Iranian Missile Development Head Kill In Bombing
Videographer Just Happened To Be Taping At The Moment
By Dell Hill via Ace
Rather
than mount an all-out preemptive attack on Iran, it appears that Israel
has decided to destroy as much of the Iranian military as possible with
clandestine attacks. Of course they’ll never admit that the Mossad was
even involved, but it seems rather apparent, as Ace explains.
Iran's Head of Missile Development Dies of "Zucotti Pud" and Mossad Bomb But Mostly Mossad Bomb
You ever notice that Muslims never want to credit the Jews with the conspiracies they really are behind?
Marilyn Monroe? Oh yeah, Jews killed her.
Pwning Iran's missile program? "Ammunition malfunction."
Brigadier
General Hassan Moghaddam was said to be "responsible for industrial
research aimed at ensuring self-sufficiency of the Revolutionary Guards'
armaments", a coded way of confirming reports that he was responsible
for its missile inventory.
The
authorities claimed the explosion was caused by an accident which
happened as ammunition was being moved, but the high-profile status of
its main victim will add to speculation that it was an act of sabotage
aimed at the country's nuclear weapons programme.
One
US-based commentator known to have good sources in Israel's military
community said he had been told it was carried out by Mossad,
co-operating with an exile group, the People's Mojaheddin of Iran (MEK).
He
drew comparisons with an explosion at a base housing Shahab-3
long-range missiles just over a year ago, which killed 18 people and
which was also put down by the authorities to a fire in an ammunition
depot.
Amateur video of the blast's aftermath past the jump.
Iran is admitting they've been hit by Stuxnet II, called Duqu.
For
the first time, Iran admitted on Sunday that it had been on the
receiving end of a new cyber attack by the Duqu computer virus that
allegedly targeted computers of firms in the Islamic Republic.
Speaking
with the official IRNA news agency, head of Iranian civil defense
Brigadier General Gholamreza Jalali said that Tehran had developed a
software to thwart attacks by the Duqu virus, adding that the "software
to control the [Duqu] virus has been developed and made available to
organizations and corporations" in Iran.”
I know it’s hard to believe, but an amateur videographer just happened to be on hand to record the aftermath of this explosion.
No comments:
Post a Comment