Monday, June 27, 2016

Nazi U-Boat found in Lake Ontario

Many people do not know this, but early in WWII Nazis were sinking ships within sight of the U.S. coastline and in the gulf of Mexico. There were ships sunk on the great lakes, but the U.S. government thought they were just due to accidents aboard those ships. Now there is proof. I do not know how they justified the torpedo that hit the USS Sable. This below is right out of the news.

It turns out that while this story is fake, there were Nazi subs sinking our ships right off our coastline so when I received this story I did check to see if it was possible to get to Ontario by water, it is, so I bought the fake story hook, line and sinker. Sorry.



U-Boat in Great Lakes.
February 18th, 2016
NAZI_sub_found_Lake_Ontario.jpg


Niagara Falls, Divers from the U.S coast guard took part this morning, in a delicate wreck recovery operation to bring to the surface a Nazi submarine discovered two weeks
ago at the bottom of Lake Ontario.


The divers of the U.S. Coast guard braved the frigid water temperature to go attach cables to the wreck for the recovery operation. The submarine was identified as the UX-791, a unique experimental German submarine, based on the U-1200 model, and known to have participated in the “Battle of the St. Lawrence”.  It was reported missing in 1943 and was believed to have
been sunk near the Canadian coast.


Professor Mark Carpenter, who leads the team of archaeologists, believes that the U-boat could have traveled up the St-Lawrence River, all the way to the Great Lakes, where it intended to disturb the American economy.


A report dated from February 1943 suggests, that the ship could have attacked and destroyed three cargo ships and two fishing vessels, even damaging the USS Sable (IX-81), an aircraft carrier of the U.S. navy that was used for training in the Great Lakes, before finally being sunk by anti-sub grenades launched by a Canadian frigate.


“We have known for a long time that the Nazis had sent some of their U-boats in the St-Lawrence River, but this is the first proof that they actually reached the Great Lakes,” Professor
Carpenter told reporters. “This could explain the mysterious ship disappearances that took place in the region in 1943, and the reported “Battle of Niagara Falls” which had always been
dismissed as a collective hallucination caused by fear.”


The restoration of the submarine could take more than two years, but once completed, the museum ship is expected to become one of the major tourist attractions of the region.

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