20. 05. 2016 to 06: 06h
Seventy year old German Peter Lor, who is an amateur historian, claims to have discovered hints of mysterious metal objects in the long-abandoned network of tunnels that the Nazis made not far from Chemnitz in east Germany.
"At least two objects were the Nazi nuclear bomb," he said to the German "Bild".
Source & more:
http://www.blic.rs/riznica/ako-je-otkrice-ovog-penzionera-tacno-na-drugi-svetski-rat-vise-necemo-gledati-istim/jjr6d2c
Historians and amateur treasure hunters have long been searching for the missing artifacts of the Second World War, including the legendary "amber room" and "Gold Train", which, according to rumors, were last year found in Poland.
However, Lor was up against the more dangerous prey.
Speculation that Germany in the final phase of the war was near of making an nuclear bomb did not stop. The Nazis in 1939 had a program to develop nuclear weapons, but officially withdrew from it in 1942 in favor of other projects. It was said that they secretly continued to work on it, but most historians agree that they failed to make a nuclear bomb.
Lor, however, does not share their opinion and claims to have arrived to discovery while researching a network of Nazi Jonastalu tunnel, near the city of Chemnitz.
Up to date it was not been fully clarified what was supposed to be the purpose of these tunnels that before the end of the war dug inmates of Buchenwald. Some believe that it should have served as a hiding place for Adolf Hitler, while others maintain that they were designed to test nuclear weapons.
Peter Lor examined the area with geological radar in 2012, but says that he is only now has fully analyzed objects using software for 3D design. The results, he says, suggest that the room under the ground is higher than was previously assumed and that it contains five large metal objects that look like a nuclear bombs.
"The objects were underground 71 years. Eventually they will fall apart and we will be confronted with a new Chernobyl, "he said.
If it turns out that his claims are true, the land, due to the nuclear material, would be contaminated for centuries. It seems that the competent authorities do not take seriously his threats. The only thing they did when he raised an alarm is that they forbade him to continue the research.
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...German historian Rainer Karlsch, thinking about these issues wrote, "It would be rash indeed to believe that this is the last word on the matter. The German atomic bomb is like a zombie: just when we think we know what happened, how and why, it rises again from the dead." Karlsch resurrected the latest zombie himself when his book, Hitler's Bombe, was released in 2005. The book presents evidence that a second team of scientists under the direction of army physicist Kurt Diebner was much more oriented toward a weapons program than the Heisenberg group and had more success. Karlsch contends that this group was designing a bomb that used both nuclear fission and fusion (like that in an H-bomb) principles to release energy. He further suggests that this type of device was tested three times shortly before the end of World War II. One test occurred on the German island of Ruegen in the fall of 1944 and two more in the eastern state of Thuringia in March of 1945. While Karlsch doesn't say that the tests were entirely successful, he does believe that 700 people (mainly prisoners) died in the blasts. ..
More:
http://www.unmuseum.org/nbomb.htm
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As far as I know, Hitler forbid the use of their nuke because of the fear of similar retaliation from Allies, where ex German citizens worked on the same think.
So he transferred the tech to Japan that developed it further in area of present North Korea. That after the WWII used it against UN (US) invasion from south.
IZAKOVIC