Russia and Germany plan to launch a joint Mars probe later this year, the Interfax news agency said recently. A Russian rocket will launch a satellite carrying a German-made high-resolution camera. The probe will come within 155 miles of the red planet and broadcast images back to Earth on nine color channels. Scientists hope to learn more about Mars' surface, atmosphere and weather. Interfax said the German Ministry of Science and Daimer-Benz Aerospace are participating in the project.
No mention was made if they plan to re-photograph the Cydonia region on Mars; where there is a mile-long "face", pyramids and what remains of a small city, undoubtedly designed and built by an extraterrestrial race. On September 25, 1992 NASA launched the billion-plus dollar Mars Observer, which suspiciously malfunctioned on Aug. 21st at 6 p.m. PST. NASA claimed that they lost contact with the spacecraft, although various NASA, JPL and Ames insiders have said that the "Observer" purposely went off-line, only to re-broadcast on a clandestine channel. The timing indeed was very peculiar. The communications loss came after the entire computer command sequence to enable the spacecraft to automatically place itself inside the Mars orbit had been radioed up the night before. The radio loss occurred during the critical fuel system pressurization sequence. It is thought that the ultimate reason for this anomaly was a desperate, last-minute effort to secure secret pictures of Cydonia with no one looking over NASA's shoulder.
Securing multiple, secret Cydonia images in a short period of time would have required extensive changes to the spacecrafts orbit to place the spacecraft repeatedly above the artifacts on multiple orbital passes. These rapid orbital changes would have required clandestine expenditure of significant amounts of on-board fuel. The lack of public radio telemetry during this key period was deliberate and coincided with the key fuel pressurization sequence. Although the Mars Observer never officially went back on-line, this sequence of events appears to have been done in case the Mars Observer did resume communications. Thus NASA could have claimed that some kind of explosion occured during the pressurization sequence which caused the communications failure, as well as the resulting loss of on-board fuel.
Whether or not the joint German-Russian Mars probe will photograph these and other alien artifacts remains questionable. But no one outside of "NASA" believes that these relics are just "shadows and light" as NASA fool-heartily claims! It is time to contact the NASA Administrator DAN GOLDIN, who has stated that the search for extraterrestrial life is a prime goal of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Let us force him to make a public statement about encouraging the Germans and Russians, as well as NASA themselves, to take a BOLD step for the future and re-photograph ALL alien artifacts on the Moon and Mars; and also to release the voluminous amount of photographs that NASA and the NRO already have in their possession!
Thank you to Richard Hoagland, UFO Magazine, Interfax and the German Ministry of Science for the above information.