The Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces (GRU) is reporting today that the “highly suspicious” cargo retrieved by the US from Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that had been “disappeared”
to one of the United States most secretive bases in the Indian Ocean,
Diego Garcia, was flown this past week to the White Sands Missile Range
in New Mexico where it was then destroyed in a “massive fireball.”
The GRU had previously,
reported their
“puzzlement” as to why the United States Navy
“captured and then diverted”
this Malaysia Airlines civilian aircraft from its intended flight-path
to the Diego Garcia atoll, an assessment that has subsequently been
verified by radar tracks showing the mysterious US military flights
moving about this aircraft immediately prior to its
“disappearance.” (See video below)
Flight 370, it is important to note, was already under GRU “surveillance” after it received a “highly suspicious”
cargo load that had been traced to the Indian Ocean nation Republic of
Seychelles, and where it had previously been aboard the US-flagged
container ship MV Maersk Alabama.
What first aroused GRU suspicions regarding the MV Maersk Alabama was that within 24-hours of its off-loading this “highly suspicious” cargo load bound for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the two highly-trained US Navy Seals assigned to protect it, Mark Daniel Kennedy, 43, and Jeffrey Keith Reynolds, 44, were found dead under “suspicious circumstances.”
Earlier reports
After this “highly suspicious” cargo was off loaded from MV Maersk Alabama, on 17 February, the GRU reported it was then transferred to Seychelles International Airport
where it was loaded on an Emirates flight bound for Kuala Lumpur
International Airport in Malaysia, after first stopping over in Dubai,
where it was subsequently loaded onto Flight 370 on 8 March for its
scheduled flight to Beijing.
This new GRU report says, this “highly suspicious” cargo was flown from Diego Garcia to the White Sands Missile Range
in New Mexico where it was destroyed in a 19 March explosion so massive
it stunned the residents of this region due to the massive plume of
smoke Russian munitions experts speculate was caused by US military-grade Thermate (a variation of thermite) devices.
Weather experts baffled by mystery plume on New Mexico radar near 1945 nuclear bomb test site
- There is speculation that the cloud could be the result of a weapons test
- But the U.S. has not done A-bomb tests since the Test Ban Treaty in 1992
- Plume originated from White Sands Missile Range in Socorro county
A mystery ‘storm cloud’ caught on weather
radar after erupting off a U.S. military missile testing ground in New
Mexico has left weather experts baffled.
Deepening the mystery, U.S. National
Weather Service offices in Albuquerque and El Paso have confirmed the
reading, but say they have no idea where it could have come from.
The
mysterious plume as it appeared on the radar at Plymouth State Weather
Centre as it headed toward Cannon Air Force Base. Weather experts are
baffled about where it could have come from
The plume first appeared at sunset on
Monday evening over the part of the vast White Sands Missile Range in
east Socorro county, close to the ‘Trinity Site’ where the first atomic
bomb was detonated in 1945.
It was spotted in publicly accessible
radar data by a blogger, who tracked its progress and has published his
findings in two YouTube videos and a
blog post.
He showed how the Weather Channel’s storm
identification system had detected the plume as a strong storm cell
which seemingly emerged out of nowhere on a clear night.
A second view of the plume, on the College of DuPage’s NeXt Generation Weather Lab service, showed how it appeared to burst out of a small point, like the aftermath of a massive explosion.
The plume was tracked north-east, over Cannon Air Force Base near Clovis, home of the 27th Special Operations Group, over Amarillo in north Texas and towards the Oklahoma border, where it appeared to dissipate.
A closer look at the whereabouts of the beginning of the apparent weather event showed that it emerged from the White Sands Missile Range, a site which extends to some 3,200 sq/miles across New Mexico that is used as a proving ground for the U.S. military’s ballistic missiles.
In its previous incarnation as the Alamogordo Bombing and Gunnery Range, the site played host to the ‘Trinity’ test of the world’s first atomic bomb on July 16, 1945.
In that test scientists from the Manhattan Project exploded a 20 kiloton plutonium bomb of the same kind as the Fat Man device that was a month later dropped on the Japanese city of Nagasaki, killing 40,000 people instantly.
There is as yet no evidence of a nuclear explosion. The U.S. has not official.
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