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Vimanas - Las Naves ETs de Los Vedas Hindúes… Era lo Que Buscaban en Afganistán

por Rafapal

Mayo 10, 2013

del Sitio Web Rafapal

 

 

Cuatro meses a posterior de la invasión a Afganistán,

seis soldados de las fuerzas especiales y también un reportero

se encontrarán cara a cara con un enemigo

que además nunca habrían imaginado.

 

 

Una prueba más de que las películas están convirtiendo en ficción lo que es real.


En el primer vídeo, el investigador Steve Quayle comenta la noticia de que 8 soldados norteamericanos desaparecieron cuando estaban en una cueva de Afganistán buscando un “Vimana, una de las míticas naves extraterrestres de las que hablan las sagradas escrituras hindúes.

 

Con lo cual, descubrimos lo que de verdad buscaban los yanquis en Afganistán, y no Bin Laden, que murió en el 2006, de causas naturales, según sus guardaespaldas chechenos.


Lo que estoy casi seguro que no saben estos dos investigadores es que hay una película titulada “Vimanas” que cuenta exactamente eso… en el año 2008.

 


PD: Si veis la película hasta el final os encontraréis que uno de los coguionistas se llama… Wesley Clark Jr, el hijo de un importante general de los Estados Unidos, al mando de las tropas en Yugoslavia durante la guerra.

 

 

¿Hace falta que os lo explique mejor o entendéis que esta película fue real?

 

 


 

 



Vimanas Extraterrestres

-   Enemigo Sobrenatural   -
por SurfandolacrestaXXI
Mayo 29, 2012

del Sitio Web YouTube
 

 


Película sobre Vimanas...

...una misión suicida a descubrir una secreta fuerza invasora

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

English

 

 

A group of Special Ops Reservists on a mission in the harsh and hostile terrain of Afghanistan find themselves lost in a Middle Eastern "Bermuda Triangle" of ancient evil.

In Ghazni Province, Afghanistan, a Special Forces team meets CIA Agent Benjamin Keynes, who explains their mission is to find a very important Afghan cleric by the name of Mohammad Aban.

 

The team leader, Wally Hamer briefs the men to be ready. After being inserted, the team finds a local guide, Abdul (incorrectly pronounced 'abdool' in the film, similar to Abdul's slight mispronunciation of some words due to obvious language barriers), in a village in Southern Afghanistan, where the cleric is from. Together, they go to the mountains, where the cleric has a reputation for hiding.

As they go further into the mountains, they begin to have strange encounters. First, they are ambushed by gunmen, who kill Trinoski. The team returns fire, killing multiple gunmen, but when they check the bodies, they have disappeared.

 

That night, the team spots headlights of a vehicle approaching. However, the two lights separate and then speedily fly into the sky and disappear. After speculating on what the lights may have been, they radio for a helicopter to resupply them. The next day, they cannot get reception on their radio or GPS.

 

Their truck, damaged from the ambush, is struggling to move up the mountain. At night, the team hears a helicopter approaching, though they cannot spot it.

 

As their radio is not working, they attempt to signal the helicopter. As the helicopter, still unseen, sounds to be directly on top of them, the noise abruptly and instantaneously stops, something that shouldn't be physically possible. Meanwhile, the radio picks up what sounds like Farci or Arabic, but no one can understand it.

 

They cache Trinoski's body so that they can move to a safer position for the night. The next morning, the team finds parts of Trinoski's body strewn out across rocks.

 

Further up the mountain, they spot strange, triangular markers made of sticks across the mountain's surface. As they continue on foot with their mission in the rocky and barren landscape, fatigue, frustration and confusion take their toll on the members of the team and they come across a cave. Inside, they find an old man who gives them shelter and refills their canteens.

 

Sergeant Sadler notices that under the man's robes, he appears to be wearing a nineteenth century British army uniform.

 

Sadler tells the others of a legend of how a British regiment disappeared in Afghanistan's mountains, leaving only one survivor. In the morning Sergeant Cole observes the old man apparently talking to himself. But when he looks through his night vision goggles, the soldier sees a group of men with swords in black robes.

 

Panicking, the soldier opens fire, accidentally killing the old man. Abdul says they must bury the body, but Keynes orders the team to move on in case the enemy heard them. One soldier, the medic, develops horrible stomach pains.

 

As he tries tries to drink from a canteen, he finds that it is full of sand, as are everyone else's water containers. Further on, Abdul is surprised to find that there is an entire valley that did not used to be there. The tensions further increase when the team is encountered by a bright light at night. As K.T. and Cole try to flank the light, believing it to be a ruse by the Taliban, they're immediately vaporized.

 

The next morning, Abdul warns Keynes that they are dealing with a supernatural phenomenon that is beyond human conception, and has deadly consequences; he then commits suicide by stepping off a cliff.

As the team progresses further and tensions among the men increase, the soldiers confront Keynes and demand the truth.

 

Keynes shows them a recording from his thermal imaging camera and informs them about the real motive. The thermal video shows a triangular object in the desert. Being nearly invisible to the naked eye, it lifts off the ground after three (supposed) men, including Muhammad-Aban, walk to it and vanishes right in front of Keynes' eyes.

 

It was this object that killed the men.

 

The CIA monitored this phenomenon for some time and sent Keynes and the special forces team there to further investigate it. The whole time, Keynes has been recording with his special thermal camera and sending the images to Langley via an advanced laser aimed at CIA satellites.

 

Keynes theorizes that this object originates from an ancient Indian mythology called 'Vimanas', a sort of UFO-related phenomena that occurred when Alexander rode through this area of land as he was conquering, and the bright lights and the ghostly gunmen are associated with it. He also explains that the team is an 'expendable' for the investigation and they will not be rescued, which causes a brief scuffle with the agitated sergeant.

Running out of ammo, water and food the team wanders further into the desert where they finally encounter the Vimanas at what appears to be the location that the British regiment was destroyed.

 

Sadler, overwhelmed with fear, opens fire upon the seemingly invisible Vimanas only to be vaporized. Keynes flees with Degetau and abandons him later, as is too sick to continue, and later hears his screams before being obliterated by the objects. Exhausted and traumatized, Keynes searches for water.

 

He encounters an oasis and drinks water from it only to discover the body of Hamer laying next to the water. Unable to grasp the horror, he passes out.

 

When he wakes up in the night, he hears the distant sound of a helicopter and fires his flare gun. Simultaneously, several flares fire up from the valley. The bright light he encountered earlier re-appears and two beings from it approach him.

 

As it touches his forehead, he sees visions and hallucinations of various objects and landscapes from his previous encounters, causing him to go into a trance. In the final scene he is shown floating several inches above a bed with a talisman he took from Aban's home in his hand, inside a hospital room, where doctors and a military colonel are observing him through a glass window.

 

In a trance, he finally whispers, "They will save us all..."
 

 

 

 

 

Vimanas

-   The Objective 2008 - Afghanistan documentary   -
by
Faisal Lhr
June 1, 2012

from YouTube Website