"After the war, von Braun went to Fort Bliss near El Paso, Texas, to build the first operational & guided surface-to-air missile, the Nike Ajax. The Nike Ajax was designed to hit high-flying strategic bombers and played a crucial role in strategic air defense in the 1950s," the thread continued, noting that von Braun met Wing-Uexküll's grandfather at the military installation. His grandfather had earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry and was training U.S. Army soldiers in how to fuel, de-fuel and arm Nike missiles by 1954. "A few years later and out of the Army, Grandpa W– got into nuclear energy. He worked at Argonne National Lab in Chicago, an early government site for nuclear energy built around Fermi's Chicago Pile-1, the world's first nuclear reactor that went critical in 1942," he added. His grandfather then started to specialize in industrial hygiene, or identifying the dangers, stressors and risks to workers in industrial settings. He dismantled CP-1 in Chicago before transferring to nuclear weapons manufacturing sites in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. "In Oak Ridge, grandpa became an expert in detecting and mitigating the byproducts of nuclear weapons manufacturing, especially uranium enrichment. He worked with stockpiles of waste that were stored for decades, and figured out how to maintain their integrity and eventually transport them," Wing-Uexküll noted further. At one point, his grandfather met "Paul Tibbets, the pioneering pilot of the Enola Gay, the specially-modified B-29 Superfortress that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima."WvB, a Prussian aristocrat and aerospace engineer, designed the V-2 rocket, which climbed to 55 miles in altitude before landing more than 200 miles away & detonating a 1,000 kg warhead.
In 1944-5, approximately 1,400 V-2s hit England and 590 hit Antwerp, the Allies' main port. pic.twitter.com/yA79RCO8N4 — Charles Wing-Uexküll (@CWingUexkull) June 11, 2022
"My grandfather's network and projects showed how the worlds of nuclear weapons and missile technology were connected, going back to the 1950s and perhaps before," the thread continued. "That's what made his trips to Peenemunde and Antarctica in the 1990s, after his retirement, so mysterious." "From there, grandpa went to Peenemunde and poked around for a few weeks, going to the Museum and the ruins of test launch sites and assembly plants. I still don't know what he was looking for," noted Wing-Uexküll. "Again, I'm not sure what he was looking for, these were supposedly tourist trips, but he hated nature. I know that he knew that it was possible to mass-produce large rockets underground – he had studied the V-2 Mittelwork factory, where 60,000 slaves had built von Braun's weapon," the thread added.Tibbets' crew for the Hiroshima mission included his best friends, navigator Ted 'Dutch' Van Kirk and bombardier Tom Ferebee, with whom he'd flown for years.
Tibbets pulled a hard manuever, a 155 degree turn, to put the Enola Gay tangent to the blast and get away in time. pic.twitter.com/jNvUqo41R7 — Charles Wing-Uexküll (@CWingUexkull) June 11, 2022
"I do know that my grandfather's dark, terrifying reverence for rocketry and his awe of atomic weapons and their destruction power consumed his life even after his retirement," he wrote, adding that "like von Braun who went seamlessly from the SS to the Kennedy admin, he was never 're-educated' post-WW2." Later, Wing-Uexküll noted that von Braun's dissertation was classified until 1960, but he was publishing about reaching Mars as early as 1948, adding: "I'm determined to find out what my grandfather learned about German rockets, atomic energy, and Antarctica at the end of his life. There's a strange, mystical brotherhood that existed between these obsessives who aimed for the stars, no matter the human cost. Almost a secret society." "So when I say I don’t know what my grandfather was looking for in Peenemunde or in Antarctica, I'm not sure if it was evidence of atomic energy – or energy of an even more fundamental kind," the thread concluded. Sources include: ThreadReaderApp.com NaturalNews.com Twitter.com 1 Twitter.com 2Again, I'm not sure what he was looking for, these were supposedly tourist trips ,but he hated nature.
I know that he knew that it was possible to mass-produce large rockets underground—he had studied the V-2 Mittelwork factory, where 60,000 slaves had built von Braun's weapon. pic.twitter.com/UAPZj7Gwfj — Charles Wing-Uexküll (@CWingUexkull) June 11, 2022
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