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#explosives — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #explosives, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The Rainbow Warrior Affair
    #Nuclear #Power, State #Secrecy, and the Slow Machinery of #Truth

    On the night of July 10, 1985, the #harbor of #Auckland, New Zealand, looked calm. The water reflected the city lights. Crew members aboard the #Greenpeace ship #Rainbow Warrior were asleep after a long day of preparations. Nothing suggested that a Western #democracy was about to launch a covert #military #operation against a civilian vessel.

    Then the #explosions came.

    Within minutes, the #ship sank into the dark harbor water. One man died: photographer Fernando #Pereira. What initially looked like #sabotage soon evolved into one of the most revealing #intelligence #scandals of the Cold #War.

    The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior was not only an #attack on a ship. It was an attack on visibility itself. Greenpeace wanted to bring cameras, journalists, and public attention to French nuclear testing in the #Pacific. #France wanted silence.

    The #conflict between those two goals shaped everything that followed.

    The Nuclear #Logic of the Cold War
    To understand act of #terrorism, one must first understand the political #psychology of nuclear powers during the Cold War.

    After the United States used atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, nuclear weapons became symbols of strategic prestige and geopolitical survival. Possessing the bomb meant entering an exclusive club of global influence. France joined that club in 1960 under President Charles de Gaulle.

    For French political elites, nuclear independence was not merely military policy. It became part of national identity. France viewed its nuclear deterrent — the force de frappe — as proof that the country remained a sovereign world power independent from both #Washington and #Moscow.

    But nuclear #weapons require testing.

    France first conducted tests in colonial #Algeria. After Algerian independence in 1962, Paris moved its testing program to French #Polynesia, especially the #Mururoa and #Fangataufa #atolls in the Pacific #Ocean.

    To #Paris, these remote islands seemed strategically ideal.

    To environmental activists, they became symbols of colonial #arrogance and ecological #violence.

    Greenpeace emerged directly from this historical moment. Founded in #Vancouver in 1971, the #organization pioneered a new form of political #activism: media-centered confrontation. Instead of fighting states militarily, Greenpeace used images, ships, and public spectacle. Activists understood that modern #politics increasingly depended on #television and emotional #symbolism.

    In this sense, the Rainbow Warrior was more than a ship. It was a floating camera and cameras threaten secrecy.

    Why France Saw Greenpeace as a Strategic #Threat
    By 1985, Greenpeace planned to protest French nuclear testing directly at Mururoa Atoll. The Rainbow Warrior was expected to transport activists and assist Pacific #island communities opposing the tests.

    French intelligence services feared international humiliation.

    This fear is important. Governments rarely conduct covert operations because they are physically weak. They do so because they fear symbolic weakness. Nuclear powers depend heavily on credibility, prestige, and deterrence. In the logic of Cold War #geopolitics, allowing activists to disrupt military testing risked projecting vulnerability.

    The French external intelligence service, the #DGSE (Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure), therefore received orders to neutralize the ship.

    The operation was given the #codename Opération Satanique.

    The name itself reveals the strange theatricality often surrounding covert operations. Intelligence agencies frequently cloak violence in bureaucratic language, technical terminology, or symbolic code names. Such language creates psychological distance between planners and consequences.

    It transforms people into “targets.” Ships into “objectives.” Deaths into “collateral effects.”

    The Architecture of a Covert Operation
    The attack on the Rainbow Warrior was sophisticated but not flawless.

    French agents entered New Zealand under false identities. Combat divers secretly attached limpet mines to the hull of the ship while undercover operatives monitored the harbor area. Another agent, Christine #Cabon, infiltrated Greenpeace itself months before the bombing. Posing as a volunteer, she gathered internal information and transmitted it to Paris.

    The operation reveals four classic mechanisms of covert state power:

    1. #Infiltration
    Intelligence agencies often penetrate organizations by exploiting openness and trust. Greenpeace depended heavily on volunteers. That #vulnerability allowed Cabon to enter the group with relative ease.

    The strategy resembles modern #cyberwarfare. Instead of hacking computers, intelligence services inserted a human being into the system.

    2. Plausible Deniability
    Operations are designed so political leaders can deny direct involvement. Orders are often transmitted orally. Written evidence remains minimal.

    This structure creates distance between decision-makers and operational violence.

    In public, leaders appear uninvolved. In private, command chains remain understood.

    3. Controlled Narratives
    After the bombing, French officials denied responsibility. #Defense Minister Charles #Hernu publicly insisted that no French service had carried out the attack.

    The first official investigations minimized state involvement.

    Such reactions are common after intelligence scandals. Governments initially attempt to control information flow long enough to stabilize political damage. Historians repeatedly encounter this pattern across different countries and eras.

    4. Sacrificial Containment
    When #evidence becomes overwhelming, lower-ranking officials are often sacrificed to protect higher political #authority.

    In the Rainbow Warrior #affair, DGSE chief Pierre #Lacoste and Defense Minister Hernu lost their positions. President François #Mitterrand, however, remained politically untouched and won reelection in 1988.

    The structure resembles a firewall in computer systems: expendable layers absorb damage before it reaches the center.

    The #Mistake That #Broke the #Operation
    Despite careful planning, the operation failed because of an almost banal #error.

    Witnesses observed suspicious activity near a rented van and noted its license plate number. This small #observation enabled New Zealand investigators to identify two French operatives: Alain #Mafart and Dominique #Prieur.

    Their arrest transformed the bombing from #rumor into #international #crisis.

    New Zealand reacted with unusual determination. Prime Minister David Lange rejected French attempts to frame the affair as a regrettable misunderstanding. He insisted that state #terrorism had occurred on New Zealand soil.

    His response mattered historically because it challenged a powerful Western ally publicly and directly. Small states rarely confront nuclear powers successfully. New Zealand did.

    The Long Silence Around François Mitterrand
    The central mystery persisted for years:

    Did #President François Mitterrand personally #authorize the operation?

    For a long time, the answer remained hidden behind silence.

    Mitterrand refused detailed public discussion of the affair. This #silence itself became politically effective. Modern #media systems often reward emotional immediacy. But silence can outlast outrage. News cycles move on. Public attention fragments.

    Mitterrand understood this dynamic well. He remained silent until his death.

    Only years later did former DGSE director Pierre Lacoste reveal critical details in his memoir Un Amiral au Secret. Lacoste stated that he had received presidential approval for the operation during a meeting with Mitterrand in May 1985.

    This delayed revelation illustrates a central challenge in intelligence history:

    Truth often emerges only after institutions lose control over memory.

    Retired officials write memoirs. Classified archives slowly open. Participants age. Political loyalties weaken.

    #History is frequently reconstructed backward, fragment by fragment, like archaeologists rebuilding a shattered statue from scattered pieces.

    Fernando Pereira and the Politics of #Witnessing
    At the #moral center of the story stands Fernando Pereira.

    His #death transformed the operation from sabotage into #tragedy.

    Pereira returned below deck to recover his photographic equipment after the first explosion. In doing so, he demonstrated a principle central to both journalism and activism: evidence matters.

    Without documentation, suffering becomes abstract. Without images, distant violence remains politically invisible.

    This explains why authoritarian systems and covert operations so often target journalists, photographers, and witnesses. Cameras challenge monopoly over #narrative.

    The Rainbow Warrior affair therefore was never simply about one ship. It was about who controls #reality in the public #imagination.

    Greenpeace sought exposure. The French state sought containment.

    One side used cameras. The other used #explosives.

    Why the Affair Still Matters
    The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior remains historically significant because it exposed uncomfortable truths about democratic governments and covert violence.

    The affair demonstrated that even liberal democracies can authorize illegal operations when strategic interests feel threatened. It revealed how intelligence agencies rely on secrecy, infiltration, deniability, and narrative management. It also showed how difficult accountability becomes once national #security enters political discourse.

    Most importantly, the case demonstrated that truth emerges slowly.

    Not in dramatic cinematic revelations. Not through a single leaked document. But through decades of persistence by investigators, journalists, historians, witnesses, and former participants.

    The Rainbow Warrior sank in #Auckland Harbor in 1985. But the deeper story surfaced much later.

    #conspiracy #press #journalism #terror #military #crime #justice #democracy #fail #guilty

  2. The Rainbow Warrior Affair
    #Nuclear #Power, State #Secrecy, and the Slow Machinery of #Truth

    On the night of July 10, 1985, the #harbor of #Auckland, New Zealand, looked calm. The water reflected the city lights. Crew members aboard the #Greenpeace ship #Rainbow Warrior were asleep after a long day of preparations. Nothing suggested that a Western #democracy was about to launch a covert #military #operation against a civilian vessel.

    Then the #explosions came.

    Within minutes, the #ship sank into the dark harbor water. One man died: photographer Fernando #Pereira. What initially looked like #sabotage soon evolved into one of the most revealing #intelligence #scandals of the Cold #War.

    The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior was not only an #attack on a ship. It was an attack on visibility itself. Greenpeace wanted to bring cameras, journalists, and public attention to French nuclear testing in the #Pacific. #France wanted silence.

    The #conflict between those two goals shaped everything that followed.

    The Nuclear #Logic of the Cold War
    To understand act of #terrorism, one must first understand the political #psychology of nuclear powers during the Cold War.

    After the United States used atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, nuclear weapons became symbols of strategic prestige and geopolitical survival. Possessing the bomb meant entering an exclusive club of global influence. France joined that club in 1960 under President Charles de Gaulle.

    For French political elites, nuclear independence was not merely military policy. It became part of national identity. France viewed its nuclear deterrent — the force de frappe — as proof that the country remained a sovereign world power independent from both #Washington and #Moscow.

    But nuclear #weapons require testing.

    France first conducted tests in colonial #Algeria. After Algerian independence in 1962, Paris moved its testing program to French #Polynesia, especially the #Mururoa and #Fangataufa #atolls in the Pacific #Ocean.

    To #Paris, these remote islands seemed strategically ideal.

    To environmental activists, they became symbols of colonial #arrogance and ecological #violence.

    Greenpeace emerged directly from this historical moment. Founded in #Vancouver in 1971, the #organization pioneered a new form of political #activism: media-centered confrontation. Instead of fighting states militarily, Greenpeace used images, ships, and public spectacle. Activists understood that modern #politics increasingly depended on #television and emotional #symbolism.

    In this sense, the Rainbow Warrior was more than a ship. It was a floating camera and cameras threaten secrecy.

    Why France Saw Greenpeace as a Strategic #Threat
    By 1985, Greenpeace planned to protest French nuclear testing directly at Mururoa Atoll. The Rainbow Warrior was expected to transport activists and assist Pacific #island communities opposing the tests.

    French intelligence services feared international humiliation.

    This fear is important. Governments rarely conduct covert operations because they are physically weak. They do so because they fear symbolic weakness. Nuclear powers depend heavily on credibility, prestige, and deterrence. In the logic of Cold War #geopolitics, allowing activists to disrupt military testing risked projecting vulnerability.

    The French external intelligence service, the #DGSE (Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure), therefore received orders to neutralize the ship.

    The operation was given the #codename Opération Satanique.

    The name itself reveals the strange theatricality often surrounding covert operations. Intelligence agencies frequently cloak violence in bureaucratic language, technical terminology, or symbolic code names. Such language creates psychological distance between planners and consequences.

    It transforms people into “targets.” Ships into “objectives.” Deaths into “collateral effects.”

    The Architecture of a Covert Operation
    The attack on the Rainbow Warrior was sophisticated but not flawless.

    French agents entered New Zealand under false identities. Combat divers secretly attached limpet mines to the hull of the ship while undercover operatives monitored the harbor area. Another agent, Christine #Cabon, infiltrated Greenpeace itself months before the bombing. Posing as a volunteer, she gathered internal information and transmitted it to Paris.

    The operation reveals four classic mechanisms of covert state power:

    1. #Infiltration
    Intelligence agencies often penetrate organizations by exploiting openness and trust. Greenpeace depended heavily on volunteers. That #vulnerability allowed Cabon to enter the group with relative ease.

    The strategy resembles modern #cyberwarfare. Instead of hacking computers, intelligence services inserted a human being into the system.

    2. Plausible Deniability
    Operations are designed so political leaders can deny direct involvement. Orders are often transmitted orally. Written evidence remains minimal.

    This structure creates distance between decision-makers and operational violence.

    In public, leaders appear uninvolved. In private, command chains remain understood.

    3. Controlled Narratives
    After the bombing, French officials denied responsibility. #Defense Minister Charles #Hernu publicly insisted that no French service had carried out the attack.

    The first official investigations minimized state involvement.

    Such reactions are common after intelligence scandals. Governments initially attempt to control information flow long enough to stabilize political damage. Historians repeatedly encounter this pattern across different countries and eras.

    4. Sacrificial Containment
    When #evidence becomes overwhelming, lower-ranking officials are often sacrificed to protect higher political #authority.

    In the Rainbow Warrior #affair, DGSE chief Pierre #Lacoste and Defense Minister Hernu lost their positions. President François #Mitterrand, however, remained politically untouched and won reelection in 1988.

    The structure resembles a firewall in computer systems: expendable layers absorb damage before it reaches the center.

    The #Mistake That #Broke the #Operation
    Despite careful planning, the operation failed because of an almost banal #error.

    Witnesses observed suspicious activity near a rented van and noted its license plate number. This small #observation enabled New Zealand investigators to identify two French operatives: Alain #Mafart and Dominique #Prieur.

    Their arrest transformed the bombing from #rumor into #international #crisis.

    New Zealand reacted with unusual determination. Prime Minister David Lange rejected French attempts to frame the affair as a regrettable misunderstanding. He insisted that state #terrorism had occurred on New Zealand soil.

    His response mattered historically because it challenged a powerful Western ally publicly and directly. Small states rarely confront nuclear powers successfully. New Zealand did.

    The Long Silence Around François Mitterrand
    The central mystery persisted for years:

    Did #President François Mitterrand personally #authorize the operation?

    For a long time, the answer remained hidden behind silence.

    Mitterrand refused detailed public discussion of the affair. This #silence itself became politically effective. Modern #media systems often reward emotional immediacy. But silence can outlast outrage. News cycles move on. Public attention fragments.

    Mitterrand understood this dynamic well. He remained silent until his death.

    Only years later did former DGSE director Pierre Lacoste reveal critical details in his memoir Un Amiral au Secret. Lacoste stated that he had received presidential approval for the operation during a meeting with Mitterrand in May 1985.

    This delayed revelation illustrates a central challenge in intelligence history:

    Truth often emerges only after institutions lose control over memory.

    Retired officials write memoirs. Classified archives slowly open. Participants age. Political loyalties weaken.

    #History is frequently reconstructed backward, fragment by fragment, like archaeologists rebuilding a shattered statue from scattered pieces.

    Fernando Pereira and the Politics of #Witnessing
    At the #moral center of the story stands Fernando Pereira.

    His #death transformed the operation from sabotage into #tragedy.

    Pereira returned below deck to recover his photographic equipment after the first explosion. In doing so, he demonstrated a principle central to both journalism and activism: evidence matters.

    Without documentation, suffering becomes abstract. Without images, distant violence remains politically invisible.

    This explains why authoritarian systems and covert operations so often target journalists, photographers, and witnesses. Cameras challenge monopoly over #narrative.

    The Rainbow Warrior affair therefore was never simply about one ship. It was about who controls #reality in the public #imagination.

    Greenpeace sought exposure. The French state sought containment.

    One side used cameras. The other used #explosives.

    Why the Affair Still Matters
    The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior remains historically significant because it exposed uncomfortable truths about democratic governments and covert violence.

    The affair demonstrated that even liberal democracies can authorize illegal operations when strategic interests feel threatened. It revealed how intelligence agencies rely on secrecy, infiltration, deniability, and narrative management. It also showed how difficult accountability becomes once national #security enters political discourse.

    Most importantly, the case demonstrated that truth emerges slowly.

    Not in dramatic cinematic revelations. Not through a single leaked document. But through decades of persistence by investigators, journalists, historians, witnesses, and former participants.

    The Rainbow Warrior sank in #Auckland Harbor in 1985. But the deeper story surfaced much later.

    #conspiracy #press #journalism #terror #military #crime #justice #democracy #fail #guilty

  3. The Rainbow Warrior Affair
    #Nuclear #Power, State #Secrecy, and the Slow Machinery of #Truth

    On the night of July 10, 1985, the #harbor of #Auckland, New Zealand, looked calm. The water reflected the city lights. Crew members aboard the #Greenpeace ship #Rainbow Warrior were asleep after a long day of preparations. Nothing suggested that a Western #democracy was about to launch a covert #military #operation against a civilian vessel.

    Then the #explosions came.

    Within minutes, the #ship sank into the dark harbor water. One man died: photographer Fernando #Pereira. What initially looked like #sabotage soon evolved into one of the most revealing #intelligence #scandals of the Cold #War.

    The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior was not only an #attack on a ship. It was an attack on visibility itself. Greenpeace wanted to bring cameras, journalists, and public attention to French nuclear testing in the #Pacific. #France wanted silence.

    The #conflict between those two goals shaped everything that followed.

    The Nuclear #Logic of the Cold War
    To understand act of #terrorism, one must first understand the political #psychology of nuclear powers during the Cold War.

    After the United States used atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, nuclear weapons became symbols of strategic prestige and geopolitical survival. Possessing the bomb meant entering an exclusive club of global influence. France joined that club in 1960 under President Charles de Gaulle.

    For French political elites, nuclear independence was not merely military policy. It became part of national identity. France viewed its nuclear deterrent — the force de frappe — as proof that the country remained a sovereign world power independent from both #Washington and #Moscow.

    But nuclear #weapons require testing.

    France first conducted tests in colonial #Algeria. After Algerian independence in 1962, Paris moved its testing program to French #Polynesia, especially the #Mururoa and #Fangataufa #atolls in the Pacific #Ocean.

    To #Paris, these remote islands seemed strategically ideal.

    To environmental activists, they became symbols of colonial #arrogance and ecological #violence.

    Greenpeace emerged directly from this historical moment. Founded in #Vancouver in 1971, the #organization pioneered a new form of political #activism: media-centered confrontation. Instead of fighting states militarily, Greenpeace used images, ships, and public spectacle. Activists understood that modern #politics increasingly depended on #television and emotional #symbolism.

    In this sense, the Rainbow Warrior was more than a ship. It was a floating camera and cameras threaten secrecy.

    Why France Saw Greenpeace as a Strategic #Threat
    By 1985, Greenpeace planned to protest French nuclear testing directly at Mururoa Atoll. The Rainbow Warrior was expected to transport activists and assist Pacific #island communities opposing the tests.

    French intelligence services feared international humiliation.

    This fear is important. Governments rarely conduct covert operations because they are physically weak. They do so because they fear symbolic weakness. Nuclear powers depend heavily on credibility, prestige, and deterrence. In the logic of Cold War #geopolitics, allowing activists to disrupt military testing risked projecting vulnerability.

    The French external intelligence service, the #DGSE (Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure), therefore received orders to neutralize the ship.

    The operation was given the #codename Opération Satanique.

    The name itself reveals the strange theatricality often surrounding covert operations. Intelligence agencies frequently cloak violence in bureaucratic language, technical terminology, or symbolic code names. Such language creates psychological distance between planners and consequences.

    It transforms people into “targets.” Ships into “objectives.” Deaths into “collateral effects.”

    The Architecture of a Covert Operation
    The attack on the Rainbow Warrior was sophisticated but not flawless.

    French agents entered New Zealand under false identities. Combat divers secretly attached limpet mines to the hull of the ship while undercover operatives monitored the harbor area. Another agent, Christine #Cabon, infiltrated Greenpeace itself months before the bombing. Posing as a volunteer, she gathered internal information and transmitted it to Paris.

    The operation reveals four classic mechanisms of covert state power:

    1. #Infiltration
    Intelligence agencies often penetrate organizations by exploiting openness and trust. Greenpeace depended heavily on volunteers. That #vulnerability allowed Cabon to enter the group with relative ease.

    The strategy resembles modern #cyberwarfare. Instead of hacking computers, intelligence services inserted a human being into the system.

    2. Plausible Deniability
    Operations are designed so political leaders can deny direct involvement. Orders are often transmitted orally. Written evidence remains minimal.

    This structure creates distance between decision-makers and operational violence.

    In public, leaders appear uninvolved. In private, command chains remain understood.

    3. Controlled Narratives
    After the bombing, French officials denied responsibility. #Defense Minister Charles #Hernu publicly insisted that no French service had carried out the attack.

    The first official investigations minimized state involvement.

    Such reactions are common after intelligence scandals. Governments initially attempt to control information flow long enough to stabilize political damage. Historians repeatedly encounter this pattern across different countries and eras.

    4. Sacrificial Containment
    When #evidence becomes overwhelming, lower-ranking officials are often sacrificed to protect higher political #authority.

    In the Rainbow Warrior #affair, DGSE chief Pierre #Lacoste and Defense Minister Hernu lost their positions. President François #Mitterrand, however, remained politically untouched and won reelection in 1988.

    The structure resembles a firewall in computer systems: expendable layers absorb damage before it reaches the center.

    The #Mistake That #Broke the #Operation
    Despite careful planning, the operation failed because of an almost banal #error.

    Witnesses observed suspicious activity near a rented van and noted its license plate number. This small #observation enabled New Zealand investigators to identify two French operatives: Alain #Mafart and Dominique #Prieur.

    Their arrest transformed the bombing from #rumor into #international #crisis.

    New Zealand reacted with unusual determination. Prime Minister David Lange rejected French attempts to frame the affair as a regrettable misunderstanding. He insisted that state #terrorism had occurred on New Zealand soil.

    His response mattered historically because it challenged a powerful Western ally publicly and directly. Small states rarely confront nuclear powers successfully. New Zealand did.

    The Long Silence Around François Mitterrand
    The central mystery persisted for years:

    Did #President François Mitterrand personally #authorize the operation?

    For a long time, the answer remained hidden behind silence.

    Mitterrand refused detailed public discussion of the affair. This #silence itself became politically effective. Modern #media systems often reward emotional immediacy. But silence can outlast outrage. News cycles move on. Public attention fragments.

    Mitterrand understood this dynamic well. He remained silent until his death.

    Only years later did former DGSE director Pierre Lacoste reveal critical details in his memoir Un Amiral au Secret. Lacoste stated that he had received presidential approval for the operation during a meeting with Mitterrand in May 1985.

    This delayed revelation illustrates a central challenge in intelligence history:

    Truth often emerges only after institutions lose control over memory.

    Retired officials write memoirs. Classified archives slowly open. Participants age. Political loyalties weaken.

    #History is frequently reconstructed backward, fragment by fragment, like archaeologists rebuilding a shattered statue from scattered pieces.

    Fernando Pereira and the Politics of #Witnessing
    At the #moral center of the story stands Fernando Pereira.

    His #death transformed the operation from sabotage into #tragedy.

    Pereira returned below deck to recover his photographic equipment after the first explosion. In doing so, he demonstrated a principle central to both journalism and activism: evidence matters.

    Without documentation, suffering becomes abstract. Without images, distant violence remains politically invisible.

    This explains why authoritarian systems and covert operations so often target journalists, photographers, and witnesses. Cameras challenge monopoly over #narrative.

    The Rainbow Warrior affair therefore was never simply about one ship. It was about who controls #reality in the public #imagination.

    Greenpeace sought exposure. The French state sought containment.

    One side used cameras. The other used #explosives.

    Why the Affair Still Matters
    The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior remains historically significant because it exposed uncomfortable truths about democratic governments and covert violence.

    The affair demonstrated that even liberal democracies can authorize illegal operations when strategic interests feel threatened. It revealed how intelligence agencies rely on secrecy, infiltration, deniability, and narrative management. It also showed how difficult accountability becomes once national #security enters political discourse.

    Most importantly, the case demonstrated that truth emerges slowly.

    Not in dramatic cinematic revelations. Not through a single leaked document. But through decades of persistence by investigators, journalists, historians, witnesses, and former participants.

    The Rainbow Warrior sank in #Auckland Harbor in 1985. But the deeper story surfaced much later.

    #conspiracy #press #journalism #terror #military #crime #justice #democracy #fail #guilty

  4. ... Main #Missile and #Artillery #Directorate of the Russian Defense Ministry near #Yekaterinburg, an #explosives production enterprise in #Bryansk region, #oil #refinery in #Perm and military sites in #Groznyi, #Chechnya. Putin`s #air #defence and regime collapsing.

    #Ukraine #russia #russoUkrainianWar

    youtu.be/HlKPAl86C3M

    You can always buy me a coffee for more video projects to come:
    ☕️ buymeacoffee.com/AnnafromUkrai
    or become my patron:
    🇺🇦 patreon.com/AnnafromUkraine

    2/2

  5. ... Main #Missile and #Artillery #Directorate of the Russian Defense Ministry near #Yekaterinburg, an #explosives production enterprise in #Bryansk region, #oil #refinery in #Perm and military sites in #Groznyi, #Chechnya. Putin`s #air #defence and regime collapsing.

    #Ukraine #russia #russoUkrainianWar

    youtu.be/HlKPAl86C3M

    You can always buy me a coffee for more video projects to come:
    ☕️ buymeacoffee.com/AnnafromUkrai
    or become my patron:
    🇺🇦 patreon.com/AnnafromUkraine

    2/2

  6. ... Main #Missile and #Artillery #Directorate of the Russian Defense Ministry near #Yekaterinburg, an #explosives production enterprise in #Bryansk region, #oil #refinery in #Perm and military sites in #Groznyi, #Chechnya. Putin`s #air #defence and regime collapsing.

    #Ukraine #russia #russoUkrainianWar

    youtu.be/HlKPAl86C3M

    You can always buy me a coffee for more video projects to come:
    ☕️ buymeacoffee.com/AnnafromUkrai
    or become my patron:
    🇺🇦 patreon.com/AnnafromUkraine

    2/2

  7. ... Main #Missile and #Artillery #Directorate of the Russian Defense Ministry near #Yekaterinburg, an #explosives production enterprise in #Bryansk region, #oil #refinery in #Perm and military sites in #Groznyi, #Chechnya. Putin`s #air #defence and regime collapsing.

    #Ukraine #russia #russoUkrainianWar

    youtu.be/HlKPAl86C3M

    You can always buy me a coffee for more video projects to come:
    ☕️ buymeacoffee.com/AnnafromUkrai
    or become my patron:
    🇺🇦 patreon.com/AnnafromUkraine

    2/2

  8. ... Main #Missile and #Artillery #Directorate of the Russian Defense Ministry near #Yekaterinburg, an #explosives production enterprise in #Bryansk region, #oil #refinery in #Perm and military sites in #Groznyi, #Chechnya. Putin`s #air #defence and regime collapsing.

    #Ukraine #russia #russoUkrainianWar

    youtu.be/HlKPAl86C3M

    You can always buy me a coffee for more video projects to come:
    ☕️ buymeacoffee.com/AnnafromUkrai
    or become my patron:
    🇺🇦 patreon.com/AnnafromUkraine

    2/2

  9. Mystery drone boat ‘armed with explosives’ discovered in Greece | World | News

    A drone boat believed to be carrying explosives has been rendered safe after fishermen discovered it in Greek…
    #Greece #GR #Europe #Europa #EU #Droneboat #drones #explosives #greece #Greekislands #Greekwaters #Ελλάδα #νεα
    europesays.com/2977826/

  10. 🟡 Explosives Seizure | 6/10
    🇨🇴

    Colombia seizes largest FARC explosives factory
    The Third Division of the Colombian Army has located one of the largest improvised explosive factories linked to the Carlos Patiño structure, which belongs to the EMC faction of FARC remnants. During the operation, military forces seized 150 kilograms of explosives. This facility is considered one of the most significant among illegal armed groups in the region. The factory was likely used to supply terrorist attacks and sabotage operations. The seizure of such a large quantity of explosives significantly weakens the group's combat capabilities.

    #OSINT #NewsGroup #Colombia #FARC #Explosives

  11. 🟡 Explosives Seizure | 6/10
    🇨🇴

    Colombia seizes largest FARC explosives factory
    The Third Division of the Colombian Army has located one of the largest improvised explosive factories linked to the Carlos Patiño structure, which belongs to the EMC faction of FARC remnants. During the operation, military forces seized 150 kilograms of explosives. This facility is considered one of the most significant among illegal armed groups in the region. The factory was likely used to supply terrorist attacks and sabotage operations. The seizure of such a large quantity of explosives significantly weakens the group's combat capabilities.

    #OSINT #NewsGroup #Colombia #FARC #Explosives

  12. 🟡 Explosives Seizure | 6/10
    🇨🇴

    Colombia seizes largest FARC explosives factory
    The Third Division of the Colombian Army has located one of the largest improvised explosive factories linked to the Carlos Patiño structure, which belongs to the EMC faction of FARC remnants. During the operation, military forces seized 150 kilograms of explosives. This facility is considered one of the most significant among illegal armed groups in the region. The factory was likely used to supply terrorist attacks and sabotage operations. The seizure of such a large quantity of explosives significantly weakens the group's combat capabilities.

    #OSINT #NewsGroup #Colombia #FARC #Explosives

  13. 🟡 Explosive Neutralization | 7/10
    🇨🇴

    Colombia: 600 kg of explosives neutralized in Cauca sewers
    Colombian Armed Forces reported the discovery and neutralization of six cylinders containing approximately 600 kilograms of ammonium nitrate-based explosives. The dangerous cache was found in the sewer system near the rural area of La Loma, in the municipality of Piendamó, Cauca department. The operation was conducted as part of ongoing countermeasures against FARC dissident groups. The explosives were reportedly intended for terrorist attacks targeting civilians and infrastructure. Timely intervention by security forces prevented a potential large-scale tragedy.

    #OSINT #NewsGroup #Colombia #Explosives #CounterTerrorism

  14. 🟡 Explosive Neutralization | 7/10
    🇨🇴

    Colombia: 600 kg of explosives neutralized in Cauca sewers
    Colombian Armed Forces reported the discovery and neutralization of six cylinders containing approximately 600 kilograms of ammonium nitrate-based explosives. The dangerous cache was found in the sewer system near the rural area of La Loma, in the municipality of Piendamó, Cauca department. The operation was conducted as part of ongoing countermeasures against FARC dissident groups. The explosives were reportedly intended for terrorist attacks targeting civilians and infrastructure. Timely intervention by security forces prevented a potential large-scale tragedy.

    #OSINT #NewsGroup #Colombia #Explosives #CounterTerrorism

  15. 🟡 Explosive Neutralization | 7/10
    🇨🇴

    Colombia: 600 kg of explosives neutralized in Cauca sewers
    Colombian Armed Forces reported the discovery and neutralization of six cylinders containing approximately 600 kilograms of ammonium nitrate-based explosives. The dangerous cache was found in the sewer system near the rural area of La Loma, in the municipality of Piendamó, Cauca department. The operation was conducted as part of ongoing countermeasures against FARC dissident groups. The explosives were reportedly intended for terrorist attacks targeting civilians and infrastructure. Timely intervention by security forces prevented a potential large-scale tragedy.

    #OSINT #NewsGroup #Colombia #Explosives #CounterTerrorism

  16. Explosives attack in Colombia kills more than a dozen

    At least 13 people were killed in an explosives attack in western Colombia, in violence authorities have blamed on dissidents of the FARC guerrilla group. #Colombia #violence #explosives #attack #fatalities #FARC #guerillagroup #News #Reuters #Newsfeed Read the story here: 👉 Subscribe: Keep up with the latest news from around the world: Follow Reuters on Facebook: Follow Reuters on X: Follow Reuters on Instagram:

    fllics.com/en/video/explosives

  17. Explosives attack in Colombia kills more than a dozen

    At least 13 people were killed in an explosives attack in western Colombia, in violence authorities have blamed on dissidents of the FARC guerrilla group. #Colombia #violence #explosives #attack #fatalities #FARC #guerillagroup #News #Reuters #Newsfeed Read the story here: 👉 Subscribe: Keep up with the latest news from around the world: Follow Reuters on Facebook: Follow Reuters on X: Follow Reuters on Instagram:

    fllics.com/en/video/explosives

  18. Explosives attack in Colombia kills more than a dozen

    At least 13 people were killed in an explosives attack in western Colombia, in violence authorities have blamed on dissidents of the FARC guerrilla group. #Colombia #violence #explosives #attack #fatalities #FARC #guerillagroup #News #Reuters #Newsfeed Read the story here: 👉 Subscribe: Keep up with the latest news from around the world: Follow Reuters on Facebook: Follow Reuters on X: Follow Reuters on Instagram:

    fllics.com/en/video/explosives

  19. Explosives attack in Colombia kills more than a dozen

    At least 13 people were killed in an explosives attack in western Colombia, in violence authorities have blamed on dissidents of the FARC guerrilla group. #Colombia #violence #explosives #attack #fatalities #FARC #guerillagroup #News #Reuters #Newsfeed Read the story here: 👉 Subscribe: Keep up with the latest news from around the world: Follow Reuters on Facebook: Follow Reuters on X: Follow Reuters on Instagram:

    fllics.com/en/video/explosives

  20. Explosives attack in Colombia kills more than a dozen

    At least 13 people were killed in an explosives attack in western Colombia, in violence authorities have blamed on dissidents of the FARC guerrilla group. #Colombia #violence #explosives #attack #fatalities #FARC #guerillagroup #News #Reuters #Newsfeed Read the story here: 👉 Subscribe: Keep up with the latest news from around the world: Follow Reuters on Facebook: Follow Reuters on X: Follow Reuters on Instagram:

    fllics.com/en/video/explosives

  21. Finnish personnel in a rowboat disarming a sea mine, WW2, 1944

  22. Finnish personnel in a rowboat disarming a sea mine, WW2, 1944

  23. Finnish personnel in a rowboat disarming a sea mine, WW2, 1944

  24. Sunday, June 15, 2025

    Russia transfers 50 Ukrainian children to so-called ‘rehab camp’ in Kalmykia — Trump gave Putin a 2 week deadline to consider peace in Ukraine; Instead, Russia launched more drones — Ukraine confirms drone strikes on Russian chemical plants tied to explosives production — Ukraine repatriates bodies of 1,200 citizens in latest swap with Russia … and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  25. This is *not* a "harmless nerd" with just an interest in science (and who decided to cosplay as Harry Potter for his Court date!) - its worrying it seems his involvement in racist chat *and* use of hard drugs (which can cause impulsive and irrational behaviour) was overlooked, he seemed to be concentrating on #explosives and #IEDs rather than wider science experiments. #Autism isn't an excuse for this sort of behaviour either!

    At least he's in #jail for the moment and hopefully will stay there for a while (its possible the authorities could have thwarted a worse attack on #Luton which is a very multicultural area..)

    itv.com/news/anglia/2025-10-27

  26. This is *not* a "harmless nerd" with just an interest in science (and who decided to cosplay as Harry Potter for his Court date!) - its worrying it seems his involvement in racist chat *and* use of hard drugs (which can cause impulsive and irrational behaviour) was overlooked, he seemed to be concentrating on #explosives and #IEDs rather than wider science experiments. #Autism isn't an excuse for this sort of behaviour either!

    At least he's in #jail for the moment and hopefully will stay there for a while (its possible the authorities could have thwarted a worse attack on #Luton which is a very multicultural area..)

    itv.com/news/anglia/2025-10-27

  27. This is *not* a "harmless nerd" with just an interest in science (and who decided to cosplay as Harry Potter for his Court date!) - its worrying it seems his involvement in racist chat *and* use of hard drugs (which can cause impulsive and irrational behaviour) was overlooked, he seemed to be concentrating on #explosives and #IEDs rather than wider science experiments. #Autism isn't an excuse for this sort of behaviour either!

    At least he's in #jail for the moment and hopefully will stay there for a while (its possible the authorities could have thwarted a worse attack on #Luton which is a very multicultural area..)

    itv.com/news/anglia/2025-10-27

  28. This is *not* a "harmless nerd" with just an interest in science (and who decided to cosplay as Harry Potter for his Court date!) - its worrying it seems his involvement in racist chat *and* use of hard drugs (which can cause impulsive and irrational behaviour) was overlooked, he seemed to be concentrating on #explosives and #IEDs rather than wider science experiments. #Autism isn't an excuse for this sort of behaviour either!

    At least he's in #jail for the moment and hopefully will stay there for a while (its possible the authorities could have thwarted a worse attack on #Luton which is a very multicultural area..)

    itv.com/news/anglia/2025-10-27

  29. This is *not* a "harmless nerd" with just an interest in science (and who decided to cosplay as Harry Potter for his Court date!) - its worrying it seems his involvement in racist chat *and* use of hard drugs (which can cause impulsive and irrational behaviour) was overlooked, he seemed to be concentrating on #explosives and #IEDs rather than wider science experiments. #Autism isn't an excuse for this sort of behaviour either!

    At least he's in #jail for the moment and hopefully will stay there for a while (its possible the authorities could have thwarted a worse attack on #Luton which is a very multicultural area..)

    itv.com/news/anglia/2025-10-27

  30. Wednesday, October 22, 2025

    Russia intensifying strikes on Ukraine's energy sector as Tomahawk threat fades -- Ukraine strikes Russian chemical plant with long-range Storm Shadow missiles -- Ukrainian drones launch 'massive air attack' on Russia's Bryansk -- Kyiv Independent launches holiday gift guide celebrating Ukrainian creativity ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  31. Friday, July 25, 2025

    Over 23,000 civilians, 113 children trapped in active combat zones in Donetsk Oblast — Russian glide bombs strike Kharkiv residential high-rise building, injuring at least 41 — Marjorie Taylor Greene is spreading lies about Ukraine’s protests. Russia is taking note — Georgian-Ukrainian music festival ICKPA returns to Kyiv amid shared resistance to Russian imperialism … and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  32. Wednesday, October 22, 2025

    Russia intensifying strikes on Ukraine's energy sector as Tomahawk threat fades -- Ukraine strikes Russian chemical plant with long-range Storm Shadow missiles -- Ukrainian drones launch 'massive air attack' on Russia's Bryansk -- Kyiv Independent launches holiday gift guide celebrating Ukrainian creativity ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  33. Wednesday, October 22, 2025

    Russia intensifying strikes on Ukraine's energy sector as Tomahawk threat fades -- Ukraine strikes Russian chemical plant with long-range Storm Shadow missiles -- Ukrainian drones launch 'massive air attack' on Russia's Bryansk -- Kyiv Independent launches holiday gift guide celebrating Ukrainian creativity ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  34. Wednesday, October 22, 2025

    Russia intensifying strikes on Ukraine's energy sector as Tomahawk threat fades -- Ukraine strikes Russian chemical plant with long-range Storm Shadow missiles -- Ukrainian drones launch 'massive air attack' on Russia's Bryansk -- Kyiv Independent launches holiday gift guide celebrating Ukrainian creativity ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  35. Wednesday, October 22, 2025

    Russia intensifying strikes on Ukraine's energy sector as Tomahawk threat fades -- Ukraine strikes Russian chemical plant with long-range Storm Shadow missiles -- Ukrainian drones launch 'massive air attack' on Russia's Bryansk -- Kyiv Independent launches holiday gift guide celebrating Ukrainian creativity ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  36. Saturday, October 4, 2025

    A risky situation: The critical state of Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, explained -- Russian economy latest: Oil, gas September revenues down 25% from last year amid high budget deficit -- Ukrainian drones strike Russia's chemical giant over 1,700km from front lines -- Art after apocalypse — opera spurred by Russia’s ecocide in Ukraine to return to Kyiv ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  37. Saturday, October 4, 2025

    A risky situation: The critical state of Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, explained -- Russian economy latest: Oil, gas September revenues down 25% from last year amid high budget deficit -- Ukrainian drones strike Russia's chemical giant over 1,700km from front lines -- Art after apocalypse: opera spurred by Russia’s ecocide in Ukraine to return to Kyiv ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  38. Saturday, October 4, 2025

    A risky situation: The critical state of Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, explained -- Russian economy latest: Oil, gas September revenues down 25% from last year amid high budget deficit -- Ukrainian drones strike Russia's chemical giant over 1,700km from front lines -- Art after apocalypse: opera spurred by Russia’s ecocide in Ukraine to return to Kyiv ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025

  39. Saturday, October 4, 2025

    A risky situation: The critical state of Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, explained -- Russian economy latest: Oil, gas September revenues down 25% from last year amid high budget deficit -- Ukrainian drones strike Russia's chemical giant over 1,700km from front lines -- Art after apocalypse — opera spurred by Russia’s ecocide in Ukraine to return to Kyiv ... and more

    activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025