World War II began the era of industrialised, global, modern combat. Millions
died. This war, unprecedented in global reach and casualties, was only ended
through the deployment of nuclear bombs dropped at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing
hundreds of thousands of civilians in two devastating strikes.
Recent Department of Occult Warfare paranormal excavations revealed concentrated
levels of activity at Al-Khali during the War. The roots of the activity stretch
back further.
In the 1930s reports reached the UK Security
Service that a German occult society, deeply
entwined with the Nazi hierarchy, was
investigating paranormal warfare. Initially these
documents were dismissed and filed. The outbreak
of the Spanish Civil War changed everything.
Field reports spoke of strange phenomena during
bombardments, projectiles that seemed to change
their path in mid-flight to reach hidden
positions, interrogation led by unidentified
collaborators that obtained information without a
word being uttered, and sudden deaths in inexplicable conditions (heart attacks,
spontaneous combustion) of high Republican commanders inside their underground
refuges. Covert operations revealed that a new German corps established by the
German Occultists, the Geheimnisvoll Abwehrmacht, were operating on the Spanish
northern front, camouflaged as logistical and intelligence support for the Condor
Legion.
The Spanish Civil War was a training ground for the new corps. Extensive research
was carried out by the German Occultists to establish how the paranormal could
further their war effort. As their new fighting force carried operations in Spain,
psychic operatives identified Al-Khali of critical strategic potential.
As soon as WW II broke out, German forces invaded Al-Khali. Local men, women and
children were enslaved to carry out excavations. Hundreds died of exhaustion and
starvation. After uniformed German forces led and supervised the excavations, the
Geheimnisvoll Abwehrmacht, commanded by their finest psychic squadron leader Hanne
Lechtermact, was dispatched to Al-Khali to take over the site.
In response, a British commando unit was sent to Al-Khali under the command of
Major Pat Buckland. The unit, known as Blackwatch, was established by the Office
of Strategic Services under the supervision of famed British Occultist Alleister
Crowley. The squad was comprised of veterans hardened on the battlefronts of
almost all the wars in the early 20th century. People touched by luck,
clairvoyants, occultists and experts in demolition and infiltration. They were the
Allies best hope of response as they played catch-up against their German
counterparts.
Despite the huge levels of paranormal
activity recorded at Al-Khali, what
actually occurred there during the war
remained a mystery. All contact with the
British commando unit was lost soon after
their arrival. There are no official known
records of Gehimisvoll Abwermacht activity
although it is believed they never
returned from the desert. The physical
excavations at Al-Khali and any
discoveries made at the site were lost.