Sorry for the delay, my friends... It's been a long, crazy, hectic holiday season and this is a delicate issue, if you cross the wrong people. So
while I'd LIKE to come right out and be frank about certain pieces of information…that would be a very serious misstep on my part. So instead, I am
going to give you two roads to follow...two stories. If this subject is important to you, it will be enough to lead you to some interesting
conclusions. If it isn't...if you are just an armchair follower of this topic, well...you might be disappointed. C'est la vie....
First, I want to point out that there has been no "independent" confirmation that 6 nukes left Minot and only 5 arrived in Barksdale per the initial
post of this thread. Instead, the "official" story is that the original reports from Barksdale that there were only 5 nukes were
wrong. This
"inaccuracy" was updated by the original sources who reported the nukes leaving Minot. This is important because it is the military's position that
NO nukes are missing and no nukes left
physical control of the US military on US soil.
So what's the concern then?
Well, at this point...there are two
stories. There is no debate that the shipping & loading of the nukes from Minot to Barksdale did NOT
follow the
normal process. This leads to the question of "okay, then what happened? How did this happen and why?"
Looking at the official reports and investigation, it seems clear that none of the ground crews in Minot raised an eyebrow about loading nukes. As
the OP indicated, there are many checks & balances to ensure that these are not loaded “by mistake.” There are multiple authorizations that must
be passed by certified personnel (paperwork, passwords, etc…) to even get
access to their storage location. Then there are other
considerations that had would have raised alarms including but not limited to – clearly marked, color-coded weapons that would have been noticed,
weapons sensors both on board the plane, at both bases, and in between, load balancing on the plane to account for the weight of the nukes, and the
numerous individuals whose job it is to track every nuke. Any mistakes or failures at any point from end to end would have raised alarms. Yet, no
alarms were raised…which leads to the conclusion that the crew in Minot received orders from
somewhere to load the nukes. The question is
“who gave that order?”
Theory 1 - Cheney did it….well, sorta.
Shortly after the incident, several investigative journalists came forward with undisclosed military sources stating that the nukes had been loaded
intentionally as part of a False Flag operation along the Turkish/Syrian border. The intent was to give the US a reason to attack Iran. Sources are
split on the exact reasoning behind this theory. Some say that CIA front companies were using it for profit –
exopolitics.org...
www.opednews.com...
Others have indicated that, ultimately, it was intended to be a joint attack on Iran between the US & Israel –
www.globalresearch.ca...
Theory 2 – Chinese did it.
There is another theory that the “orders” were part of a cyber breach by a foreign state actor. As I have posted previously, there are numerous
ways to access even “off-grid” networks -
www.abovetopsecret.com... State-sponsored actors have known about these
methods for a very long time…well before the 2007 incident. The “article” I’ve linked below provides the most comprehensive theory on how
this occurred, if it did. It is written by one William Thomas who claims to be an investigative journalist, but whom I might call a ‘Conspiracy
Theorist.’ Needless to say, his article has been wiped from his site and many other sites that were carrying it, including cached backups on the
internet. The only place it can now be found is one a few conspiracy sites, which is not a coincidence.
goldenageofgaia.com...
There are many holes that can be pointed out in each theory. Given the Obama administration’s distaste for Bush & his ilk, if Cheney had been
behind the incident, I have no doubt it would have been made public by the subsequent administration. Or, maybe, it
was intended to start a
war with Iran which was subsequently derailed by the Chinese through the cyber breach. Nothing is ever clear-cut….