USA TESTS 'Tsunami bomb' tested off New Zealand coast
The United States and New Zealand conducted secret tests of a "tsunami bomb" designed to destroy coastal cities by using underwater blasts to trigger massive tidal waves.
The
tests were carried out in waters around New Caledonia and Auckland
during the Second World War and showed that the weapon was feasible and a
series of 10 large offshore blasts could potentially create a 33-foot
tsunami capable of inundating a small city.
The
top secret operation, code-named "Project Seal", tested the doomsday
device as a possible rival to the nuclear bomb. About 3,700 bombs were
exploded during the tests, first in New Caledonia and later at
Whangaparaoa Peninsula, near Auckland.
The
plans came to light during research by a New Zealand author and
film-maker, Ray Waru, who examined military files buried in the national
archives.
"Presumably if the atomic bomb had not worked as well as it did, we might have been tsunami-ing people," said Mr Waru.
"It
was absolutely astonishing. First that anyone would come up with the
idea of developing a weapon of mass destruction based on a tsunami ...
and also that New Zealand seems to have successfully developed it to the
degree that it might have worked." The project was launched in June
1944 after a US naval officer, E A Gibson, noticed that blasting
operations to clear coral reefs around Pacific islands sometimes
produced a large wave, raising the possibility of creating a "tsunami
bomb".
Mr
Waru said the initial testing was positive but the project was
eventually shelved in early 1945, though New Zealand authorities
continued to produce reports on the experiments into the 1950s. Experts
concluded that single explosions were not powerful enough and a
successful tsunami bomb would require about 2 million kilograms of
explosive arrayed in a line about five miles from shore.
"If you put it in a James Bond movie it would be viewed as fantasy but it was a real thing," he said.
"I only came across
it because they were still vetting the report, so there it was sitting
on somebody's desk [in the archives]."
Forty years after
the joint testing, New Zealand faced a dramatic breakdown in its
security ties with the US after it banned the entry of nuclear-armed
ships from entering its territory during the 1980s. The dispute led to
the US downgrading its relationship with New Zealand from an "ally" to a
"friend".
In his new book
Secrets and Treasures, Mr Waru reveals other unusual findings from the
archives including Defence Department records of thousands of UFO
sightings by members of the public, military personnel and commercial
pilots.
Some of the
accounts of the moving lights in the sky include drawings of flying
saucers, descriptions of aliens wearing "pharaoh masks" and alleged
examples of extraterrestrial writing.
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