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What Really Happened at Chernobyl?

goldenageofgaia.com /2017/05/11/what-really-happened-at-chernobyl/

Steve Beckow
Tom Bearden is a retired U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel who specializes in the science of free energy,
scalar weapons, etc.

His theory of what most probably happened at Chernobyl flies


in the face of contemporary explanations.

We reproduce an excerpt from one of his technical papers on


what happened that day. The language may be a bit technical
for some.

Chernobyl after the blast

Tom Bearden, Weapons that Use Time-Reversed Elecromagnetic Waves, n.d. at

http://www.cheniere.org/books/excalibur/part4.htm

Any radioactive nucleus is already teeter-tottering toward nuclear decay, so to speak,


and it will instantly decay radioactively when struck by a significant scalar potential
pulse. Thus a TR [time-reversed] wave radar weapon can deliver a powerful TR pulse
against a distant vehicle carrying a nuclear warhead, and the resultant EG pulse
penetrating the nuclear material of the warhead will electrogravitationally explode it in a
full-order nuclear detonation.

Therefore, when using such weapons, extreme care must be taken to avoid
inadvertently pulsing ones own nearby nuclear weapons or nuclear material. In
Tom Bearden
attacking distant ground targets, one must be careful not to detonate nearby nuclear
weapons, nuclear powerplants, or stored nuclear material-even at some distance from
the target. Otherwise, large-scale nuclear fallout will be experienced over a worldwide area, and unacceptable
boomerang self-damage to the attacker himself may be incurred. The more powerful the TR pulse employed, the
greater the safety separation between the struck target and stored nuclear materiel must be to prevent unacceptable
boomerang large-scale fallout

Also, large TR wave interferometer weapons, such as the Woodpecker systems, usually first produce very powerful,
scalar EM [electromagnetic] standing wave beams by continuously transmitting (in the beam) both a normal EM
wave and its phase conjugate, modulated (locked) together to produce a zero EM vector resultant
electrogravitational (EG) wave. Interference of two of these scalar EM beams in the targeted area, plus internal
scanning within the beam by other signals, allows EM effects of either normal EM energy or time-reversed EM
energy to be produced and controlled at very precise locations within the broad interference area.

Each such huge scalar EM standing wave beam represents a gigantic electrogravitational standing wave, and
hence a giant oscillating potential in spacetime. This standing wave represents a sort of gigantic capacitor, or
accumulator of infolded energy. Enormous energy may be collected in this potential, charged-up over a period of
time. Shortout of this giant capacitor by transmitter failure can result in a large flash-over discharge of the EG
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energy into the local earth, producing a massive EG ground wave that can be enormously destructive.

Thus one must carefully protect the TR wave weapon system from inadvertent discharge of large EG pulses into the
earth at the local site, due to transmitter failure, shortouts, etc. Otherwise ones own nuclear weapons or facilities
may be exploded even at some distance by the EG pulse ground wave produced. Ones communications and
electronics installations, for example, can be knocked out at an even greater distance.

For example, in the winter of 1957-58, a large Soviet TR wave prototype weapon at Kyshtym, near the Urals,
apparently suffered a catastrophic transmitter failure, discharging a powerful scalar EM (electrogravitational, or EG)
pulse into the earth. This huge EG pulse struck the atomic wastes stored nearby, causing the radioactive nuclei to
immediately decay. In other words, the nearby atomic wastes exploded just as eye-witnesses reported. Deadly
radioactive contamination spread across a major region, and exists to this day.

After this accident, the Soviets would have developed much more elaborate safety circuits and devices and
implemented them into their TR wave weapons.

Even so, in April 1986, the explosive eruption of a reactor at Chernobyl was almost certainly caused by an
accidental catastrophic failure of a large TR Woodpecker transmitter about 30 kilometers away. The sudden failure
of the East-to-West Woodpecker transmitter was positively detected by engineer Bill Bise. All safety circuits at the
site would have been instantly activated, desperately and slowly draining off the huge standing wave potential built
up by the weapon.

The Soviets would have immediately shut down the reactors at Chernobyl as a precaution.

Some hours later, the transmitter safety devices finally failed, and a much smaller, though still significant, remnant
EG pulse was discharged into the earth, spreading out in a ground wave. The first radioactive material the fuel
rods in one of the hapless, shutdown Chernobyl reactors encountered by the EG ground wave pulse received it
and immediately erupted radioactively.

Had the full EG pulse escaped the stricken transmitter, all four reactors at Chernobyl would have violently exploded,
and deadly nuclear fallout would have rained down over a wide area of the earth. Had the reactors not been shut
down and the control rods inserted full-in to dampen the radioactivity, a far greater radioactive eruption probably
a nuclear explosion of the struck reactor would have occurred.

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