
Strange Clouds Over Kokura
Newscaster Paul Harvey told radio listeners the following remarkable story from World War II:
From the island of Guam one of our mighty bombers took off for Kokura, Japan, with another deadly cargo. The sleek B-29 turned and circled above the cloud that covered the target for half an hour, three-quarters of an hour, 55 minutes, until the gas supply reached the danger point. It seemed a shame to be right over the primary target and then have to pass it up, but there was no choice. With one more look back, the crew headed for the secondary target. Upon arrival, they found the sky clear. “Bombs away!”—the B-29 headed for home.
Weeks later, an officer received information from military intelligence that chilled his heart. Thousands of Allied prisoners of war, the biggest concentration of Americans in enemy hands, had been moved to Kokura a week before the suspended bombing!
“Thank God,” breathed the officer, “thank God for that cloud.”
The city which was hidden from the bomber was a prison camp and thousands of Americans are now alive who would have died but for that cloud which rolled in from a sunlit sea. The secondary target that day was Nagasaki, and the missile intended for Kokura was the world’s second atomic bomb!




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