From: John.Powell@p0.f4.n1010.z9.FIDONET.ORG (John Powell) Subject: A Few Questions... Date: 17 Mar 94 05:24:00 GMT Organization: FidoNet node 9:1010/4.0 - From these excerpts we see that certainly by late April or early May, 1945, the US had not just knowledge but at least semi-functional examples of the Horten flying wing. I'm recklessly assuming that the US would have wanted these craft back home for study as soon as was practical. Lieutenant General Twining's (Commander of the Army Materiel Command) September 23, 1947, letter to Brig. General Schulgen (Commanding General Army Air Forces) states: f. It is possible within the present U.S. knowledge - provided extensive detailed development is undertaken--to construct a piloted aircraft which has the general description of the object in subparagraph (e) above which would be capable of an approximate range of 700 miles at subsonic speeds. Why only possible? The Horten flying wing(s) had already been in our possession for two years. Twining continues: g. Any devlopments in this country along the lines indicated would be extremely expensive, time consuming and at the considerable expense of current projects and therefore, if directed, should be set up independently of existing projects. Why expensive? The design, prototype and development work had already been completed. Is this a dodge for more money? Twining points out: h. Due consideration must be given the following: (1) The possibility that these objects are of domestic origin - the product of some high security project not known to AC/AS-2 or this command. How likely is it that the AMC was unaware of the captured Horten flying wing(s)? Twining states that "This opinion was arrived at in a conference between personnel from the Air Institute of Technology, Intelligence T-2, Office, Chief of Engineering Division, and the Aircraft, Power Plant and Propeller Laboratories of Engineering Division T-3." How likely is it that these groups were unaware of the captured Horten flying wing(s)? Phil Klass [SUN #26, March 1994] quotes Air Intelligence Report No. 100-203-79, December 10, 1948: "The origin of the devices [UFOs] is not ascertainable. There are two reasonable possibilities: (1) The objects are domestic [U.S.] devices.... (2) Objects are foreign, and if so, it would seem most logical to consider that they are from a Soviet source. The Soviets possess information on a number of German flying-wing type aircraft, such as the Gotha P60A, Junkers EF-130 long-range jet bomber and the Horten 229 twin-jet fighter, which particularly resembles some of the descriptions of unidentified flying objects." This report was prepaed by the US Air Force's Directorate of Intelligence and the Office of Naval Intelligence and more than a year has passed since Twining's letter. How is it that these agencies believe that it is the Germans who have the captured Horten flying wing(s) or just information when, by this time, the US has had them for at least three years? What value would there be in pointing the finger at the Soviets _and_ suggesting that they have aircraft far in advance of our own? Klass contends that the USAF Directorate of Intelligence and the Office of Naval Intelligence demonstrate no knowledge of a Roswell-related crashed object/disk because there wasn't such an incident. Yet, three years after the fact, these same offices demonstrate no knowledge of the US possession of the Horten flying wing(s). Klass can't have it both ways - and neither can the rest of us. If these offices were not aware of the US possession of the Horten flying wing(s) then the so-called UFO cover-up exceeded their need-to-know and began _before_ the Roswell incident. If these offices were aware of the US possession of the Horten flying wing(s) then why would they not acknowledge such (in a Top Secret document that took 37 years to declassify)? Thanks, take care. John. - -- John Powell - via ParaNet node 1:104/422 UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name INTERNET: John.Powell@p0.f4.n1010.z9.FIDONET.ORG ====================================================================== Inquiries regarding ParaNet, or mail directed to Michael Corbin, should be sent to: mcorbin@paranet.org. Or you can phone voice at 303-429-2654/ Michael Corbin Director ParaNet Information Services