman"?
Officialy, he was a Major-Select and was assigned to Special
Operations Command. Some are writing that he was part of the security
detail for nuclear bombers. He was apparently, "...last seen April
29th (28 hours before his last phone call) heading out for a walk with
a GPS, camera and camcorder." He apparently shot himself dead near his
rental car.
So let me get this right. He flew all the way across the USA to attend
the wedding of a friend. He went out for a walk with a GPS, camera and
camcorder. He then decided to kill himself?
People better at this game than I have their own takes.
Looks like Chuck Simpson of The Geronimo Manifesto is paying close
attention, too.
What worries me is that I have long understood that were a nuclear
device to detonate in the USA, technology would allow other nations
and NGOs to determine whose device it actually was, making it nearly
impossible for the kind of false-flag operation being bandied about by
conspiracy theorists to be a reality. Apparently, I was wrong and it
would not necessarily be possible to know whose nuke went off.
There's one thing that's still bugging me, though. Would somebody
PLEASE tell me how the death of Congressman Paul Gillmor fits into all
of this?
http://nsphere.blogspot.com/2007/09/dangerous-time-to-be-based-at-minot.html
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