It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Guyfriday
a reply to: pheonix358
Why and where did this whole "Nukes aren't real" thing come from? I knew someone that not only seen multiple nuclear explosions, they even saw the Hydrogen bomb get tested. If he was still alive he'd asked for whoever is spreading that idea to explain all the massive explosions he saw as well as the cancer he later got that was due to seeing those explosions.
The UN is clearly against Russia.
Now they're claiming that there are no biolabs in Ukraine supported by the US.
Well, decide for yourself.
Here are all of the Russian documents, translated in English for you...
*The Administration did not inform the Senate and House Intelligence Committees that the C.I.A. was passing intelligence to Iraq. Administration officials asserted that the program was nothing more than routine liaison between two intelligence agencies -- a generic and unscrutinized category of C.I.A. activity. Some committee aides, suspecting that the C.I.A. was shielding covert operations, tried without success in 1983 to gain jurisdiction over all liaison agreements.
*The C.I.A. also did not inform the committees that it had permitted American-made arms to be sold to Iraq. Starting in 1983, the agency also did not interfere as private American arms dealers began selling Iraq sophisticated Soviet arms purchased in Eastern Europe. One of the major arms brokers was Sarkis Soghanalian, a Lebanese-born Miami-based arms dealer who has been repeatedly linked in the last two decades to gun-running for the C.I.A. Mr. Soghanalian was convicted in Miami last fall of illegal arms trafficking to Iraq and is now awaiting sentencing.
Akio Nakatani is a Professor of Applied Mathematics and Statistics.
Between November 2017 and 26 February 2018, Russia conducted four tests of the 9M730 Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile, launched from other test sites. According to the United States intelligence community, only the flight test in November 2017 from Pankovo test site was moderately successful with all of the others ending in failure. According to Russia, none of the tests ended in failure. During recovery efforts later in 2018, Russia used three ships, one capable of handling radioactive material from the weapon nuclear core, to bring the missile tested in November 2017 from the seabed of Barents Sea back to the surface. Based on satellite images, the Nyonoksa test site copies those at Kapustin Yar and Pankovo, where 9M730 Burevestnik was tested.
originally posted by: Guyfriday
a reply to: GeauxHomeYoureDrunk
I've been thinking about it for a while now, but the explosion in Russia had me thinking;
"what if this explosion was not an accident, but was set in order to hide a yellow cake heist?"
Steal the yellow cake, blow up the base, nobody would know any the wiser. Though then the thought was, Why? Why would anyone want yellow cake if they already have a nuc? Then I remembered something a read years ago, and it started to fall into place.
Now I'm not sure of what to think about the explosion in Russia, but the idea started to drive into my head that I could be on to something with the other points. Radioactive materials, farmlands in South America, the Occult. None of it made any sense, why would the rich and powerful people in the world be into this kind of stuff?
Of course! They're trying to make a Philosophers Stone. Then the pieces really started to fit. As for the Lovecraftian styled cult, well it gives people something to excuse their insidious behaviors. They can go to their graves believing that it was all for their gods, and it gives them an excuse to sleep at night.
originally posted by: CharlesNPope
a reply to: duncanhidao
Why would Russia go crying to the UN, then? It looks like the DS will take advantage of Russia's complete lack of credibility, even in ladies figure skating.