Operation High Jump


Operation Highjump

 

 

Between August 26th, 1946 and late February 1947, approximately one year after Germany surrendered at the close of World War II, Rear Admiral Richard Byrd led an expedition to Antarctica called Operation Highjump. Now, at that time, the United States had spent a lot of money on World War II. The end of the war would normally be considered a time to close down military activities, consolidate gains, save cash, and so on. But this expedition to Antarctica involved tremendous resources. Those resources were called Task Force 68, and it involved 13 ships, 33 aircraft, and nearly 5,000 men, and that included destroyers, a submarine, an aircraft carrier, icebreakers, a tanker, supply ships, the works.

Now, the stated reason for the Task Force to Antarctica was to gather data, to explore, to see if it was possible to design air bases in that cold location, and that type of thing, sort of National Geographic on steroids. But you don’t need 13 military ships, 33 military aircraft, and nearly 5,000 military personnel to do that, especially for an inhospitable location that you don’t know much about.

Perhaps one can envision one or two ships and a couple of aircraft to check out the scene, but an entire armada armed to the teeth doesn’t seem to match the stated goals of the expedition. Admiral Byrd’s expedition to Antarctica just doesn’t seem to make sense if there was no urgent military reason to go there at the time. Indeed, you simply do not send that type of very expensive military force into a dangerous area like Antarctica unless you have solid intelligence suggesting that there is a clear and urgent need to do so. It just would not happen otherwise. It just wouldn’t.

What you are about to see is a revision of the mainstream account of history. We are going to show you remote-viewing data that will explain more than one unexplained mystery involving the Nazis, the U.S. military, and Antarctica. What we are about to show you will explain why Admiral Byrd really led that expedition to Antarctica, what happened when he did it, and ultimately why U.S. presidents eventually made a very bad deal by allowing certain extraterrestrial groups to establish an official presence on, or perhaps I should say underneath, U.S. soil. The story is both complicated and chilling in its details.

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The Remote-Viewing Data

Blind Conditions for All Remote-Viewing Data: All remote viewing for this project (as with all projects conducted at The Farsight Institute) was conducted under totally blind conditions. The viewers were told nothing about the project or specific targets while they were conducting their remote-viewing sessions. They were only instructed that there is a target, and that they should remote view it.

Targets for this Project

Target 1: The most advanced Nazi base in Antarctica circa the end of World War II.

Target 2: The most significant battle between the Nazi forces in Antarctica and U.S. forces circa the end of World War II or after.

 

 

 

 

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