Nazi UFO’s The Legends and Myths of Hitler’s Flying Saucers in WW2 written by S. D, Tucker and published by Pen & Sword Books - £20 - Hardback - Pages 208
Nazi UFOs tells the strange tale of how, following the first alleged flying saucer sightings made in the USA in 1947, a series of fantasists and neo-fascists came forward to create a media myth that the Nazis may have invented these incredible craft as a means for winning the Second World War, a plan which was tantalisingly close to completion before the Allies conquered Berlin in 1945.
Today, the fantasy of Nazi UFOs has grown into an entire mythology in books, on TV
and online. Did Germany back-engineer anti-gravity craft, and even a full-blown
time-machine, by stripping technology from a crashed alien saucer? Did the SS
secretly invent ‘Green’ technology for use in their starship engines, and was this
planet-saving discovery later suppressed at the behest of a sinister Big Oil conspiracy?
Did Himmler try to develop ‘lightning weapons’ for use in aerial combat?
By contrasting the fake military-industrial pseudo-histories of Nazi UFO theorists with
details of real-life Nazi aerospace achievements, the author demonstrates both how this
modern-day mythology came about and how it cannot possibly be more than fractionally
true. For the first time, this fake ‘alternative military history’ is laid out in full.
This book features an appealing cast of con-men and spies, complete madmen, real-life Nazis and completely made-up ones, operating right across the globe from South America to wartime Europe and Japan. A good example may be the ‘mad professor’, Viktor Schauberger, who actually genuinely did manage to gain a personal audience with Adolf Hitler in order to try and convince him that he had discovered and then exploited some amazing new source of natural ‘free energy’ which could make objects (such as saucers, in the opinion of some) float. Hitler dismissed his plan, but it does nonetheless show how close some bizarre schemes came to being implemented in Nazi Germany.
I have to admit that reading this book was a bit like being stuck on the History Channel, and we all know how far downhill that has gone in the past decade. Now in reality the book does try to look at the possibility of UFO’s or at least UFO technology, it also looks at the scams and fake news that took part or that was promoted around the world, especially since WW2. I liked the fact that fake news was explored and that there were scams being perpetrated, and I suppose I enjoyed some of the info that got carried away with the prospect of UFO technology. I would recommend this book, as it does try to be balanced, but I imagine it might annoy others or they might not read it in the first place.
Review originally posted in October 2022