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Are There Hidden Bombs Around The United States? I Do Belive That There Are, CBS Chicago News Reported On March 29, 2011 That  The letter inside said, “The Al-Qaeda Organization Has Planted 160 Nuclear Bombs
Throughout The U.S. In Schools, Stadiums, Churches, Stores, Financial Nstitutions And Government Buildings.”  It also said, “This Is A    Suicide  Mission For Us. ”The writer, who claims to be Osama Bin Laden, tells the reader the nukes are remotely controlled. “It was clear the writer wanted to scare me,” said Rizzo, “Yes, it frightened me.” Rizzo was one of eight people in the Chicago area to contact the FBI.  Read More Her:                                         
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2011/03/29/threats-claim-nuclear-bombs-hidden-all-over-u-s/
"News That Thay Don't Tell You" Dident Make This Up Out The Blue. So We Have A Dead Osama Bin Laden Telling Us In This Letter That The Al-                                                                                            Qaeda Had Planted Bombs In  Are Schools,Churches,Stores,Stadiums                                                  
And Also Financial Nstitutions And Government Buildings. As We Have The Mainstreem Media News Talking About How Good The Al-Qaeda Are. Whill There Could Be Remotely Controlled Bombs Seat Up By Are Own Gov. As Most Of Us Know By Now That The Al-Qaeda Was Trained In Created By The C.I.A. Also We Hear About The Russian Nuclear Weapons Hidden in USA During 'Cold War. 

The Cold War's Missing Atom Bombs, By
Benjamin Maack

In a 1968 plane crash, the
US military lost an atom bomb in Greenland's Arctic ice. But this was no
isolated case. Up to 50 nuclear warheads are believed to have gone missing
during the Cold War, and not all of them are in unpopulated areas.
It was a little early to be swimming in the Mediterranean that year. But in
early March 1966, Manuel Fraga Iribarne, the Spanish information minister at the
time, and Biddle Duke, the American ambassador in Madrid, together with their
respective families, plunged into the chilly waters off the Costa Cálida.
Journalists from around the world had gathered on the beach of the small village
of Palomares to report on the two families' spring bathing outing. Their
interest would have been surprising, if it hadn't been for the hydrogen bomb
lying on the ocean floor only a few kilometers away, a bomb with more than 1,000
times the explosive force of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Only a few weeks earlier,
on Jan. 17, 1966, the worst nuclear weapons incident of the entire Cold War
had taken place off Spain's southeastern coast. During an
aerial tanking maneuver, an American B-52 bomber and a KC-135 tanking aircraft
collided in mid-air at 9,000 meters (29,000 feet), and both planes exploded in a
giant fireball over Palomares. There were four hydrogen bombs in the hold of the
B-52. One landed, unharmed, in tomato fields near the village. The non-nuclear
fuse detonated in two others causing bomb fragments and plutonium dust to rain
down on the impact site. The fourth bomb fell into the water somewhere off the
coast, burying itself in several meters of silt. But where exactly did it fall?
Read More Here: 
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/a-nuclear-needle-in  
-a-haystack-the-cold-war-s-missing-atom-bombs-a-590513.html