Field Propulsion Saucers
The existence of World War Two German field propulsion flying
saucers is a topic which is denied by virtually every reputable
authority in aviation history. It is also denied by many
researchers studying German saucers. The problem is that in the
years immediately following the Second World War the earth's
skies suddenly began to be populated by flying craft which did
some remarkable things. They flew at unheard of speeds. They
made very sharp turns, seemingly non-aerodynamic turns, even at
this extreme speed. They lacked the glowing tail of jets or
rockets but they glowed or gave off light at night from their
periphery or from the whole craft. They were silent or almost
silent. Sometimes they gave off sounds that an electric
generator or motor might make. Sometimes vehicles with
electrically based ignition systems ceased to operate in the
presence of these saucers. No government claimed these flying
craft, yet they were seen all over the world.
The press and popular culture attributed these unusual craft to
an extraterrestrial source. Yet, after over fifty years, no real
proof for this assertion has ever come forth. Let's come back
down to earth. By all accounts these saucer were solid and
material in nature. Perhaps it is time to attribute their origin
to a solid, material source.
It seems only proper to begin searching for an explanation for
field propulsion saucers with the very sources which we now know
built conventional flying saucers, the Germans of the Third
Reich. The earliest reference to a field propulsion saucer being
a German invention is from a 1960 book by Michael X in which it
is described as a "flying egg" (1). Michael X., under the name
Michael X. Barton, is also the author who, in 1968, wrote The
German Saucer Story. In the second book returns to the theme
again (2). This time he cites a source. His primary informant,
Hermann Klaas, describes twelve secret weapons to Barton. They
are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
The flying disc
A tank made entirely of one piece of metal
The sound wave weapon
A laser beam weapon
A flaming artificial cloud
A robot bomb
A charged cloud weapon
An armor piercing projectile
The electromagnetic KM-2 rocket
A paralyzing ray
Electronic ball lighting
The flying bottle, tube, sphere, etc.
Thirty-two years later we certainly know that some of these
weapons did exist. It has been confirmed that the Germans were
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