U.S. News & World Report
Text: "Washington whispers." U.S. satellite photos, on at least three occasions, show huge smoke plumes rising from a remote Russian island with no history of volcanic activity and from which seismographs recorded eruption tremors. Possibly related to artificial scalar interferometry and cold explosions, and devices using the Bohm-Aharonov effect. SEE - Wood, Derek. "U.S.A. probes mystery cloud reported off Japan." Jane's Defence Weekly. 1(18), May 12, 1984. P. 716. Describes the explosive eruption at 1409 GMT, 9 April, 1984 which rose to 60,000 feet in two minutes. The captain of a Japanese Airlines Boeing 747 freighter en route from Tokyo to Anchorage observed a cloud form resembling the top half of a ball, which quadrupled in size in 30 seconds and rose to over 18,280 meters altitude. The aircraft took evasive action, believing something similar to a nuclear explosion had occurred, although there was no flash. The captain also sent a "Mayday" distress signal which is recorded by the FAA. SEE - Haines, Richard F. Private communication to T. E. Bearden, 27 Sept. 1984. Another B-747 (American carrier) captain at 47 degrees 5' 44" N; 161 degrees 00' 05" E. near the Kuriel Islands on 27 July 1984 (1550 GMT) observed a slowly expanding ball of white light above the horizon. The shell of light continued to expand over a ten minute-long period until visible ahead of them and to their right. Weather radar detected nothing unusual. The shell of light had sharply defined edges and was semi-transparent (stars were visible through it). It was an almost perfect half-circle in outline. This almost positively shows the testing of a Soviet Tesla weapon in the Tesla shield mode, about 3-1/2 months after the cold explosion test in the ocean off Japan on Apr. 9, 1984. SEE - "Explosive events seen on Soviet island." Aviation Week & Space Technology. Sept. 26, 1983. p. 31. Shows explosive events and massive smoke plumes (some 155 miles long) observed by U.S. spacecraft on Bennett Island in the East Siberian Sea. Three photos are included. The third photo shows the initiation of such an event. These events are excellent candidates for the "heat exhaust" of a scalar interferometer weapon used in the "cold explosion" mode, where heat is extracted violently from a distant interference zone and emerges at the scalar interferometer site. Such utilization requires a heat dump and heat exhaust system of enormous size, and no other schema fits the explosive events seen on this Soviet island located 350 miles north of the Soviet mainland near the Arctic Circle. Note also this location would be a candidate for the site of the Soviet scalar interferometer initiating the 77 other such anomalous "cold explosion" events picked up by U.S. weather satellites in the Soviet Arctic since 1974. For an explanation of the cold explosion weapon and how it works (and the technical quantum mechanical basis for it), see Possony, Stefan T. "The Tesla connection." Defense & Foreign Affairs. Aug., 1984. p. 12-14, 27. See also Bearden, Thomas E. Star Wars Now! The Bohm-Aharonov effect, scalar interferometry, and Soviet weaponization. Millbrae, California 94030: Tesla Book Co., 1984. 39 p. See also Bearden, Thomas E. Toward a new electromagnetics: part IV: vectors and mechanisms clarified. Millbrae, California 94030: Tesla Book Co., 1983. For a succinct description of the three kinds of electromagnetics that now exist, see Mueller, Eike. Experiments with a Kromrey and a Brandt-Tesla converter built by John Bedini, with comments by Tom Bearden. Millbrae, California 94030: Tesla Book Co., 1984. p. 13-23. U.S. News & World Report. Oct. 24, 1983. p. 18.
See Also: artificial scalar interferometry, plumes, cold explosions, Bohm-Aharonov effect, Soviet weapons, anomalous phenomena.
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