VENGEFUL EDWARD TARGETED FAMILY & HELPED HITLER BOMB BUCKINGHAM PALACE
EXPLOSIVE top secret documents reveal
England’s turncoat Duke of Windsor Edward — who renounced his throne to wed an American gold digger — shamefully betrayed his country and his family by giving Adolf Hitler inside information the Germans used to bomb Buckingham Palace!
After abdicating his throne in 1936 and marrying divorcee Wallis Simpson, the Duke of Windsor and his wife became Nazi stooges — and even met Hitler during a 1937 tour of Germany — while living in exile in France.
Historians believe the dirty duke counted on Germany winning the war and cut a deal to regain his throne as Hitler’s puppet king — with Wallis as queen!
Photos show the backstabbing blue blood reviewing German troops, visiting Hitler’s mountain retreat and even giving a Nazi salute! Leaked documents indicate he passed information aiding Germany’s invasion of France.
Even worse, after reviewing buried classified archives, royal expert Alexander Larman concludes the devious duke gave the Nazis detailed layout information to aid their Sept. 13, 1940, bombing raid on Buckingham Palace, where his brother King George VI and the other royals were living.
“The Nazis knew what they were doing and that’s because they had inside information from the duke,” Larman says.
“I don’t think he wanted to see his brother King George VI dead, but he was in a position where he knew exactly where everyone was in Buckingham Palace.”
Nazi planes dropped six bombs and just missed the palace, but destroyed the chapel.
Before her death in
2002, King George’s wife, Elizabeth, recalled hearing the “whirr-whirr of a
German plane and then the scream of a bomb” that “exploded with tremendous crash in the quadrangle.”
She and the king ducked into a corridor “for fear of flying broken glass” and then scurried to an air raid shelter.
The king recalled “six bombs had been dropped.
The aircraft was seen coming straight down the Mall, having dived through the clouds and had dropped two bombs in the forecourt, two in the quadrangle, one in the chapel and the other in the garden.”
Edward’s long-distance coup failed — and he was sent to the Bahamas. The disgraced duke died in Paris in 1972.