By Janet Kira Lessin & Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. | June 2025

A fiery mushroom cloud erupts over the desolate Sinai landscape as Enlil’s forces unleash nuclear devastation to prevent Marduk’s takeover. The explosion marks the beginning of Earth’s ancient atomic catastrophe.
SINAI PENINSULA— In one of the most catastrophic turning points in ancient Earth history, according to Sumerian-era accounts and modern reinterpretations of the Anunnaki legacy, a series of nuclear strikes launched by the Anunnaki commander Enlil (known to later cultures as Yahweh) devastated not only his enemies but also his people.

Ninurta hovers above the ancient spaceport, unleashing divine energy as the heavens ignite and the Earth trembles beneath his wrath.
It was a decision that would alter the course of civilization, destroy entire populations, and ultimately hand control of Earth to Enlil’s longtime rival, Marduk.
The Race for the Spaceport

A toxic sky looms over the cradle of civilization.
Green fire churns above ziggurats and canals as the fallout from Sinai darkens the land. Statues weep. Priests flee. And the gods vanish into the mist, leaving only silence behind.
The Sinai Peninsula, 2024 BCE: As tensions mounted between the warring factions of the Anunnaki—extraterrestrial beings from the planet Nibiru—Commander Enlil faced an escalating threat. Prince Marduk, son of the rebel Enki, had amassed power in Egypt and was poised to seize the Sinai Spaceport—a critical site for launching spacecraft to Nibiru.
Enlil, determined to deny Marduk access, secured authorization from King Anu and ordered his son, Ninurta, to destroy the spaceport before it could be captured.
The order was clear: total annihilation.
What followed was a coordinated nuclear assault on four primary targets:
- The rocket launch pads in Sinai
- The Enkiite-controlled region of Canaan
- The Mission Control center—near what would become Jerusalem
- The southern edge of the Salt Sea, triggering catastrophic flooding
The collateral damage included the ancient cities of Sodom, Gomorrah, and Zoar, wiped out by a wall of water and radioactive debris.
A Toxic Wind Turns North
The Enlilites expected the fallout to blow harmlessly eastward. It didn’t.
Instead, the radioactive cloud curled north over Sumer—the heartland of Enlil’s own Earthling civilization, the region we now call Iraq and Kuwait. The Anunnaki elites evacuated in time. Their workers, however—humans they had genetically uplifted and educated—were left behind.
They died in agony.
At Lagash, Princess Bau, Ninurta’s consort, refused to flee. She stayed, administering medicine and comfort to the dying. She perished alongside them.

While the gods fled, she stayed.
Princess Bau kneels among the dying, her robes glowing softly under the swirling fallout sky. Stone pillars crumble, the river runs green, and the heavens mourn—but Bau’s presence brings grace to the end.

Marduk had seen it coming. Anticipating the worst, he built fallout shelters for his people. He also advised his ally, King Yima, in what is now Turkey, to construct underground bunkers—the most famous of which may still lie beneath Derinkuyu.
His capital, Babylon, was spared. Its position north of the fallout path kept it untouched.
With Enlil’s reputation shattered and much of Sumer a radioactive wasteland, Marduk emerged as the sole remaining power on Earth. Even Enlil had to concede that an old vision—delivered long ago by the mysterious emissary Galzu—was coming true: Marduk would rule Earth.
Seventy years after the holocaust, the title of “Foremost God” officially passed from Enlil to Ra-Marduk.

A Dispersal, Not an Ending

But not all Anunnaki returned to Nibiru. After relocating the Earth-Nibiru communicator to the Sun Pyramid at Teotihuacan, Enlil and other high-ranking Anunnaki used Adad’s spaceport in Nazca to begin their departure. Some fled Earth entirely. Others scattered across the planet, bringing their knowledge—and their rivalries—with them.
Marduk’s allies, the Aryans, expanded outward. They conquered lands to the east and west, enforcing a racial supremacy that has echoed through millennia and remains embedded in modern ideologies.
The Silence After the Storm

What began as a cold calculation to deny a rival his launchpad ended in mass extinction—and an unplanned transfer of power.
Enlil’s bombs did stop Marduk’s immediate advance. But they cost him everything else: his cities, his people, his future.
And the god who had once claimed moral superiority by enforcing the Flood to punish human sin now stood accused—by history, perhaps even by his own conscience-of an even greater crime.
The heavens did not weep. They watched, silent, as the smoke rose over what remained of Eden.

Atop the Sun Pyramid, light bridges two worlds.
As Anunnaki stand in ritual formation, a crystal device ignites, sending radiant signals skyward from Earth’s sacred geometry. The past and future converge in one mythic transmission.

From the mountains of the north, the sun-marked legions march.
Under banners of celestial power, the Aryan warrior-priests ride through sacred gates into history. Their conquest spreads the Anunnaki legacy—and its shadow—across the Earth.
ENLIL NUKED SPACEPORT TO DENY IT TO MARDUK; FALLOUT KILLED ENLIL’S EARTHLINGS IN IRAQ & LEFT MARDUK AS EARTH’S KING
From ANUNNAKI, GODS NO MORE By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA) & Janet Kira Lessin (CEO, Aquarian Media)

The nuclear storm did not blow far enough north to destroy Babylon, Marduk’s city in Sumer. “By the darkening of the skies were the brilliances followed, then a storm began to blow, gloom from the skies an Evil Wind carried. From the Upper Sea, a storm wind began blowing, and the dark-brown cloud eastward toward Sumer carried the death. Where it reached, death to all that lives mercilessly, it delivered. “The alarm Enlil and Enki transmitted to the gods of Sumer was ‘Escape.’ From their cities, the gods did flee.”
Enki managed to evacuate his followers from Eridu in Sumer before the nuclear storm destroyed them. Marduk anticipated an attack and built fallout shelters for them and advised his ally, King Yima, in Turkey to build underground shelters too (Yima built Derinkuyu. Babylon, north of the radioactive storm, “where Marduk, in his supremacy, was spared by the Evil Wind.”
Enlil concluded that the disaster had fulfilled the prophetic vision he’d had of Galzu: Marduk would achieve supremacy on Earth. Anu and Enlil officially declared “the title of Foremost God, the Enlil-ship, passed over to Ra-Marduk 70 years after the nuclear holocaust that Anu, Enlil, Ninurta, and Nergal unleashed.”
Enlil relocated the Earth-to-Nibiru communicator (Bond-Heaven-Earth) to the Sun Pyramid Ningishzidda, which was designed in Teotihuacan, Mexico.
For the next 80 years, most Anunnaki on Earth first went to Adad’s spaceport at Nazca, then returned to Nibiru in rockets.
Some, however, “dispersed from Sumer with their followers to lands in the far corners of the Earth; others remained nearby and rallied their supporters to a renewed challenge to Marduk.”

Beneath twin skies and golden towers, the Aryan legions surge outward.
Armored in prophecy and driven by celestial order, the warrior-priests ride forth through monumental gateways etched with divine symbols. The sun and moon bear witness as the empire’s reach begins.
Marduk’s “extended family in Northern Sumer, the Aryans, invaded the lands to the east and Europe to the west, conquering humans everywhere and imposing their Aryan supremacy, which, to this day, persists.”



